Trump Administration Threatens Native Hawaiian Higher Ed Programs

University of Hawaiʻi President Wendy Hensel alerted students and staff Friday to “deeply disappointing news” from the federal government that state data indicates could threaten more than $12 million in funding for Native Hawaiian programs.
The U.S. Department of Education said that federally funded programs based on race, including those that serve Native Hawaiians and Alaska Natives, are unconstitutional, according to an opinion by department lawyers.
Education Secretary Linda McMahon is using that as an impetus to review programs and institutions serving Black, Hispanic, Native Hawaiian and Alaska Native programs.
The federal education department wants to wind down programs that serve minority institutions. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)
One key argument the opinion makes is that Native Hawaiian programs can’t be afforded the same rights as those granted to programs serving Indian tribes because the U.S. has no government-to-government relationship with a Hawaiian organization.
“Thus, there is no equivalent political status from which constitutionally permissible preferences for those groups might flow,” the opinion said.
Hensel said that UH lawyers are reviewing the opinion. Officials are also evaluating the potential impact the end of these programs could have on UH.
“We recognize that this news creates uncertainty and anxiety for the students, faculty and staff whose work and educational pathways are supported by these funds,” Hensel said in the letter. “We are actively assessing how best to support the people and programs affected as we navigate this evolving legal landscape.”
An announcement from McMahon on Friday did not say which specific programs could be on the chopping block. The announcement said $132 million in minority-serving programs nationwide that have already been disbursed will not be clawed back.
Hensel’s letter did not itemize the amount of funding that could be at risk. There were more than a dozen federal awards totaling $12.3 million allocated to the UH system with the term “Native Hawaiian” in their title, according to state data analyzed by Civil Beat.
Hawaiʻi’s congressional delegation condemned the “Trump administration attack” on minority-serving institutions. The programs expand opportunities and help students who have “too often been left behind,” according to a statement from U.S. Sens. Mazie Hirono and Brian Schatz, and Reps. Ed Case and Jill Tokuda.
“Targeting them does nothing to improve educational outcomes,” the statement said, ” and instead threatens to undermine institutions that are vital to the people they serve.”
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