Attorney General Neronha files motion to enforce court order to unfreeze federal funding

 

PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Attorney General Neronha today co-led a coalition of 23 attorneys general in filing a motion for enforcement of their ongoing lawsuit against President Trump over his administration’s funding freeze. The freeze would put an indefinite pause on the majority of federal funding and financial assistance, jeopardizing vital programs that support families, promote public safety, and provide essential services to communities nationwide.

 

Citing evidence of ongoing disruptions impacting disbursements to states, and federal funds that remain blocked under the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and Infrastructure, Investment, and Jobs Act (IIJA) despite the court’s Temporary Restraining Order (TRO), the coalition also seeks to enforce the TRO to require the Trump Administration to disperse these funds. The motion further highlights the harm states face if funds under the IRA and the IIJA are not allocated as required by statute.

 

“As long as this Administration continues to break the law, we will continue our fight to uphold it,” said Attorney General Neronha. “When Judge McConnell granted our TRO last Friday, he ordered the resumption of all federal funding that had been previously severed by the Administration’s new OMB policy. And yet, since then, states and federal funding recipients across the country have reported trouble accessing their congressionally allocated funds. These lingering funding pauses are not coincidental. So let me be as crystal clear as Judge McConnell’s order: we’re not interested in playing these games, especially when it comes to funding programs that Americans rely on to survive and thrive.”

 

Due to ongoing disruptions impacting disbursements to states despite the court’s TRO, efforts that bolster clean energy investments, transportation, infrastructure, and ensure critical health care, among others, have been put at risk. This includes some Brown University public health research endeavors funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). One project researching dementia care was scheduled for renewal review with the NIH on February 3, but that morning, NIH notified Brown that they were cancelling the meeting to review Brown’s renewal application. Other ongoing research at Brown that relies on federal funding includes projects to improve children's nutrition and to prevent coronary heart disease.

 

Without access to federal financial assistance, many states could face immediate cash shortfalls, making it difficult to administer basic programs. For example, the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) has several projects which rely on federal funding, including grants that support local farmers, improve access to fresh and local produce, and provide food access for underserved, low-income communities in Rhode Island. If its funding continues to stay frozen, DEM cannot administer these programs, pay their contractual obligations, or support payroll for a number of staff.

 

This lawsuit is led by Attorney General Neronha and the attorneys general of California, New York, Illinois, Massachusetts, and New Jersey. Joining the lawsuit are the attorneys general of Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia.

 

A federal judge is blocking parts of President Trump's executive orders targeting diversity, equity, and inclusion in the federal government. On Friday, the judge halted Trump's orders to cancel federal contracts concerning DEI, and his order to make government contractors prove they don't use DEI practices. The judge's injunction does not block the Department of Justice from making lists of companies and universities to investigate.        Hamas is releasing another set of human remains after Israel demanded they hand over the body of a mother taken hostage. Hamas released four bodies on Thursday, but Israel was outraged when the remains of Shiri Bibas were not among them. On Friday, the leader of Hamas said Bibas' remains have now been given to Israel.        The Supreme Court says it will prevent President Trump from firing the head of a top watchdog agency for now. Trump has been trying to fire Hampton Dellinger, who leads the Office of Special Counsel, but so far has been blocked by lower courts. On Friday, the Supreme Court neither granted nor denied Trump's request to fire Dellinger, instead saying they're choosing not to act because lower court proceedings are moving quickly.        The Trump administration is reversing its decision to make major cuts to the World Trade Center Health Program. The program provides medical treatment to over a-hundred-thousand first responders and survivors of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Officials say they're reinstating research grants that had been cut, and employees who were fired will be allowed to return to their jobs.        White House officials say federal aid for the Los Angeles wildfires will come with strings attached. In an interview with Politico, Trump envoy Richard Grenell said "The federal response is mostly money and so we are going to have strings on the money that we give to California." Grenell didn't specify what the conditions would be, but did say the California Coastal Commisison, which protects the state's coastlines, should be "defunded."        Hackers have made away with one-point-five-billion-dollars in the largest crypto heist in history. Bybit, a major cryptocurrency exchange, announced the news Friday. The hackers compromised an offline storage system, and the stolen funds were quickly transferred and liquidated through various platforms.