A US Federal Judge Has Thrown A Lifeline To New York And Four Other States, Restoring Billions Of Dollars In Childcare Funding
In a significant development, a Manhattan-based judge has temporarily blocked the Trump administration from freezing billions of dollars in federal funding to New York and four other states. The ruling comes after the Department of Human Services announced it would be holding $10 billion in federal funding for three major programs - including thousands of dollars in childcare assistance that could impact hundreds of thousands of families.
The funding freeze, which was put in place by the Trump administration, was intended to give the department time to investigate potential fraud. However, state officials argued that the cuts could quickly disrupt vital services and that there was no concrete evidence to justify the action. Moreover, they claimed that the administration had singled them out unfairly.
New York and the four other Democratic-led states - which were all part of the lawsuit - have welcomed the temporary restraining order granted by US District Court Judge Arun Subramanian. The judge ruled that the states had demonstrated "good cause" to halt the funding freeze, paving the way for them to access the funds while the case continues.
As a result, federal officials are now required to lift any restrictions on the money, which represents around $3.1 billion in annual funding for hundreds of thousands of New York families alone. The ruling is set to remain in effect for up to 14 days unless extended.
In a significant development, a Manhattan-based judge has temporarily blocked the Trump administration from freezing billions of dollars in federal funding to New York and four other states. The ruling comes after the Department of Human Services announced it would be holding $10 billion in federal funding for three major programs - including thousands of dollars in childcare assistance that could impact hundreds of thousands of families.
The funding freeze, which was put in place by the Trump administration, was intended to give the department time to investigate potential fraud. However, state officials argued that the cuts could quickly disrupt vital services and that there was no concrete evidence to justify the action. Moreover, they claimed that the administration had singled them out unfairly.
New York and the four other Democratic-led states - which were all part of the lawsuit - have welcomed the temporary restraining order granted by US District Court Judge Arun Subramanian. The judge ruled that the states had demonstrated "good cause" to halt the funding freeze, paving the way for them to access the funds while the case continues.
As a result, federal officials are now required to lift any restrictions on the money, which represents around $3.1 billion in annual funding for hundreds of thousands of New York families alone. The ruling is set to remain in effect for up to 14 days unless extended.