World April 6, 2026

U.S. Ends Enforcement of Six Transgender-Related Education Agreements

Education Department says Office for Civil Rights will stop monitoring resolution agreements tied to transgender student protections in several school districts and a college

By Ajmal Hussain
U.S. Ends Enforcement of Six Transgender-Related Education Agreements

The U.S. Education Department announced it will terminate six resolution agreements that had been established to protect transgender students under Title IX, stating the deals were improperly reached. The Office for Civil Rights will no longer monitor or enforce agreements with five school districts and one college, and the department declined to provide further details about the terminations. Advocates and affected institutions have not yet responded publicly.

Key Points

  • The Education Department said it will terminate six resolution agreements tied to transgender student protections under Title IX.
  • OCR will no longer monitor or enforce agreements with Sacramento City Unified, Cape Henlopen, Fife, Delaware Valley, La Mesa-Spring Valley school districts and Taft College.
  • The action is presented by the department as part of a broader rollback of prior administrations' policies on issues including transgender rights, climate programs, diversity initiatives and campus protests.

Summary: The U.S. Education Department on Monday said it would terminate six resolution agreements related to transgender student protections that prior administrations had negotiated with local education institutions under Title IX. The department said its Office for Civil Rights (OCR) will no longer monitor or enforce those agreements, but provided limited detail about the reasoning behind the decision.

The department identified the specific entities whose agreements will no longer be monitored or enforced: Sacramento City Unified School District in California; Cape Henlopen School District in Delaware; Fife School District in Washington state; Delaware Valley School District in Pennsylvania; La Mesa-Spring Valley School District in California; and Taft College in California. The affected school districts and Taft College did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Title IX is the federal civil-rights statute that bars denial of benefits or discrimination in education "on the basis of sex." The Education Department said the six resolution agreements had been reached through what it described as manipulation of Title IX. The department did not provide additional specifics about the terminations in its statement.

The department's announcement included a direct comment from an Education Department official. Kimberly Richey said: "Today, the Trump Administration is removing the unnecessary and unlawful burdens that prior Administrations imposed on schools in its relentless pursuit of a radical transgender agenda."

The statement said the OCR will cease monitoring and enforcing the named deals. Media outlets reported earlier accounts of the matter. The department's announcement follows a broader pattern of actions described by the administration since taking office, which the department framed as a rollback of what it called previous overreach.

Since taking office, the administration has taken multiple steps that affect schools and colleges, including issuing executive orders and warning of potential freezes to federal funding over a range of campus issues. Those issues, as noted by the department, have included transgender rights, climate-related programs, diversity initiatives and pro-Palestinian protests relating to the war in Gaza. The administration has also issued executive actions specifically targeting the rights of transgender people, and a directive stating the U.S. government will recognize only two sexes - male and female.

The Education Department did not expand on the legal or operational consequences for the affected institutions, nor did it provide a timeline for ending OCR oversight of the specified agreements.


Key points

  • The Education Department is terminating six Title IX-related resolution agreements tied to transgender student protections.
  • OCR will stop monitoring or enforcing deals with five school districts and one college named by the department.
  • The move is part of broader administrative actions affecting schools and colleges, including threats to withhold federal funds over various campus issues.

Risks and uncertainties

  • Legal and compliance uncertainty for the affected school districts and college as OCR oversight ends - this could affect district administrative policy and legal exposure.
  • Potential reputational and operational impacts for educational institutions navigating federal policy shifts on civil-rights enforcement.

Risks

  • Uncertainty about legal and compliance responsibilities for the affected school districts and college as federal monitoring ends - impacts K-12 and higher education sectors.
  • Potential operational and reputational consequences for institutions that had implemented protections under the terminated agreements - impacts school administration and local education markets.

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