Changeflow GovPing Government State AGs Sue Education Dept. Over Data Demand
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State AGs Sue Education Dept. Over Data Demand

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Filed March 11th, 2026
Detected March 11th, 2026
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Summary

A coalition of 10 state Attorneys General, led by Colorado AG Phil Weiser, has sued the U.S. Department of Education to halt new data collection requirements for higher education institutions. The lawsuit challenges the department's demand for race and sex-based data, arguing it is an unlawful expansion of the IPEDS system and jeopardizes student privacy.

What changed

Ten state Attorneys General have filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Education challenging new data reporting requirements for colleges and universities. The lawsuit, filed by Colorado AG Phil Weiser and others, argues that the Education Department's demand for race and sex-based data through the Integrated Postsecondary Education System (IPEDS) is an unlawful expansion of the system's statutory purpose and an arbitrary and capricious action. The states contend that the rushed implementation, coupled with reduced staff at the Department, increases the risk of errors, jeopardizes student privacy, and could lead to baseless investigations and penalties.

The practical implications for educational institutions are significant. While the lawsuit aims to halt the requirements, institutions were facing a compliance deadline of March 18, 2026, to provide seven years of retroactive data. The coalition argues that the new demands place an undue burden on institutions and compromise student privacy obligations. Compliance failures could lead to "costly penalties and baseless investigations." Educational institutions should monitor the litigation closely, as its outcome will determine their ongoing data reporting obligations and potential liabilities.

What to do next

  1. Monitor the ongoing litigation challenging the Education Department's data demand.
  2. Assess current data collection practices for race and sex to identify potential discrepancies with the challenged IPEDS requirements.
  3. Prepare for potential data submission or legal challenges depending on the lawsuit's outcome.

Penalties

The coalition argues the new requirements could lead to "costly penalties and baseless investigations" and "severe financial penalties" for institutions that make reporting errors.

Source document (simplified)

Attorney General Phil Weiser sues to stop Education Department’s unlawful data demand to colleges and universities

March 11, 2026 (DENVER) – Attorney General Phil Weiser today joined a coalition of state attorneys general in challenging the Trump administration’s demand that higher education institutions provide new data to the U.S. Department of Education supposedly to track compliance with a 2023 U.S. Supreme Court decision that prohibits race from being used as a factor in admissions.

At issue is a newly added component to the Integrated Postsecondary Education System, or IPEDS, a collection of interrelated mandatory surveys administered by the Education Department that gathers data from colleges, universities, and technical and vocational programs participating in federal student financial programs. Since 1986, it has served as a valuable tool for reliable data collection and statistical reporting by universities.

On Aug. 7, 2025, President Trump issued a memo stating that IPEDS would now become a tool to track “consideration of race in higher education” and investigate universities’ compliance with the Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard decision from the Supreme Court. Education Secretary Linda McMahon then announced new requirements for institutions demanding they report data via IPEDS broken down by race and sex and retroactively report data from the past seven years. On Dec.18, 2025, following a notice and comment period in which members of the coalition provided comments strongly opposing the new rules, the Trump administration finalized the new requirements. The deadline for institutions to provide the new data is March 18, 2026.

The coalition argues the hasty implementation of the new survey requirements leaves institutions vulnerable to inadvertent errors and unreliable data that could lead to costly penalties and baseless investigations into their practices, and that it jeopardizes student privacy by requesting in-depth information about individual students.

“The new federal data reporting requirements compromise student privacy and threaten sham investigations of colleges and universities. The rush to roll out the new requirements has also left Colorado universities guessing what information they are supposed to provide and facing severe financial penalties if they guess wrong,” Attorney General Weiser said. “Under federal law, IPEDS is a statistical information system and not a civil rights enforcement or investigatory tool. The Education Department has gone beyond what the law authorizes IPEDS to collect and for purposes Congress did not authorize. That is why we are taking the Education Department to court.”

In the lawsuit, Attorney General Weiser and the coalition argue that the department’s rushed implementation of the new data requirements ignores the incredible burden they place on institutions and dramatically increases the possibility of inadvertent reporting errors and unreliable data. Furthermore, the Trump administration has eliminated hundreds of positions within the Education Department, including within the very offices responsible for providing clarity about the requirements to universities.

Moreover, the coalition argues the new data demands jeopardize student privacy and could lead to individuals being easily identified. Many institutions have data protection obligations to their students, which are placed at risk by the administration’s new IPEDS demands.

The attorneys general argue the Trump administration’s actions are contrary to law, fail to observe the procedure required by law, and are arbitrary and capricious. They argue the implementation of the new data requirements was unlawful and will place an undue burden on colleges and universities.

Joining Attorney General Weiser in filing this lawsuit are the attorneys general of California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaiʻi, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Wisconsin, and Washington.

Read the complaint Massachusetts et al. v. U.S. Department of Education (PDF).

Media Contact:
Lawrence Pacheco
Chief Communications Officer
(720) 508-6553 office
lawrence.pacheco@coag.gov

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Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
State Attorneys General (10 States)
Filed
March 11th, 2026
Compliance deadline
March 18th, 2026 (4 days)
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Educational institutions Government agencies
Geographic scope
National (US)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Education
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Data Privacy Civil Rights

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