Shutdown Slashes: Kids with Disabilities Caught in the Crossfire

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Families across the country are just hoping for a smooth school year for their kids. But news drops that the federal office watching over special education has been gutted overnight. In the middle of a heated government shutdown, the Trump administration's latest round of layoffs hit the U.S. Department of Education hard, wiping out most staff in the key office that handles support for millions of students with disabilities.

Sources inside the department say the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services—known as OSERS—lost nearly all its employees. That's the group behind the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, or IDEA, a law that's funneled about $15 billion yearly to states for things like tailored lesson plans, therapy sessions, and classroom aides.

Without those experts reviewing state reports or approving grants, the whole system feels shaky. Education Secretary Linda McMahon has promised full funding will keep flowing, but insiders worry the lack of oversight could lead to mistakes or delays in getting help to kids who need it most. Why now? The administration says these "reductions in force" are a push to force Democrats in Congress to end the shutdown over budget fights.

It's part of bigger plans to shift education duties to states or even the Department of Health and Human Services under Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. But critics point out federal rules demand this office stay staffed to enforce the law. One laid-off worker, speaking off the record, called it a "gut punch" to families already stretched thin.

And states? A director from the Midwest shared fears that without federal checks, local errors might slip through, hurting enrollment or services for the seven million kids relying on IDEA.

Trimming bureaucracy sounds efficient on paper, but when it risks leaving a child without speech therapy or a safe learning spot, it hits different. As talks resume on Capitol Hill this week, parents and teachers are holding their breath.

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When politics plays games on paper, real kids in real classrooms pay the price. OSERS wasn’t just an office—it was a line of defense. Now they’ve removed it and said “funding will still flow.” But money without oversight is like medicine without a doctor.
IDEA is law, but law without enforcers is just a promise. And kids with disabilities don’t have time to wait for political compromises.

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