Three white female executives in the New York Education Department were demoted in favor of less-qualified people of color, a $90million suit launched by the women claims.

The longtime officials say they were unfairly targeted as part of the department's crusade against 'toxic whiteness' through its controversial racial equity plan.

Lois Herrera started at the DOE in 1986 as a guidance counselor and worked her way up to lead its Office of Safety and Youth Development.

In the suit filed Tuesday, she claims she saw the culture shift when Mayor Bill de Blasio appointed Richard Carranza as the chancellor of NYC's public schools in April 2018.

Lois Herrera is one of three women suing the New York Education Department for $90m over claims they were demoted in favor of less-qualified people of color

By June the Harvard graduate - who was recognized in 2017 for contributing to the 'safest year on record' in city schools - was abruptly removed from her position and demoted three levels.

The experienced official was replaced by Mark Rampersant, an African American man who was 'demonstrably less qualified,' according to the suit.

Rampersant was reportedly ushered in without so much as a formal search or interview process.

The suit says Richard Carranza (pictured with Mayor Bill de Blasio) instituted an anti-white regime when became chancellor of public schools in March of 2018

Herrera claims she was left embarrassed and 'forced' to attend Rampersant's promotion ceremony.

Her belongings were reportedly stuffed into boxes and stashed under a stairwell before she was transferred to an office in the Bronx.

Herrera was never given any reasoning for her demotion but claims she was told, 'If you've been with the DOE for more than 20 years, you are responsible for the problem,' by LaShawn Robinson, the then executive director of the DOE's Office of Equity and Access.

Robinson, who is black, reportedly told white attendees at a training seminar they 'had to take a step back and yield to colleagues of color' and 'recognize that values of white culture are supremacist'.

When Herrera was replaced by Rampersant, another plaintiff Jaye Murray was told that she would now report to him.

The move was seen as a demotion for Murray, who was the executive director of the Office of Counseling Support Programs and had been with the DOE since 2006.

Jaye Murray was the executive director of the Office of Counseling Support Programs and had been with the DOE since 2006 when she was abruptly demoted

Robinson justified the move as a move 'in a different direction', the suit claims.

It wasn't long before Murray was demoted another two levels, the documents claim.

A third woman, Laura Feijoo, claims Carranza went out of his way to promote a black woman who was far less qualified over her.

When Carranza was appointing his first deputy chancellor, he tapped Cheryl Waston-Harris without interviewing Feijoo, who was her boss.

Feijoo was in charge of supervising all 46 of the DOE superintendents, whereas Watson-Harris didn't have the necessary license to be first deputy chancellor.

Carranza went out of his way to create a 'transition period' so the under-qualified worker could obtain it, the filing says.

Feijoo was then demoted further when nine employees were promoted into a new role of 'executive superintendent'.

None of the new executive superintendents were white, and all were now above Feijoo.

A third woman, Laura Feijoo (pictured), was replaced by one of her delegates who didn't have the correct paperwork to take the role, the file says

The three executives declined to comment through their lawyer Davida S. Perry.

But in the filing, Perry wrote: 'Under Carranza’s leadership, DOE has swiftly and irrevocably silenced, sidelined and punished plaintiffs and other Caucasian female DOE employees on the basis of their race, gender and unwillingness to accept their other colleagues’ hateful stereotypes about them.'

A fourth white DOE employee with similar claims may also file a similar suit.

In a statement, Perry told The New York Post: 'As opposed to being assessed by their results or their actions, our clients were removed from their respective responsibilities and replaced by less qualified (or not qualified) individuals due to their gender and the color of their skin,' said Perry in a statement.

The Department of Education responded to The Post on Tuesday with the same statement it gave two weeks ago when asked about the race issue.

'We hire the right people to get the job done for kids and families, and these claims of 'reverse racism' have no basis in fact,' it repeated.

Department insiders say that under Chancellor Richard Carranza, who was appointed by Mayor Bill de Blasio, administrators are subjected to endless lectures and workshops critiquing 'whiteness' and attempting to root out 'white supremacy' in the workplace.

The DOE has contracted Pacific Educational Group Inc for $775,000 to run workshops about racism in the workplace, paying out $582,603 so far.

The company defines 'whiteness' as: 'The component of each and every one of ourselves that expects assimilation to the dominant culture.'

'There's been a lot of discussion of white supremacy and how it manifests in the workplace, conversations about race, and looking at how the white culture behaves,' one white executive who received the training told the Post.