WASHINGTON 鈥 President Donald Trump began sketching a road map Friday for dismantling the Education Department, with other agencies taking over responsibility for federal student loans and programs serving students with disabilities.
The executive order Trump signed Thursday to do away with the department did not offer a timeline or instructions, but his administration appears poised to carve away all but the department鈥檚 most vital operations.
The Republican president said during a White House event that student loans will be handled by the Small Business Administration, and "it will be serviced much better than it has in the past." He also said programs involving students with disabilities would be shifted to the Department of Health and Human Services.
The decisions drew blowback from advocacy groups that fear disruptions will be inevitable. The Small Business Association announced Friday it will cut its staff by 43%, raising questions about its ability to take on the Education Department's $1.6 trillion loan portfolio.
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President Donald Trump holds up a signed executive order Thursday in the East Room of the White House in Washington.
"This can only result in borrowers experiencing erratic and inconsistent management of their federal student loans," said Jessica Thompson, senior vice president of the Institute of College Access and Success. "Errors will prove costly to borrowers and ultimately, to taxpayers."
Trump's executive order claimed the student loan portfolio is too big for the Education Department to manage. After the SBA cuts, however, it will be left with fewer than 4,000 employees 鈥 about the size of the Education Department before it was cut in half by the Trump administration.
Education Secretary Linda McMahon said she will relocate the department鈥檚 core operations to other agencies and roll back federal regulations. In an opinion piece published Friday by Fox News Channel, she said abolishing the department 鈥渨ill not happen tomorrow,鈥 but she plans to pave the way.
鈥淲e will systematically unwind unnecessary regulations and prepare to reassign the department鈥檚 other functions to the states or other agencies,鈥 McMahon wrote.
The functions to be reassigned include the distribution of federal money to support low-income students and students with disabilities, the department鈥檚 management of student financial aid, civil rights enforcement and data collection, she wrote.
Some parent groups fear the reorganization could result in weaker protections for children with disabilities. The National Parents Union said families are anxious HHS might treat students' learning disabilities as medical issues and make them subject to insurance claims.
"Do we really think they are going to pay for our kid's reading interventions?" said Keri Rodrigues, the group's president. "Our children are not sick. They are not broken. They are not insurance claims."
Only Congress has the power to bring a full end to the Education Department. Republicans in Congress are planning legislation to do just that, though they face heavy opposition from Democrats.
On Friday, Democrats introduced a House resolution requesting Trump and McMahon turn over records related to the shutdown attempt. If the House Committee on Education and the Workforce takes action within 14 legislative days, it could go before the full House.

Secretary of Education Linda McMahon speaks to reporters Thursday at the White House in Washington.
Opponents say Trump's order will hurt students who rely on federal money and widen gaps between higher- and lower-achieving states. Some Democratic governors say it will lead to bigger class sizes and fewer after-school programs.
Trump denounced the department as a waste of taxpayer money, saying it is infected by liberal ideology. He said its power should be turned over to states, which he claims is a remedy for America's lagging education system.
Conservatives have long dreamed of closing the department, calling it an unneeded layer of bureaucracy that burdens local schools. Among those at the signing were the governors of several Republican states along with activists who say parents should have more power over their children's education.
The oddity of the task before McMahon, being responsible for the permanent closure of the department she leads, wasn't lost on her.
"This is not a routine mission," she wrote. "It is a transformation, driven by the clear will of the American people to return education to the states 鈥 and the decisive election of President Donald Trump."