Legislature Eliminates Funding for the Office of Diversity at the University of Tennessee

tennessee-eHouse Bill 2248 in Tennessee recently was passed by the legislature by a margin of 63-21 in the House and 27-3 in the Senate. Governor Bill Haslam neither vetoed the bill or signed it into law within the legal window for such actions, allowing it to become law. The bills strips $445,882 that had been earmarked for the Office for Diversity at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. As a result, the diversity office will receive no state funding from July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017. The law also prohibits other university funds to be diverted to fund the diversity office.

Administrators in the diversity office at the university had angered legislators by calling for the use of gender-neutral pronouns and the suggestion that office holiday parties not be “Christmas parties in disguise.”

While the university’s organizational diversity efforts will be defunded, the silver lining of the legislation is that the funds will instead be used for scholarships for students in engineering programs who are members of underrepresented groups.

Related Articles

1 COMMENT

Leave a Reply

Get the JBHE Weekly Bulletin

Receive our weekly email newsletter delivered to your inbox

Latest News

Tuskegee University Flight School Receives $6.7 Million in Federal Funding

With a $6.7 million investment from the federal government, Tuskegee University will launch a new bachelor's degree in aviation science. The program will teach students about aviation science and technology and provide them with flight school training.

Three African Americans Appointed to University Faculty Positions

The faculty appointments are Dexter Blackman at Morgan State University in Baltimore, Stephanie Henderson at Alcorn State University in Mississippi, and Yolanda Pierce at Vanderbilt University in Nashville.

Virginia State University Approved to Launch Master’s Degree in Data Analytics

The master's degree in data analytics will prepare students to use data to make strategic technology and business decisions. The new degree program will be the 14th established master's degree at Virginia State University.

Samuel Frimpong Honored for Outstanding Contributions to Mineral Industry Education

Dr. Frimpong was honored by the Society of Mining, Metallurgy, and Exploration with the 2024 Mineral Industry Education Award. He currently serves as a professor of mineral engineering, the Robert H. Quenon Endowed Chair, and vice provost for graduate education at Missouri University of Science and Technology.

Featured Jobs