Virginia officials meet with university following DOJ pact

(The Center Square) – State officials met with representatives from the University of Virginia on Monday following the school’s agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice on five civil rights investigations.

UVA Interim President Paul Mahoney was scheduled to update the Virginia Senate Finance & Appropriations Committee on institutional leadership and finances, as well as explain why the university opted to sign the controversial federal agreement.

At the meeting, Mahoney defended the university’s decision, describing it as the best possible option.

“For all of those reasons, I believe that signing the agreement was the best option available to us. In fact, we are in a clearly better position than if we hadn’t signed,” Mahoney said.

Prior to the meeting, some lawmakers expressed disappointment over the agreement and urged the university to reconsider its decision.

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“I want transparency for both the public and the legislature,” Virginia House Delegate Katrina Callsen, D-Albemarle, said in a statement to the Virginia Mercury. “I trust that my Senate colleagues will pursue information that will help everyone better understand the interactions that occurred between UVA and the federal government and the full nature of the settlement agreement UVA formed with the DOJ. Virginians deserve to know what is happening in Virginia universities.”

Other UVA leaders have supported the agreement, unlike other higher education institutions that have gone to court, losing federal funds.

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin called the UVA agreement “common sense.”

The University of Virginia reached a formal agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice in October to end investigations that the institution violated federal civil rights laws in its admissions, hiring, diversity, equity and inclusion programs, and that its campus culture was hostile toward Jewish students.

UVA denied the allegations, but later signed an agreement with the DOJ to comply.

The agreement states that UVA must submit quarterly reports to the Justice Department confirming it remains in compliance with federal law.

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“This notable agreement with the University of Virginia will protect students and faculty from unlawful discrimination, ensuring that equal opportunity and fairness are restored,” Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon of the Civil Rights Division said in a statement.

Former UVA President Jim Ryan resigned in June amid the federal government’s investigations into UVA and other institutions to end alleged illegal discrimination and race-based preferences across education.

In a 12-page letter to the UVA Faculty Senate on Nov. 14, Ryan said he was “stunned and angry” at the board’s lack of honesty as it faced federal pressure to remove him over an alleged failure to dismantle DEI initiatives.

The agreement will stay in effect through Dec. 31, 2028.

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