Native American Heritage Month blog post
AIAN communities
Federal shutdown
Assault on agencies
A school bus driver, leaning out of his open window, smiling.
Education

American Indians and Alaska Natives (AIANs) represent a diverse and growing share of the U.S. population, with more than one-quarter being children under 17. Structural inequities leave AIAN families’ economic security at risk. Native families are more likely to suffer from food insecurity and health risks from lack of insurance coverage.

With its relentless attacks on basic needs programs, access to data, and economic equity, the Trump-Vance administration continues the legacy of the federal government’s historic failure to uphold its legal and moral obligations to Tribal Nations and Native communities. The federal shutdown exacerbates the problem. Read more →

 

 

SNAP funding will soon run out because of the government shutdown. In December 2024, SNAP had more than 42 million participants. In this group, nearly eight in 10 households have at least one member who is a child, an elderly adult, or a person with a disability.

Cutting SNAP benefits or tightening the rules to discourage more people from accessing them will only expose more families to food insecurity. These concerns are especially relevant as the economic storm clouds gather. Prospects of slower economic growth and higher food prices are mounting in the face of the Trump administration’s chaotic and harmful policies.

It doesn’t have to be this way →

Independent agencies were carefully designed by Congress to ensure those charged with safeguarding critically important public interests—like workers’ rights, product safety, or household financial security—would act to serve the public good, not the president’s political needs.

The Trump administration has been attacking independent agencies, taking unprecedented—and illegal—steps to politicize them. This will undermine the safety and well-being of workers, consumers, and the public. Congress must oppose this assault and defend the independence of these agencies. Read more

School bus driver employment is still almost ten percent lower than in 2019 but has increased modestly in the last year. This modest progress appears to be driven by growing wages for bus drivers—the hourly median wage for these workers grew 4.2% in the last year.

Fueled by pandemic relief funds, overall K-12 employment is above 2019 levels, but workers like bus drivers and custodians are still heavily impacted. The end of these relief funds, and Trump administration attacks on public education, threaten to reverse progress made in recent years. It doesn’t have to be this way →

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