Libraries are cutting back on staff and services after Trump's order to dismantle small agency
Libraries across the United States are cutting back on ebooks, audiobooks and loan programs after the Trump administration suspended millions of dollars in federal grants as it tries to dissolve the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
Federal judges have issued temporary orders to block the Trump administration from taking any further steps toward gutting the agency. But the unexpected slashing of grants has delivered a significant blow to many libraries, which are reshuffling budgets and looking at different ways to raise money.
Maine has laid off a fifth of its staff and temporarily closed its state library after not receiving the remainder of its annual funding. Libraries in Mississippi have indefinitely stopped offering a popular ebook service, and the South Dakota state library has suspended its interlibrary loan program.
Ebook and audiobook programs are especially vulnerable to budget cuts, even though those offerings have exploded in popularity since the COVID-19 pandemic.
'I think everyone should know the cost of providing digital sources is too expensive for most libraries,' said Cindy Hohl, president of the American Library Assn. 'It's a continuous and growing need.'
President Trump issued an executive order March 14 to dismantle the IMLS before firing nearly all of its employees.
One month later, the Maine State Library announced it was issuing layoff notices for workers funded through an IMLS grant program.
'It came as quite a surprise to all of us,' said Spencer Davis, a library generalist at the Maine State Library who is one of eight employees who were laid off May 8 because of the suspended funding.
In April, California, Washington and Connecticut were the only three states to receive letters stating the remainder of their funding for the year was canceled, Hohl said. For others, the money hasn't been distributed yet. The three states all filed formal objections with the IMLS.
Rebecca Wendt, California state library director, said she was never told why California's funding was terminated while the other remaining states did not receive the same notice.
'We are mystified,' Wendt said.
The agency did not respond to an email seeking comment.
Most libraries are funded by city and county governments, but receive a smaller portion of their budget from their state libraries, which receive federal dollars every year to help pay for summer reading programs, interlibrary loan services and digital books. Libraries in rural areas rely on federal grants more than those in cities.
Many states use the funding to pay for ebooks and audiobooks, which are increasingly popular, and costly, offerings. In 2023, more than 660 million people globally borrowed ebooks, audiobooks and digital magazines, up from 19% in 2022, according to OverDrive, the main distributor of digital content for libraries and schools.
In Mississippi, the state library helped fund its statewide ebook program.
For a few days, Erin Busbea was the bearer of bad news for readers at her Mississippi library: Hoopla, a popular app to check out ebooks and audiobooks, had been suspended indefinitely in Lowndes and DeSoto counties due to the funding freeze.
'People have been calling and asking, 'Why can't I access my books on Hoopla?'' said Busbea, library director of the Columbus-Lowndes Public Library System in Columbus, a majority-Black city northeast of Jackson.
The library system also had to pause parts of its interlibrary loan system allowing readers to borrow books from other states when they aren't available locally.
'For most libraries that were using federal dollars, they had to curtail those activities,' said Hulen Bivins, the Mississippi Library Commission executive director.
The funding freeze came after the agency's roughly 70 staff members were placed on administrative leave in March.
Attorneys general in 21 states and the American Library Assn. have filed lawsuits against the Trump administration for seeking to dismantle the agency.
The institute's annual budget is below $300 million and distributes less than half of that to state libraries across the country. In California, the state library was notified that about 20%, or $3 million, of its $15-million grant had been terminated.
'The small library systems are not able to pay for the ebooks themselves,' said Wendt, the California state librarian.
In South Dakota, the state's interlibrary loan program is on hold, according to Nancy Van Der Weide, a spokesperson for the South Dakota Department of Education.
The institute, founded in 1996 by a Republican-controlled Congress, also supports a national library training program named after former first lady Laura Bush that seeks to recruit and train librarians from diverse or underrepresented backgrounds. A spokesperson for Bush did not return a request seeking comment.
'Library funding is never robust. It's always a point of discussion. It's always something you need to advocate for,' said Liz Doucett, library director at Curtis Memorial Library in Brunswick, Maine. 'It's adding to just general anxiety.'
Lathan writes for the Associated Press.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Upturn
4 minutes ago
- Business Upturn
'He Just Greenlit Elon's AI Takeover': Wall Street Icon Says Trump's New Order Quietly Empowers Musk's Rise in the Machine Economy
BALTIMORE, June 01, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Former hedge fund manager Enrique Abeyta believes the most important AI story in America isn't happening inside a government lab or Silicon Valley headquarters… It's happening inside Tesla. Abeyta explains in his recent briefing, that thanks to a recent executive order from President Trump, Elon Musk now has a green light to deploy it — at national scale. 'Trump just cut the red tape,' says Abeyta. 'And Musk is the one most ready to move.' Trump Signs. Musk Accelerates. Dojo — Tesla's in-house AI training system — is now one of the fastest-developing AI platforms in the world. Built from scratch after Nvidia chip shortages, it's already outperforming commercial processors by a factor of six. Fueled by Tesla's real-time video data — 160 billion frames a day — Dojo doesn't just train AI. It teaches machines how to operate independently in the real world. By June 1st, Tesla will roll out its first robotaxi — with no steering wheel, no pedals, and no driver. The Executive Order That Changed the Game Last month, President Trump signed 'Removing Barriers to American AI Innovation,' a sweeping order to clear federal restrictions on domestic AI development. Within days, companies aligned with Dojo's architecture were reportedly 'expecting to receive billions of dollars from the Trump administration.' Abeyta sees this as the true start of the machine economy — where AI no longer waits for approval, and real-world deployment becomes the new battleground. 'Musk is deploying physical AI faster than anyone,' he says. 'And Trump just gave him the air cover to do it without interference.' Musk Has the Tech. Trump Cleared the Map. What we're witnessing, Abeyta says, isn't a partnership — it's a convergence. Musk built the system. Trump removed the guardrails. And now, for the first time, a private company is building the command layer for how machines see, move, and act in physical space — at scale. About Enrique Abeyta Enrique Abeyta is a former hedge fund manager who spent over two decades tracking capital flows and strategic realignments across markets and government. After managing nearly $4 billion in institutional capital, he now leads Breaking Profits, a research outfit focused on the systems, people, and policies quietly reshaping the future of America's economic landscape. Media Contact:Derek WarrenPublic Relations ManagerParadigm Press Group Email: [email protected]


Business Upturn
4 minutes ago
- Business Upturn
Musk Builds It. Trump Unleashes It. Wall Street Legend Says Dojo Is the First Real Test of the America First AI Doctrine
WASHINGTON, June 01, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — What if the most powerful AI system in the world wasn't built in a lab… but in a car factory? And what if the U.S. government was already positioning it as a strategic national advantage? According to former hedge fund manager Enrique Abeyta's recent briefing, that's exactly what's happening with Dojo, Elon Musk's custom-built AI training platform — a system now directly aligned with President Trump's push to eliminate barriers for American AI innovation. 'Musk didn't wait for permission. Trump just made it legal to move even faster,' Abeyta says. The Private Project With a Public Mandate Dojo was born when Musk hit a wall with Nvidia's chip supply chain. Instead of waiting, he built his own chip — one now said to be 6x more powerful than Nvidia's most popular processor. Fueled by 160 billion frames of visual data daily from Tesla's fleet, Dojo is training itself to operate in the physical world — with no human in the loop. On June 1st, Musk is expected to deploy it at scale with Tesla's first robotaxi: no wheel, no pedals, no driver. Trump Clears the Runway Last month, President Trump signed an executive order titled 'Removing Barriers to American AI Innovation.' The goal: fast-track domestic AI systems that can compete globally — especially against China. Dojo fits the criteria. One of Musk's key infrastructure partners is now 'expecting to receive billions of dollars' in federal support tied to the initiative. This isn't just a Tesla story anymore — it's a White House-backed acceleration plan for real-world AI control. Enrique's Take: 'This Is What Strategic AI Looks Like' Abeyta believes we're now seeing the merger of visionary tech with presidential willpower — a rare alignment where speed, sovereignty, and national competitiveness all converge. 'Most companies are still talking. Musk is already deploying. And Trump is clearing every legal obstacle in his path,' Abeyta adds. About Enrique Abeyta Enrique Abeyta is a former hedge fund manager who spent 25 years following power shifts across capital markets, policy, and technology. After managing nearly $4 billion in institutional capital, he now runs Breaking Profits, a research platform focused on uncovering large-scale economic inflection points — especially where private enterprise and public policy collide. Media Contact:Derek WarrenPublic Relations ManagerParadigm Press Group Email: [email protected]

Yahoo
7 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Rev. Bauch retires after leading Peace United through era of change
Jun. 1—ROCHESTER — Rev. Paul Bauch doesn't remember the exact event at Peace United Church of Christ that people were protesting. It was likely something affirming an LGBTQ event — likely a perennial drag queen bingo event there. Protesters literally brought semiautomatic rifles to the front lawn of the church, he recalled. "We stood together," Bauch told his congregation Sunday. It was his last day as lead pastor at the church. His message was one of gratitude and reflection of the changes he saw over 23 years. However, Bauch stressed it was the congregation and not him that led the church to be a more open inclusive and changed institution. He recalled a protester yelling at him that he wasn't a pastor, he was an activist. "And what did you answer back?" "Amen," the congregation shouted with no hesitation. In his time at Peace United Church, Rev. Paul Bauch oversaw other major changes there. Some changes were literal physical improvements. A construction contractor, Bauch was quick to take the lead on construction projects he saw as helping the church. Those included renovation of the church's sanctuaries, adding balcony seating in one, renovation of the congregation hall, a new parking lot and then renovation and rebuilding after a fire in the church in 2022. However, it was the face and culture of the congregation Rev. Bauch also reinvigorated. In 2006, the church openly declared itself as being welcoming to people of all sexual orientations, gender identities, and gender expressions and affirmed its inclusion in the ministry. For Bauch, the decision was not a difficult one. "If you really look at the depth of what Jesus did, he stood up for the outcasts and the poor and people persecuted by the system," he said. It's that principle Bauch used to guide his decisions while leading the church. Bauch said it's the congregation's willingness to see the connection between that principle that has made the church the welcoming place it is today. That includes becoming a platinum sponsor of Rochester's annual Pride event. "You modeled for us how to listen and respond," said Peace United Rev. Linda Reynolds, during the midday farewell service there Sunday. Bauch said his biggest surprise in more than two decades leading the church was the willingness of the congregation to embrace change and try new things. "Never did I face, 'Oh, we have to be careful, oh, we can't change that,'" Bauch said. Lynn Alcock, Peace United church member, talked about Bauch's ability to include people. "It's just so important to Paul that everyone has a place," Alcock said. Bauch considered retiring after the church returned to in-person service following the COVID-19 pandemic. Then an intentionally set fire damaged the church in 2022 . Bauch stayed on board to help lead recovery and restoration efforts. "He brought us back to where we are today," said Brian Winters, a church member who served on the search committee that brought Bauch to Rochester from Chesterfield, Missouri, in 2002. The farewell service and lunch drew hundreds of people. A spillover crowd watched the proceedings from folding chairs in the hall and a video feed in the second sanctuary. The event also drew a former Chesterfield church member, Jan Bentheimer, to speak at the service. Rev. Kelly Gallagher, associate conference minister of the Minnesota Conference of the United Church of Christ, also attended. The church's other pastors also spoke and wished Bauch well. Bauch said the church is in good hands, not only because of the strong leadership, but because of the entire congregation's commitment to following a message of affirmation and love. "Everything we did went back to that message," he said.