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States Challenge Trump College Data Mandate: Lawsuit Claims Privacy Threats to Students

The Legal Clash Over Admissions Data and University Burdens

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  • ferpa

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Understanding the Origins of the Federal Mandate

The controversy surrounding the Trump administration's college data mandate stems from a push for greater transparency in higher education admissions following the Supreme Court's landmark 2023 decision in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President & Fellows of Harvard College (SFFA). This ruling effectively ended race-conscious admissions practices at U.S. colleges and universities, prompting concerns that institutions might continue such practices covertly through proxies like personal essays or legacy preferences.

In August 2025, President Trump issued a memorandum directing U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon to expand the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS)—a longstanding federal database managed by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)—to monitor compliance. IPEDS, established in 1986, has traditionally collected aggregate data on enrollments, graduations, finances, and aid to inform policy and consumer choice via tools like College Navigator. The new directive introduced the Admissions and Consumer Transparency Supplement (ACTS), marking the largest expansion in IPEDS history.

This move aligns with broader efforts to scrutinize Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) programs, which the administration views as potential vehicles for racial discrimination. However, critics argue it transforms a neutral statistical tool into an enforcement mechanism, raising questions about overreach in federal authority over higher education.

⚖️ Details of the ACTS Survey Requirements

The ACTS survey targets all four-year institutions with selective admissions processes, requiring submission of disaggregated data for undergraduate and graduate programs dating back to the 2019-2020 academic year—seven years of historical records, an unprecedented retroactive demand. Institutions must report counts and averages for applicants, admits, and enrollees broken down by race/ethnicity and sex combinations, alongside:

  • Admission test score quintiles (SAT/ACT).
  • High school GPA quintiles.
  • Family income ranges and Pell Grant eligibility.
  • Parental education levels.
  • Financial aid details (institutional grants, merit/need-based aid, federal/state/local support).
  • Graduation rates by GPA and test score bands.

For graduate programs, data is segmented by broad fields of study. The initial deadline was March 18, 2026, with manual data entry via updated templates released as late as February 2026. Colleges have never systematically tracked much of this at the granular level required, complicating compliance.

The Coalition of States Files Historic Lawsuit

On March 11, 2026, a coalition of 17 Democratic-led states, co-led by Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell and including California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin, filed suit in the U.S. District Court in Boston (Massachusetts et al. v. U.S. Department of Education et al.). The complaint accuses the administration of violating the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) on multiple fronts.

Key claims include acting contrary to law by repurposing IPEDS for partisan enforcement rather than neutral statistics (violating statutes like 20 U.S.C. § 9511), procedural failures under the Paperwork Reduction Act (no burden minimization, unclear terms), and arbitrary/capricious decision-making (rushed timeline ignoring comments from over 3,600 stakeholders). AG Letitia James stated, “Colleges should not be forced to turn over massive amounts of sensitive student data to satisfy another witch hunt.”

Judge Issues Temporary Block Ahead of Deadline

Just days later, on March 13, 2026, U.S. District Judge F. Dennis Saylor IV granted a temporary restraining order, halting the mandate's enforcement. This blocks the Department of Education from requiring ACTS submissions, imposing penalties, or using the data for investigations pending further hearings. The ruling averts immediate chaos for colleges facing fines up to $71,545 per violation or loss of Title IV funding eligibility.

The decision underscores judicial skepticism toward the administration's accelerated process, which bypassed traditional Technical Review Panels and provided only months for preparation—versus the usual year-long lead time for IPEDS changes. As the case progresses, it could set precedents for federal data collection in higher education.

Gavel striking in courtroom representing judicial block on college data mandate

Student Privacy Risks at the Forefront

A core contention is the threat to student privacy. While the data is disaggregated, high granularity—crossing race, sex, test scores, GPAs, incomes—creates “small cell sizes” where individuals could be re-identified, especially at smaller programs or niche majors. This pits institutions against Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) obligations, which protect personally identifiable information (PII) in education records.

No privacy impact assessment was conducted under the E-Government Act, and public release via College Navigator could expose vulnerable students. AG Campbell warned of risks to “student safety,” while experts note conflicts with the Privacy Act. For context, FERPA (20 U.S.C. § 1232g) allows disclosures for legitimate educational interests but prohibits federal databases of individual student data without consent.

Immense Burden on Colleges and Universities

Higher education leaders decry the operational nightmare. Surveys by the Association of Institutional Research (AIR) and Association of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU) reveal 55% of institutions estimating 250+ hours per response, exceeding entire current IPEDS burdens for some. Retroactive data demands force manual reconstruction from disparate systems, with ambiguous definitions (e.g., “selective admissions”) fueling errors.

Template changes caused virus warnings and submission glitches. NASFAA and AAU urged narrowing scope to truly selective schools, phased rollouts, or pilots—ignored. Non-compliance risks cascade: audits, funding cuts, reputational harm. Smaller colleges face disproportionate strain, diverting resources from teaching and research.

Enrollment Shifts Post-SFFA: Fueling the Debate

The mandate responds to observed demographic changes after SFFA. At elite privates, Black freshman enrollment dropped sharply: Harvard from 18% (2023) to under 12%, Princeton 9% to 5%. Asian American shares rose (Harvard 37% to 41%). An AP analysis of 20 selective colleges showed near-universal Black declines.

Conversely, public flagships saw underrepresented minority enrollment rise 8% in fall 2024, suggesting shifts from elites. Hispanic enrollment dipped slightly at top schools (15%). Recent data from over 3,000 institutions confirms nuanced impacts, with overall minority access holding but stratification increasing. Proponents argue ACTS verifies no covert race use; opponents see fishing expeditions.

Institution TypeBlack Enrollment ChangeURM Overall
Elite Privates-16.3% avgDecline
Public FlagshipsVaries+8%

Perspectives from Stakeholders Across Higher Ed

College associations like AAU and AIR submitted thousands of comments highlighting technical flaws and unreliability. Brown and Columbia previously traded data for research funding restorations, setting precedents. Student groups worry about chilled applications if privacy fears mount.

Experts like those at Stateline note it converts IPEDS from “methodical statistical reporting” to “law enforcement.” Faculty unions fear DEI purges; admins brace for compliance costs amid budgets strained by enrollment flux.

Administration's Rationale and Counterarguments

The White House frames ACTS as essential for “exposing unlawful practices and ridding society of racial hierarchies.” McMahon emphasized direct data from universities to enforce SFFA, citing “diversity statements” as loopholes. No immediate lawsuit response, but prior statements stress transparency benefits consumers and ensures merit-based admissions.

Defenders point to voluntary deals with Ivy Leagues as models, arguing existing IPEDS proves feasibility. Critics counter that aggregate data suffices for trends without granular risks.

Future Implications for Higher Education Policy

If upheld, ACTS could reshape admissions scrutiny, bolstering Title VI enforcement against perceived discrimination. A loss might limit federal data tools, spurring state-level transparency laws. Broader Trump agenda—DEI bans, department restructuring—looms, with 2026 SOTU signaling sustained focus.

Colleges may invest in data infrastructure, audit practices proactively. Students benefit from clearer insights but risk privacy erosion. Long-term, it underscores tensions between equity goals and nondiscrimination mandates in diverse campuses.

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Photo by Arno Senoner on Unsplash

Chart showing post-affirmative action enrollment changes by race in U.S. colleges

Actionable Steps for Universities and Students

Institutions should monitor litigation, enhance data governance, and consult legal experts on FERPA. Pilot internal dashboards for voluntary transparency. Students: Review College Navigator for aggregates; advocate via campus groups. Amid uncertainty, focus on holistic profiles—GPA, tests, essays—remain key in meritocratic admissions.

This saga highlights higher ed's delicate balance: fostering access while safeguarding rights. As courts deliberate, universities stand resilient.

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Dr. Nathan HarlowView full profile

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Driving STEM education and research methodologies in academic publications.

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Frequently Asked Questions

📊What is the Trump college data mandate?

The mandate, via the Admissions and Consumer Transparency Supplement (ACTS) to IPEDS, requires U.S. four-year colleges to submit disaggregated admissions data including race, sex, test scores, GPAs, and aid for 7 years back to 2019.

🗳️Which states joined the lawsuit?

17 states led by Massachusetts AG Andrea Joy Campbell: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin.

🔍What specific data does ACTS require from colleges?

  • Applicant/admit/enrollee counts by race/sex/test/GPA/income.
  • Aid details, graduation rates disaggregated.
  • Retroactive to 2019 for selective admissions institutions.

🔒Why do states argue it violates student privacy?

Granular breakdowns risk re-identifying students via small cells, conflicting with FERPA protections on PII. No privacy assessment done; data could be public.

⚖️What was the judge's ruling in the case?

U.S. District Judge F. Dennis Saylor IV issued a temporary restraining order on March 13, 2026, blocking enforcement and deadlines pending hearings.

📈How does this relate to the affirmative action ban?

Post-2023 SFFA ruling, admin seeks to verify no race use in admissions, citing enrollment drops at elites (e.g., Harvard Black freshmen 18% to 12%).

📋What is IPEDS and why the controversy?

IPEDS collects aggregate postsecondary data since 1986 for policy/stats. ACTS repurposes it for enforcement, violating neutral mandate per lawsuit.

What burdens do colleges face?

250+ hours/response for many; retroactive untracked data; rushed templates. Risks fines, funding loss, diverted resources from core missions.

Does it violate FERPA directly?

Not explicitly sued under FERPA, but creates conflicts—small cells reveal PII; no assessment. Institutions fear dual compliance issues.

💡What should universities do next?

Monitor case, bolster data systems, review admissions for compliance, engage associations like AAU. Prepare for potential phased transparency.

🔮What's the future outlook for this policy?

Ongoing litigation may vacate ACTS; could spur state laws or voluntary reporting. Signals intensified federal scrutiny on higher ed DEI/admissions.
 
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