The full UNC Board of Governors met today in Winston-Salem, one day after a committee voted to eliminate diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts at all 17 campuses.
And while the full Board will take up the DEI vote at its next meeting in May, the Board did cast a final vote on a policy to increase civic literacy at all 16 of its public university campuses.
The Foundations of American Democracy requirement mandates that college students take classes that include historical texts from the Declaration of Independence to Martin Luther King鈥檚 "Letter from Birmingham Jail" in order to graduate from any public university in North Carolina.
The policy, which a UNC Board of Governors committee has been discussing since January, passed unanimously through the board鈥檚 consent agenda.
That discussion stands in stark contrast to how the DEI policy has moved through the Board. It was added to a committee agenda very late the day before the committee met, and then passed in less than four minutes, with no discussion at all.

The 鈥淓quality Within the University of North Carolina鈥 policy replaces a 2019 mandate that required all university campuses to have diversity, equity and inclusion reporting initiatives, and in some cases, sizable staffs.
The new policy will likely lead to the elimination of all the UNC System鈥檚 DEI offices, and affect numerous positions and initiatives. Several student groups have spoken out against the policy, and over .
At the full board meeting today, BOG members and UNC System President Peter Hans made no public comments about the policy.
Since he became system president in 2020, Hans has made it a point to answer questions from the media after UNC Board of Governors meetings. But after this meeting concluded, he declined to answer questions on the record from 深夜福利 or other media outlets, and instead issued a written statement.
鈥淭he University of North Carolina will continue serving students of all backgrounds and beliefs,鈥 Hans鈥 statement reads. 鈥淭here is broad and deep commitment to that goal, and support for the UNC System鈥檚 longstanding efforts to reflect the diversity of North Carolina.鈥
鈥淲e have well-established laws and policies that prohibit discrimination, protect equal opportunity and require a safe and supportive learning environment for all students,鈥 Hans' statement continues. 鈥淲e will uphold those responsibilities.鈥
Other board of governors members, including Chair Randy Ramsey, also did not make themselves available for comment. Ramsey also issued a written statement.
鈥淲elcoming students from all backgrounds makes our universities better and stronger,鈥 Ramsey鈥檚 statement reads. 鈥淣orth Carolina is a diverse state, and our public universities belong to everyone. That means we cannot require everyone to think the same way about race, gender or any other challenging topic.鈥
The full Board of Governors will meet again in late May in Raleigh. If the policy change is passed then, it will become final and effective immediately.