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12 Department of Health and Human Services grants terminated in Arkansas
12 Department of Health and Human Services grants terminated in Arkansas

Yahoo

time11-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

12 Department of Health and Human Services grants terminated in Arkansas

ARKANSAS (KNWA/KFTA) — Twelve Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) grants have been terminated in Arkansas. In late March, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced the changes, stating the department will be doing 'more with less.' HHS expects the changes will save $1.8 billion annually, but they also include major grant cuts nationwide, impacting the Natural State as well. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) received a $3 million NIH grant to study structural racism and healthcare access among older African American men. About $1 million remains unspent. The Arkansas Department of Health (ADH) received more than $365 million in CDC grants for various public health programs, but all of these grants have since been terminated. In total, about $202.9 million was spent and $162.3 million remained unspent. The Arkansas Department of Health received over $365 million in CDC grants, all of which have since been terminated. $260.2 million went to the 2019 Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity (ELC) program; $158.2 million was spent, leaving $102 million unspent. $64.6 million was granted for the Immunization and Vaccines for Children program; $26.6 million was used, with $38 million left unspent. $40.4 million was allocated to reduce COVID-19 disparities; $18 million was spent, with over $22 million unspent. DOGE planning to terminate more than $165M in grants to Arkansas services A spokesperson for ADH told KNWA/FOX24 that the grants were supplemental funding in immunizations, health disparities, and epidemiology and laboratory capacity (ELC) funding. 'We always understood these were temporary grants. The ADH is adjusting accordingly and is well equipped to serve Arkansans,' the spokesperson said. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

San Diego County loses $40M in funds just before new public health lab opens
San Diego County loses $40M in funds just before new public health lab opens

Yahoo

time04-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

San Diego County loses $40M in funds just before new public health lab opens

SAN DIEGO (FOX 5/KUSI) — San Diego County will not receive $40 million of public health funding promised by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), County Supervisor and acting Board of Supervisors Chair Terra Lawson-Remer announced Thursday in a news release. According to the release, the county was notified just last week that the CDC would pull back on multiple funding streams that were previously awarded through fiscal year 2025-2026. The impacted streams fall under the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity (ELC) program, the Immunization and Vaccines for Children program, and the COVID-19 Health Disparities Grant. Local research on HIV, suicide prevention impacted by NIH grant cuts Lawson-Remer said the county was awarded $174 million, but recently learned that $40 million will no longer be available 'due to the CDC's abrupt 30-day closeout period.' The announcement comes just weeks before the county was preparing to debut its new Public Health Lab in May. The project was first announced years ago, and is slated to open in Kearny Mesa. The $93 million, 52,000-square-foot project was designed to expand the county's response to transmissible diseases and reduce the need for out-of-county corporate labs. It was funded, in part, by local dollars. However, the county supervisor said the lab needs federal support to ensure the facility will be able to provide services as planned. 'We built the lab. We planned responsibly. We kept our end of the deal. Now the federal government is walking away from theirs — and San Diego families are the ones paying the price,' said Lawson-Remer. 'This isn't just bad policy — it's sabotage disguised as efficiency, and it leaves San Diego taxpayers holding the bill.' The grants were meant to support $17 million in capital costs as well as lab equipment. Over 90 public health positions have been impacted by the cuts, according to the release. A few of the programs now at risk due to the lack of funding, according to Lawson-Remer, are a mobile testing unit for community outbreaks, in-shelter flu and hepatitis vaccinations, public health data system and staffing for epidemiologists and health investigators. The loss of grant funding underscores the local need for public health services. The county announced a large hepatitis A outbreak in March 2017, with some cases traced back to November 2016. Due to the scale of the outbreak, the county declared a local health emergency on Sept. 1, 2017. Before it officially was declared over on Jan. 23, 2018, the outbreak resulted in nearly 600 cases and 20 deaths. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Nashville plans legal action against Trump admin — again — as cuts hit Health Department
Nashville plans legal action against Trump admin — again — as cuts hit Health Department

Yahoo

time28-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Nashville plans legal action against Trump admin — again — as cuts hit Health Department

Metro Nashville leaders are mulling joining other cities in another round of legal action against the Trump administration. This suit would be in response to nationwide Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cuts to grants introduced in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Metro Nashville Health Department could lose up to eight grant-funded staff positions due to the budget reductions, officials said. Last week, Nashville officials joined a Southern Environmental Law Center and the Public Rights Project lawsuit against the Trump adminstration's Inflation Reduction Act cuts. Metro Director of Law Wally Dietz announced the looming legal action during Nashville Mayor Freddie O'Connell's weekly media roundtable Friday morning. Dietz said he believes the claw-back is unconstitutional and called it a 'gigantic issue.' Dietz said Nashville is actively working with other cities that have been similarly affected and 'fully intends' on filing a lawsuit to protect those grants. 'There is a procedure for the administration to go through if they want to impound these funds,' Dietz said. 'They could invoke the procedures of the Impoundment Control Act of 1974 and go to Congress and try to get these monies rescinded. That's the lawful way to do it — the way they chose is not lawful or constitutional.' O'Connell, for his part, said he's less worried about further legal action making Nashville a bigger target for federal cuts than he is about Metro losing access to funds 'we have legal rights to.' 'Frankly, I don't know that it can get much worse,' Dietz added. 'That's not a flippant comment — that's an evaluation of where we stand with the federal government right now.' O'Connell told reporters Friday that these cuts directly affect the Metro Health Department, where up to eight grant-funded staff positions will be lost. O'Connell said it's the first example to date of federal cuts leading directly to Metro Nashville jobs being eliminated. O'Connell said two of those staffers, for example, were working on finding a use for more than 100 housing pods, also called pallet shelters, that Metro purchased for an estimated $1.2 million in 2021 using COVID relief funds. 'We're working to identify other Metro employees to help pick up the process and support identifying a partner to roll this out as emergency housing, but this will delay any use of those shelters,' O'Connell said. The cuts will also affect the Health Department's measles response. While O'Connell said there's yet to be a case reported in Davidson County, cases have begun popping up in Middle Tennessee. Joanna Shaw-KaiKai, Metro Health Department's medical services director, said Friday that the department has been preparing for a potential local increase in measles cases for several weeks. In part, that work's been running through a 'strike team' of department personnel which has been holding vaccination clinics at area middle schools. But the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity grant funding was one of three awards rescinded Tuesday, Shaw-KaiKai said. The Health Department has worked with Metro Finance in the time since to restore that work, but Shaw-KaiKai said any disruption is a significant one when over 60% of the health department's work is funded by grants. 'The abrupt end of the funding meant several days of planned vaccine clinics were lost,' Shaw-KaiKai said. 'Disruptions like these can cause real public health issues, as any one person who is unvaccinated is more susceptible to contracting and spreading the disease they would have otherwise been protected against.' Metro has already taken legal action against the Trump administration in the past week. Last Friday, Nashville signed on to a lawsuit led by the Southern Environmental Law Center and the Public Rights Project seeking to halt the Trump administration's federal funding freeze on Inflation Reduction Act and Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act grants. Nashville is one of six cities included in the suit, along with 11 nonprofits. Each of them have been awarded federal grant funds, either as direct recipients or as sub-grantees, through an act of Congress. For Nashville, the lawsuit covers about $14 million in awarded funds that are likely to be rescinded entirely. Most recently, the two nonprofits leading the suit filed a motion for preliminary injunction, a type of temporary relief that, if granted, preserves the status quo before any ruling on a final judgment. Dietz said he's optimistic about that motion succeeding, but also indicated that he's ready to escalate if the Trump administration ignores a judge's order — both by filing a motion of contempt and even by taking the case all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. 'This is a critical time in our country's history — we'll see where we go,' Dietz said. 'Will the court stand up and defend the law? Will the Supreme Court make it clear that the president does not have the authority to ignore lawful orders of federal courts? There will be a clash. It is already, in my opinion, a constitutional crisis because the Trump administration has determined they are not obligated to follow orders of federal courts.' Austin Hornbostel is the Metro reporter for The Tennessean. Have a question about local government you want an answer to? Reach him at ahornbostel@ This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Metro Nashville considers suing Trump admin following CDC grant cuts

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