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US agrees to stop using race and gender in highway and transit contracts

The Trump Administration announced on Wednesday that it had agreed to stop the U.S. Transportation Department from considering race or gender in awarding federal highway and transportation project funding for small businesses.

In September, a judge in Kentucky ruled a federal program enacted by the U.S. government in 1983 that treated businesses owned and operated by racial and ethnic minorities as presumptively disadvantaged in order to qualify for funding was in violation of the U.S. Constitution’s equal protection guarantee.

In a court document, the Transportation department stated that "the program's use of presumptions based on race and gender is unconstitutional."

The Department previously defended its policy by claiming that it sought to rectify past discrimination. However, they have reevaluated their position after considering factors such as the Supreme Court decision in 2023 on an affirmative-action case.

U.S. District judge Gregory Van Tatenhove, an appointee by former Republican President George W. Bush in Frankfort (Kentucky), said that the federal government could not classify people as a way to violate the U.S. Constitution's equal protection principles.

He relied on a

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that the U.S.

The law effectively banned affirmative action policies that were used to increase the number of Blacks, Hispanics and other minorities on American campuses.

In 2021, the program was reauthorized by then Democratic President

Joe Biden

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act is the signature legislation of the, which has set aside over $37 billion to this purpose. (Reporting and editing by Chris Sanders in Albany, New York. David Shepardson is based in Albany).

(source: Reuters)