23-07-2025
Indiana report details ways in which it removed DEI
Until recently, the Indiana Department of Child Services offered online publications such as 'Parenting in Racially and Culturally Diverse Adoptive Families,' and 'Preparing Families for Racially and Culturally Diverse Adoptions.' Now, those publications and others have been removed from the DCS website in an effort to quash examples of diversity, equity and inclusion in government.
Gov. Mike Braun's administration released a report earlier this month on its efforts to replace diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, with merit, excellence, and innovation, or MEI.
In January, Braun signed an executive order directing state agencies to review their DEI positions, departments, activities, procedures and programs for compliance with the decision in , where the U.S. Supreme Court rejected affirmative action at college and universities.
Indiana Black Legislative Caucus Chair State Rep. Earl Harris, D-East Chicago, said he's concerned by the state's effort to remove diversity, equity and inclusion from state agencies, which follows actions taken by the Trump administration.
'Unfortunately, a lot of things that are happening on the national level are trickling down to states,' Harris said.
The report found more than 350 examples of DEI initiatives in state government programs, 70 cases of DEI training, instruction or programming for state employees, 34 grants within Indiana State agencies focused on DEI and 200 DEI initiatives in state agency policy and procedures.
'Indiana has replaced the divisive, politically-charged DEI ideology with merit, excellence and innovation: a level playing field where every single Hoosier has the chance to get ahead with hard work,' Braun said in a statement.
The report addresses where agencies had diversity, equity and inclusion language, from website information to candidate hiring, and the removal of the information from the agency's policies, contracts and websites to align with Braun's executive order.
For example, under the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration's division of mental health and addiction, the report highlighted 53 contracts that include DEI language. Many of the contracts state the vendor has to work within a 'culturally competence framework,' according to the report.
The contracts that haven't expired are being amended or edited to remove DEI language, according to the report.
The Indiana Commission for Higher Education's graduate medical education board, which focuses on funding physician residency programs across the state, issued a statement in 2020 about efforts to 'combat the scourge of racial and ethnic bias and its negatively associated social determinants of health,' according to the report.
That statement was removed from its website, according to the report.
The College Success Program was funded in the 2023 budget to 'be used for college success programs including capital investments for minority and first-generation low-income students,' according to the report.
Three grants issued through the College Success Program supported first-generation students of color at Indiana State University; Black, Latino and Hispanic students at Purdue University Northwest; and first-generation college students and/or of an underrepresented background in Valparaiso University.
Indiana State and VU repurposed their grant funding to other scholarships, but Purdue Northwest had continued its efforts as of April 30, 2025. The upcoming budget does not allocate funding for the College Success Program, so the grants 'will naturally conclude' at the end of the year, according to the report.
The Indiana Department of Education has an online learning lab where thousands of educational videos are available for students and teachers, according to the report. When the department reviewed the videos, some with information like 'to support diverse learners in inclusive classrooms' and 'the essential role of equity and inclusion in the new science starnars' were taken down, according to the report.
State Rep. Mike Aylesworth, R-Hebron, said he hadn't read the report and that legislative leadership hadn't discussed the report with House members. But, Aylesworth said the governor's office has the ability to take some action without the legislature.
'I certainly don't have a problem with (the report). It's the governor's prerogative,' Aylesworth said.
Sen. Rick Niemeyer, R-Lowell, said he hadn't read the report and didn't want to comment on it without doing so.
DEI has been twisted to mean something negative, Harris said, with some people pushing the idea that DEI means unqualified people who are a minority, a woman or a member of the LGBTQ community are getting jobs or contracts or opportunities based on their race, sex or gender.
'That's not what DEI is about. It actually opens up the pool to make sure that all the best have the opportunity,' Harris said. 'This whole DEI gives unqualified people the upper hand is so untrue. It actually means that even more of the best of the best are allowed opportunity.'
Harris also focused criticism on the elimination of the Indiana Department of Health's maternal health equity coordinator position. Indiana's rates of maternal mortality, especially among Black women, are some of the highest in the nation — 73% higher than their white peers according to 2021 data.
The report also states that 19 contractors who worked under the Office of Minority Health were eliminated.
Sen. Rodney Pol, D-Chesterton, said DEI is the 'alphabet soup of the year' that Republicans are attacking.
'What we're going to see is really more homogeny, more privilege, as opposed to ensuring that we have representation throughout our different communities,' Pol said. 'I think that it's all political theater.'
Removing items that address diversity, equity and inclusion will 'cause some issues for our state,' Harris said, and it will hurt all Hoosiers. As the state removes diversity, equity and inclusion from its policies, some Hoosiers may decide to move and those debating whether to move to Indiana for school or work may choose not to, he said.
When policies like this are in place, Harris said he takes comfort in knowing 'there will always be another legislative session.'
'Hopefully, as we see where this goes, we can do adjustments. The problem and the fear is what damage will already be done and how long will it take us to get where we were,' Harris said.