by James A. Bacon
by James A. Bacon
Monday marked the 30-day deadline for University of Virginia President Jim Ryan to report back to the Board of Visitors about what he had done to execute on the board’s directive to dismantle the university’s DEI bureaucracy and end racial preferences.
Ryan did, in fact, submit a report to the Board. Of course, as has become standard practice, the administration declined to release it to the public. Bacon’s Rebellion was advised to try filing a Freedom of Information Act request.
Virginia Tech, Virginia Commonwealth University, and George Mason University also are shutting down their DEI programs, and their strategies are likely to bear similarities to UVA’s. Given the fact that the universities are dismantling DEI under coercion from the Trump administration, which is threatening to yank hundreds of millions of federal research dollars if they do not comply, one can predict a minimum of enthusiasm for the mandate and a maximum of foot dragging and obfuscation.
I have no idea of what Ryan told the Board. But I thought it worthwhile to update members of the public on the little that outsiders can deduce of what UVA has accomplished so far.
There are superficial signs of change at Mr. Jefferson’s University, but it is too early to tell whether UVA will abide with the spirit of the directive or subvert it through pettifoggery, literalism or malicious compliance.
The indisputable news is that UVA has taken down its university-level “Office of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion” website. DEI offices of some academic units either have taken down their websites or rebranded them. Other web pages appear to be works in progress. The education school, for instance, still has a page tagged with “office-diversity-equity-and-inclusion” in its URL but has replaced the content with the words, “Access Denied.”










