
Trump administration reportedly suspends $200m in grants from UCLA
'UCLA received a notice that the federal government, through its control of the National Science Foundation (NSF), the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and other agencies, is suspending certain research funding to UCLA,' Julio Frenk, the university chancellor, said in a letter to the campus. The move means 'life-saving research' will be defunded, he said.
'It is a loss for Americans across the nation whose work, health, and future depend on the groundbreaking work we do.'
Frenk did not say the value of the grants, but the Los Angeles Times reported that roughly 300 grants amounting to nearly $200m were suspended.
The federal government has moved to pull billions of dollars from prominent universities across the US after accusing the institutions of failing to adequately respond to antisemitism during pro-Palestinian protests, and referred some to the Department of Justice. In recent weeks, Trump administration has reached agreements with Brown University and Columbia University to restore funding and close investigations into the schools.
The agreement with Brown requires the institution to commit to nondiscrimination in admissions and programs, and allow the administration access to admissions data. Meanwhile, Columbia's controversial deal requires it pay more than $220m, expand its Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies, review Middle East curriculum and cut programs promoting 'unlawful efforts' related to diversity. Harvard remains in a legal fight with the federal government over its move to freeze billions in federal funds.
The news out of UCLA comes days after the school reached a nearly $6.5m settlement in a lawsuit by Jewish students and a professor who said the university allowed antisemitic discrimination to take place on campus during protests last year.
Earlier this week, the Department of Justice notified the University of California that its investigation found that UCLA's response to a protest encampment in spring 2024 was 'deliberately indifferent to a hostile environment for Jewish and Israeli students' and that students experienced 'severe [and] pervasive' harassment.
In his statement about the grant cancellations, Frenk said the university has taken steps to combat antisemitism, and ensure the school is safe and welcoming for all, including the creation of a new Office of Campus and Community Safety and an Initiative to Combat Antisemitism.
He also highlighted the university's history of research, including planetary scientists who search for asteroids that could pose a threat to Earth, a Valley Fever Center and the role researchers played in helping create the internet.
'This far-reaching penalty of defunding life-saving research does nothing to address any alleged discrimination,' Frenk wrote.
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