The Last Safe Haven for DEI in Texas Higher Ed?

posted in: All news | 0

 (Editor’s Note: The author is a social work student at Texas A&M University–Central Texas.) 

On May 20, a black hearse drawn by dark horses led the march of University of Texas at Austin students, clad all in black clothes, past the Governor’s Mansion and the Texas Capitol. The mourners carried signs with the words “Academic Freedom,” “Censored University,” “Alumni Mourn Our Degrees,” and—most damningly—“UT Is Dead.” Through the glass window of the hearse, a blood-red urn and several copies of George Orwell’s 1984 were visible. 

The mock funeral, staged as the UT System Board of Regents convened, protested the university’s February decision to dissolve four of its standalone humanities department—African and African Diaspora Studies; Mexican American and Latina/o Studies; Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies; and American Studies—and consolidate them into a single entity: the Department of Social and Cultural Analysis. 

“This is yet another demonstration of the death by a thousand cuts of the University of Texas and its spirit of academic freedom,” Cameron J. Samuels, an organizer of Students Engaged in Advancing Texas (SEAT), testified at the UT Regent’s Meeting. “The University of Texas is dead. Serving at the pleasure of our Governor, you have failed to fulfill your mission, and students mourn what once was.”

When Senate Bill 17 took effect on January 1, 2024, it shuttered every Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) office at every public university in Texas. Resource centers that had operated for decades went dark, and staff were reassigned or let go. SB 17 banned the offices, but it left the classroom alone. Teaching, coursework, and scholarly research were explicitly protected. 

But that was only the first step in Texas Republicans’ brazen crusade against anything and everything “DEI.” The next legislative session, Republicans targeted academics with the passage of Senate Bill 37. 

When Governor Greg Abbott signed SB 37 in May 2025, it granted the board of regents—all of whom are the governor’s political appointees—sweeping authority to review and reject academic curriculum. Previously, the faculty that studied and taught the material had some control over what went into their syllabi. Now regents can reject a course, veto the hiring of a provost, or move to dissolve an entire degree program it deems insufficiently aligned with “workforce needs.” The faculty senates that once served as a check were reclassified as “advisory only.” The people who spent their careers building a discipline can only advise as their fields of study are dissolved.

But as programs focused on cultural diversity and inclusion are eliminated throughout Texas, there is a corner of higher education that remains a safe haven for DEI: accredited social work programs. The Council on Social Work Education (CSWE), the accrediting council for all such programs, requires students to be culturally competent, meaning that future social workers should be taught best practices for working with people of all races, classes, and creeds. There are 26 Texas public universities with accreditation, offering more than 45 degree programs at both the bachelor’s and master’s levels. The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board reports that, in 2024, more than 4,000 students were enrolled in these programs at four-year universities. 

The reason is simple and universal: Everyone deserves competent care.

The “Anti-Racism, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion” competency standard suggests that students should be equipped with empirical, research-based expertise in the environmental and social factors that affect LGBTQ+ clients and people of color, among other populations. The reason is simple and universal: Everyone deserves competent care. If a social worker is tasked with working with foster youth, they should be familiar with research and empirical information on foster youth; if a social worker is tasked with working with a trans person, they should be familiar with the related body of research. Competence is not a recommendation; it is required. Accreditation is contingent on adherence to these standards—and without accreditation, students in the program cannot sit for licensure. Without licensure, the degrees that students so often go into debt for are hardly worth the paper they’re printed on. 

Will Francis, executive director for the National Association of Social Workers (NASW) Texas and Louisiana chapters, has watched the battle for DEI in social work unravel over the last two years. “We allow for the introduction of DEI concepts to meet accreditation standards, and we allow for students to essentially engage in free speech around classroom discussion,” Francis told the Texas Observer in an interview. “However, Texas does require—from a rule standpoint—that all syllabi be posted online. That creates an interesting conundrum, because even though we’ve essentially said that accreditation allows you to explore these concepts, the posting of the syllabus means that anyone could pull that information and then attack professors by saying they’ve introduced DEI from an administrative standpoint.” 

These attacks are not hypothetical. In April, Attorney General Ken Paxton opened an investigation into the University of North Texas (UNT) after the conservative group Accuracy in Media released a hidden-camera video of Paige Falco, the field coordinator for UNT’s social work department.

In the video, Falco acknowledged that DEI is  “definitely still a focus” in coursework—just without the explicit keywords. In response, Paxton’s office began to investigate the “radical UNT officials” and called for Falco’s firing. When the student newspaper reached out to Falco for an interview, they received an automated reply stating that Falco was no longer employed by the university. Days later, Accuracy in Media released a second video, this one from the University of Texas at Arlington, in which academic recruiter Melissa Cruz acknowledged that “we still have to cover the content” to an undercover investigator posing as a potential student. 

In a September 2025 statement, CSWE acknowledged that they “are aware that several states have enacted or proposed legislation that limits or prohibits content related to diversity, equity, and inclusion in both implicit and explicit curricula. CSWE and its Board of Accreditation do not request and will not require any program to violate any enacted laws in order to maintain or achieve accreditation.”

The statement is less a defense of DEI than a handoff. CSWE won’t require a program to break the law—but it also doesn’t explicitly define where the line is. Instead, it advises university officials to consult “appropriate institutional counsel”—meaning each university’s own lawyers are left to navigate treacherous legal waters to protect the quality of their students’ education. 

That uncertainty is already shaping conversations inside social work programs. Dr. Claudia Rappaport, a social work professor at Texas A&M University–Central Texas with 25 years of experience, said faculty in her department recently met with administrators to review state restrictions and assess whether any course content could be interpreted as running afoul of them. As part of the process, social work faculty received guidance on institutional compliance, including language stating that “advocating race or gender ideology, sexual orientation, or gender identity is prohibited in all courses.”

“The magic word is ‘advocate,’” Dr. Rappaport explained. “That’s the word that they used over and over again, that you’re not allowed to advocate for a certain belief. You can state: this is what the research shows us. … I cannot say that my beliefs are the right beliefs. And what I was saying to them was—we don’t do that anyway.” 

However, diversity is still taught as a subject. One of Dr. Rappaport’s classes is entitled “Diverse Populations,” in which students study how to provide competent care to clients whose lives look nothing like their own. The coursework is clinical, not ideological. 

On one exam, students are asked to outline how they would counsel a 26-year-old Lakota man struggling with alcoholism—a question that requires knowing the history of how alcohol was introduced to Native communities, understanding that there are hundreds of distinct tribal nations rather than one monolithic “Native culture,” and learning how to adapt a standard 12-Step recovery framework around traditional practices. Other coursework covers working with Latino clients and the distinct differences among various Hispanic cultures, as well as the roles of familismo and machismo in a family system. A quiz on a documentary about transgender Americans asks students to identify the barriers to healthcare that trans clients face. All of these are critical for a social worker to understand, as they are tasked with designing interventions to help individual people; no individual can be competently cared for if their culture is not accounted for.

This is the body of research under attack: anything labeled with a political buzzword is now subject to removal from our books and universities. Yet this is the knowledge base social workers need to draw on when sitting across from a real person in crisis. Social work offers a glimpse of the contradiction at the heart of Texas’ higher education reforms: the same information that politicians increasingly dismiss as DEI is, in many cases, vital information that future professionals must understand to provide competent care. If academic subjects can be judged by their political acceptability rather than their empirical value, then the question is no longer what gets taught, but who gets to decide what counts as knowledge—and the students behind the hearse already know the answer.

The post The Last Safe Haven for DEI in Texas Higher Ed? appeared first on The Texas Observer.

School Closures Are Escalating Across Texas. ‘It’s Not a Local Failure.’

posted in: All news | 0

At least 135 public schools have closed or have been approved to close all across Texas since late 2023, as districts face budget crises amid state funding shortfalls, according to data gathered by the public school advocacy organization Our Schools Our Democracy. 

Carrie Griffith, executive director of the Austin-based nonprofit, said every region of the state has been impacted by school closures. “It’s not specific to urban or rural areas. … It’s not confined to any sort of racial or ethnic breakdown.” Griffith said. “That is why we say it’s not a local failure; it’s a statewide trend.”

The number of Texas public schools facing closure more than doubled from 2024 to 2025, rising from 22 to 50, the nonprofit’s data shows. And in the first six months of 2026, Texas school districts have voted to close even more schools—at least 55—than last year.

Using school district board minutes and news reports, Our Schools Our Democracy found that closures spanned the state. The North Texas region had the highest number of schools—around 45—that have been or will be closed. Some closures are happening in districts that have been taken over by the state, including in Fort Worth, Houston, and Beaumont, according to a list the nonprofit continues to update. The Fort Worth Independent School District (ISD), which is now operating under the state’s  appointed board of managers, recently expanded its list of pending closures to include 19 campuses by June 2029. 

(Courtesy/Our Schools Our Democracy)

School funding is tied to student attendance, which has fallen in many public school districts around the state. Griffith believes that, apart from the issue of lower birth rates, charter schools and the new private school voucher program are also siphoning students away from public schools. 

The Houston area has 32 campuses and the San Antonio area has 23 campuses in the list compiled by the nonprofit.

Bobby Blount, the president of the Bexar County School Board Coalition and a Northside ISD board member for 27 years, said school districts’ growing budget deficits, in part linked to a lack of state funding, are a major factor leading to increased campus closures. 

Before a modest increase approved in the 2025 legislative session, lawmakers last increased investments to public schools in 2019. For a while, federal money tied to COVID-19 relief kept school districts afloat. But those funds dried up even as inflation and declining enrollment in public schools increased school deficits. Then, in 2023, Abbott obstructed an increase for school funding when lawmakers initially rejected school vouchers. More funding came only after vouchers were approved in 2025.

Griffith said she thinks the voucher program will accelerate the number of neighborhood school closures, which have already been affected by charter school expansions. 

“Just in this most recent biennium, the state paid $10 billion to charter schools, and that’s at a direct expense to the money going to public school districts … and now districts are also bracing themselves for the anticipated impact of losing students to private schools [through vouchers],” Griffith said. 

Even after lawmakers in 2025 passed what they called a “historic” $8.5 billion school funding package, it wasn’t enough to make up for prior years of shortfalls.

The Legislature raised the basic allotment, or the primary per-pupil funding, by $55, but it would have had to increase it by more than $1,300 just to keep up with inflation since 2019, according to Raise Your Hand Texas, a public policy group. Texas ranks in the bottom 10 states for average public education spending, according to data from the National Education Association. 

Instead of going to the basic allotment, which would have allowed school districts to use the increased funding as they needed, most of the new funding was earmarked for specific items. Kelly Rasti, the associate executive director of the Texas Association of School Boards, said the funding did not address the needs of many school districts because of the restrictions. 

“Increasing the basic allotment allows for school districts to direct the increased funding to what their local needs are,” Rasti said. She added the bill also created new spending requirements for districts. 

“How is it possible that this remarkable amount of money was invested into public schools and they’re still closing and they’re still adopting deficit budgets? It’s because the majority of that money was not directed in a way that schools can plug their existing holes.”

The post School Closures Are Escalating Across Texas. ‘It’s Not a Local Failure.’ appeared first on The Texas Observer.

Deaths Uncovered in Laredo Show the Ongoing Toll of Border Militarization

posted in: All news | 0

Four years ago, after authorities in San Antonio found 53 immigrants dead in a trailer in San Antonio, Governor Greg Abbott knew exactly whom to blame. “These deaths are on Biden,” Abbott posted on social media about the then-president, going on to say that “deadly open border policies” encourage migrants to risk life and limb taking the dangerous journey to the United States through Mexico.

Abbott’s implicit pitch was that if he and his ally Donald Trump, since returned to the presidency, were given a free hand to secure the border, these types of tragic incidents would stop.

As I wrote at the time, this thinking is predicated on the idea that the U.S. government can somehow outdo the horrors of immigrating here—horrors that border hawks often accurately portray. Trump has tried to do just that. Masked federal agents roam U.S. cities scanning people’s faces and arresting them. Immigration officials have set up checkpoints in the country’s interior, occasionally vacuuming up U.S. citizens. Longtime residents are thrown in detention and pressured to leave the country. And, since he returned to the presidency, arrests at the border have plummeted.

Yet last month, seven people climbed into a cargo container, probably near Del Rio, for a journey by rail to San Antonio.

According to Laredo officials, the seven likely perished from heat stroke. One man who was carrying Mexican identification was apparently thrown off the train near San Antonio or escaped but died before finding help. The cargo container carrying the remaining six, some of whom were from Honduras and Mexico and one of whom was 14 years old, was sent back south to Laredo, where a railroad company employee found their bodies. 

A Border Patrol agent collects ladders used to cross over the border wall in Hidalgo in 2021. (Gabriel V. Cárdenas/Texas Observer)

The trains from Del Rio and nearby Eagle Pass to San Antonio have long been utilized by people trying to circumvent the Border Patrol checkpoints on U.S. 90 and U.S. 57 and, more recently, Abbott’s border deployment. Last year, federal authorities unraveled a smuggling scheme to cross the border from Eagle Pass on trains. 

It’s a dangerous route. Those riding on top risk falling off and losing limbs to the wheels. Those inside face sweltering conditions. In 2023, police in the region found five people dead in train cars and dozens of others suffering from heat exposure over just a few days.

Critics of Trump note that this latest tragedy coincides with his crackdown on legal immigration, including restricting refugee resettlement almost exclusively to white South Africans, refusing to hear asylum claims at the border, pressuring Mexico to restrict travel through its territory, and detaining people with pending asylum cases. While it’s tempting to try to tie these tragic incidents to a specific president’s actions, the reality is that U.S. immigration policy is deeply invested in what the Department of Homeland Security calls “prevention through deterrence.” 

This existed under Biden, who, despite his open-borders reputation, implemented some of the most draconian immigration policies of any modern president other than Trump, marooning asylum-seekers in Mexico regardless of their nationality and setting up a screening system that drove them into the arms of criminal groups

Extrajudicial punishment is a hallmark of immigration enforcement in this country. And despite Trump’s and Abbott’s insistence that their policies save lives, the Webb County medical examiner told the Associated Press that she’s seen a rise in deaths this spring compared to last year. Border Patrol’s data shows that agents arrested slightly more people on the southwest border in March and April of this year, the latest numbers available, over last. (Webb County Medical Examiner Corinne Stern didn’t respond to a request for comment, and getting accurate death data in Texas is notoriously difficult; activists interviewed for this story said they didn’t have reason to believe there have been more deaths this year than in years when border crossings were significantly higher, but they argued that deadly incidents are an inevitable result of U.S. policies even when crossings are down.)

“The more deterrence policies the United States implements, the more people are going to die,” said Ari Sawyer, a co-director of the Frontera Federation, which advocates for social justice on the border.

Sawyer said Trump’s crackdown may convince some people to defer their journey to the United States, but a range of factors beyond U.S. policy du jour impact people’s decisions to relocate, and when the risks of remaining at home outweigh the risk of emigrating, people will.

“It just depends on why they’re immigrating, what they’re emigrating from,” Sawyer said. “The people we’re finding now dying on the U.S. side of the border are the people who could not wait.”

Increasingly, experts are warning that climate change is driving migration from the Global South, while also increasing the risk of heat exposure for travelers—as reportedly played out in South Texas last month.

The country’s current immigration framework fails to address two factors that have been constant for generations: the need for labor in this country and conditions across the hemisphere that drive people from their homes. The relatively less restrictive policies of Biden and the authoritarian tactics used by Trump have both ended up being unpopular with voters, and trying to track the impact of these shifting policies is also difficult. Trump ran on a platform of harsher immigration enforcement than his predecessor, former President Barack Obama, but in 2019 Border Patrol agents arrested 859,000 people, more than any year of the Obama presidency. Biden took office in 2021 and attempted to roll back Trump’s policies. Border Patrol arrests promptly hit new highs, but what gets lost is that the policies Biden kept in place were still far more restrictive than Obama’s, when the number of people crossing the border was much lower. 

“The way to stop smugglers is to create more lawful pathways and legal regulated pathways to the United States,” Sawyer said.

But, as after past tragedies, the solution proposed by authorities along the border has been more enforcement. In a news conference after the May deaths, Laredo Mayor Victor Treviño struck an empathetic tone while still hammering home the point that the seven people died outside his city’s limits.

“Based on preliminary medical reports, they did not pass away in our city,” Treviño told reporters. “But they were discovered here after hours of suffering, and eventually dying several hours before arriving from what is commonly known as severe heat stroke. This tragedy weighs heavily on all of us. We’re a tight-knit community that is considered one of the safest cities in our country. As mayor and a physician in this community, my heart goes out to the families and victims.”

At the same time, Treviño called for “investing in more personnel, equipping our agencies with more technology needed to detect and prevent these situations before they become tragedies,” something he repeated at a city council meeting a few days later. Treviño proposed the city look into adding more detection technology at the ports of entry, usually a federal responsibility, and facial recognition technology that could be tied to the Laredo Police Department’s body cameras. “Some of the facts associated with this heinous crime across multiple jurisdictions [are] a wake-up call to make sure that we have all the proper preparedness,” he said.

Max Prado, an organizer with the Laredo Immigrant Alliance, said that incessant border militarization—Laredo is already filled with law enforcement surveillance cameras, patrolled from above by drones and helicopters, and early in the Trump administration even prowled by a Stryker armored vehicle—is now being turned on residents.

“That equipment would not have prevented the deaths of the six people who were found on May 10,” Prado said. “How would such technology help prevent deaths in the future?”

Prado added: “The narrative is we need more enforcement, more surveillance to prevent these deaths, but I think they’re just doubling down. We’re going to keep seeing the same trends happening over and over again.”

The post Deaths Uncovered in Laredo Show the Ongoing Toll of Border Militarization appeared first on The Texas Observer.

Texas Has a Water Shortage and a Water Glut. They Are the Same Problem.

posted in: All news | 0

Texas does not have enough water. Texas also cannot get rid of the water it has. Both of those things are true right now, and in the dry stretch of West Texas where the two collide, they are turning into the same problem.

On one West Texas cattle ranch, the problem looks concrete. Old and abandoned wells have started spewing wastewater back to the surface on their own, pushed up by pressure building underground. A water well on the property tested positive for benzene and other contaminants, and the owners moved their herd and eventually sold it off. That is one version of what happens when a place runs out of room for the water its oilfields bring up.

The full scale behind that scene is hard to picture. The Permian Basin pumps roughly 6 million barrels of crude a day, which makes it the most productive oil region in the country. It also lifts up several barrels of water for every barrel of oil—around three to four on average and more as a well ages. By early 2025 that added up to about 22 million barrels of water a day across the basin, a figure that one analytics firm expects to climb another 39 percent by 2035. That is far more water than cities nearby use, surfacing every day in one of the driest corners of the state.

Hold that against the other headline. Texas is short on water and falling behind, with cities and farms competing for a supply the state openly expects to shrink. So the contradiction sits in plain sight. The basin brings up an ocean and calls it waste, while towns not far away ration what comes out of the tap.

For decades the answer was simple. Operators put the water back underground into disposal wells and kept producing, and it worked as long as the rock kept accepting it. Then the ground stopped cooperating. Forcing that much fluid into the subsurface raised the pressure on old faults, and West Texas has seen a rising frequency of earthquakes, including a magnitude 5.4 quake near Mentone in 2022, the strongest the region had recorded in decades. Regulators have since limited injection in the most active zones, which leaves a growing waste stream with fewer places to go.

This is not to put all the blame on oil or to argue against drilling. Oil is central to the Texas economy, and the Permian is its largest single engine. The water is simply what comes up alongside, and the system was built around disposal because disposal was practical and cheap. It still is. Injecting a barrel underground still costs well under a dollar. Cleaning that same barrel for use outside the oilfield runs several times more, as much as four to seven dollars a barrel at the high end. A University of Texas scientist named the deeper flaw, noting that underground space was treated as something to race to fill rather than manage. Texas got very good at making the water vanish, and never had to get good at understanding it. That is the challenge now arriving.

Here the story could turn, and the optimists have a real case. A state-commissioned consortium estimates that treated produced water could eventually yield 2 to 4 billion barrels a year for use outside the oilfield as costs come down, and it has pilot plants running in the Delaware and Midland basins. Operators already recycle a meaningful share of the water for new wells rather than send it to disposal. Texas has also started permitting treated oilfield water for release into rivers and streams, and a 2025 law handed the state authority to write the discharge rules. In a region the consortium says faces real shortfalls, turning waste into water is not only cleanup; It is strategy.

The catch is that the science has to keep pace with the ambition, and the money has to pencil out. Produced water is not one thing. Researchers have catalogued more than 1,100 different chemicals in it, many at trace levels and many never studied for health effects, while the federal drinking-water framework sets limits for only about 90 contaminants and was written for treated city supplies, not brine off an oilfield. As one water law scholar pointed out to Inside Climate News, the Clean Water Act—enacted back in 1972—never imagined this water flowing into a stream. Treating it to a known standard is one task. Treating it to standards that do not yet exist, at a price that can compete with cheap disposal, is another.

That is the conversation Texas has not fully had out loud. Not whether to drill, which is settled, and not whom to blame, which misses the point. The real question is whether a state this thirsty can keep treating an ocean of difficult water as nothing but waste, and whether it can build the monitoring and the public trust before that water moves into wider use. Get it right, and the byproduct the industry always wanted gone becomes part of the state’s water future. Get it wrong, and Texas trades one water problem for another. Either way the choice is arriving faster than the old disposal model can handle.

On the Antina Ranch where this started, the corral sits empty, the cattle moved off and sold at auction after the water turned. The plugged wells beneath it still hold enough pressure to move a needle on a gauge, a reminder that sealing a well with cement is not the same as settling what is underneath. The places sitting on top of this do not have the luxury of waiting.

The post Texas Has a Water Shortage and a Water Glut. They Are the Same Problem. appeared first on The Texas Observer.