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The Trump administration this week moved to terminate roughly $600 million in public health grants directed to four Democratic-led U.S. states — California, Colorado, Illinois and Minnesota — part of a broader push that officials instructed agencies to claw back more than $1.5 billion in federal grants across the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Transportation.
Targeted programs include HIV and sexually transmitted infection surveillance and prevention projects (for example a $1.1 million Los Angeles County behavioral surveillance project and community prevention funds for the Los Angeles LGBT Center), research grants (including a $7.2 million American Medical Association award and a $5.2 million Chicago hospital project), and transportation and climate adaptation grants such as funding for electric vehicle chargers and translating commercial driver’s license tests.
Administration officials say the grants “no longer reflect” agency priorities and have cited concerns about DEI and gender-affirming care; critics say the moves are politically motivated.
States and affected organizations said they had not received formal notices and plan legal challenges; courts previously blocked similar funding restrictions.
Public health experts warn the terminations could weaken outbreak detection and services for vulnerable populations.
















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