From Virginia Tech to University of Wisconsin, separate is still unequal.

by Victoria Manning
It’s 2026, yet colleges and universities across the nation still push racial segregation on campus. Higher education institutions have spent the last decade building racially segregated dormitories under a friendlier nameโ”black living learning communities.”
Now President Trump’s Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is ordering them to end housing segregation or face the consequences.
On June 23, Craig Trainor, Assistant Secretary for HUD’s Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity, issued a Dear Colleague letter with a clear warning to higher education institutions. “Racial segregation was a moral abomination when it was demanded by the majority in certain regions of the United States many decades past. It is no less morally outrageous when it is demanded by other racial groups today.”
Trainor points out that the 1968 Fair Housing Act prohibits segregating dwellings based on race. He warns that HUD “will ensure maximum accountability for . . . violating the Act.” HUD encourages whistleblowers to report these racist practices so they can be investigated.
Colleges across the nation have used living learning communities (LLCs) to openly segregate student dormitories by race without consequences for at least the past decade. In 2018, Virginia Tech started a university sanctioned segregated dormitory for black students called the Ujima LLC.
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