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15 states sue Trump administration to block school mental health funding cuts
The states say the $1 billion program served nearly 775,000 students and that the administration is trying to end the grants despite a court order.
On Friday, a coalition of 15 states sued the administration of President Donald Trump to block the planned termination of federal school-based mental health grants scheduled for the end of this month.
Congress allocated $1 billion in 2022 for the Mental Health Service Professional Demonstration Grant Program following the Uvalde, Texas school shooting, backed by Republican U.S. Senators John Cornyn, Susan Collins, and Thom Tillis.
Trump administration officials claimed the grants conflicted with administration priorities, defying a court order from last July that protected the program serving nearly 775,000 students nationwide.
Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell stated the administration lacks power to arbitrarily revoke services; the new filing addresses gaps in the prior court order that could permit funding termination.
Rhode Island Attorney General Peter F. Neronha emphasized that grants help students cope with loneliness and violence; the Department of Education did not respond to requests for comment on the termination plan.