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Judge grants preliminary injunction to pause $11 billion in public health cuts | California

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Dave Mason | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-05-16 16:40:00


A federal judge issued an indefinite freeze on the Trump administration’s plan to cut \$11 billion in public health funding, following a lawsuit filed by 23 states and the District of Columbia. Judge Mary McElroy ruled that the federal government overstepped its authority by terminating the funds, which supported programs like infectious disease control, immunization, and mental health services. She determined that Congress, not the Health and Human Services Department, had the authority to decide on such cuts. California co-led the lawsuit and praised the ruling, noting the state stood to lose over \$972 million without the challenge.

(The Center Square) – A federal judge Friday put an indefinite freeze on the Trump administration’s plan to terminate $11 billion in public health funding.

The U.S. District Court for Rhode Island granted a preliminary injunction in a lawsuit filed April 1 by the District of Columbia and 23 states, including California, Colorado, Nevada and Washington. The court on April 3 granted a temporary restraining order. Preliminary injunctions can last longer, until the court says otherwise.

In her ruling Friday, Judge Mary McElroy determined the federal government “clearly usurped Congress’s authority to spend and allocate funds” when it suddenly terminated $11 billion of public health grants on March 24. The lawsuit contends the grants were terminated with no advance notice.

The federal grants addressed everything from infectious disease outbreaks to immunization and mental and substance abuse services, McElroy said. “Without the funds, these programs could not continue.”

Congress instructed the Health and Human Services Department to spend various amounts of money in certain ways, McEloy said. She added Congress didn’t give the department the power to decide against spending the money.

“If Congress intended to charge HHS with such a determination, it would have done so at some point — like in June 2023, when it went line-by-line and rescinded some COVID-era funding but left other funding in place,” McElroy wrote in her ruling. She added states are likely to succeed in court on their argument supporting Congress on this point.

“The Court presumes that ‘Congress intends to make policy decisions itself’ rather than leaving those decisions to agencies,” McEloy said, citing the 2022 precedent West Virginia v. EPA. She cited other cases as well.

California co-led the coalition that is suing the U.S. Health and Human Services Department and its leader, Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 

California Attorney General Rob Bonta Friday praised the preliminary injunction and said the state would have lost more than $972 million if the cuts weren’t challenged.

“Critically, the court also noted that we are likely to succeed on the merits of our claims,” Bonta said in a news release.

Besides California, the other states filing the suit are Colorado, Rhode Island, Minnesota, Washington, Arizona, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon and Wisconsin. Plaintiffs also include the governors of Kentucky and Pennsylvania.

The post Judge grants preliminary injunction to pause $11 billion in public health cuts | California appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

The article primarily reports on a legal decision against the Trump administration’s action to cut $11 billion in public health funding, focusing on the perspective of the states and the judge’s ruling. While it provides factual details and citations, the tone and framing emphasize the criticism of the Trump administration’s move and highlight the states’ success in challenging it, which aligns more with a center-left viewpoint that generally supports government-funded public health programs. The absence of counterarguments or defenses from the administration and the positive language toward the injunction and plaintiff states suggest a subtle lean toward a center-left bias rather than strictly neutral reporting.

News from the South - Kentucky News Feed

Kentucky State Police takes to the skies in National Cruiser Contest

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www.wnky.com – WNKY Staff – 2025-06-30 12:49:00

SUMMARY: Kentucky State Police (KSP) has entered the 2025 Best Looking Cruiser Contest by the American Association of State Troopers, which lets the public vote for their favorite law enforcement cruiser photo. KSP’s entry features a 2024 Mustang GT, a 2024 Dodge Durango, and a Bell 407 helicopter, symbolizing their teamwork and tactical support from ground to sky. Governor Andy Beshear and KSP Commissioner Phillip Burnett, Jr. encourage Kentuckians to vote daily until July 11 to help KSP win again after placing in the top five for seven years and winning in 2021 and 2022. Voting is at surveymonkey.com.

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News from the South - Kentucky News Feed

Evening Forecast 6/28/2025

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www.youtube.com – FOX 56 News – 2025-06-28 22:17:59

SUMMARY: Tonight, showers across the area are fading, with only light sprinkles remaining in parts of Knox and Whitley counties. Most radar activity is ground clutter, not actual rain. Overnight will be partly cloudy and humid with patchy fog possible. Sunday’s highs will be in the mid-80s, with some southern spots reaching 90°. Showers and storms will redevelop in the afternoon and evening, continuing into Monday and Tuesday, especially as a cold front passes Tuesday. Drier and less humid weather arrives by midweek, with highs in the mid-80s. Warmer conditions near 90° are expected around the 4th of July.

Evening Forecast 6/28/2025

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Another round of afternoon storms on Sunday

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www.youtube.com – WLKY News Louisville – 2025-06-28 17:44:54

SUMMARY: Afternoon storms moved through the WLKY viewing area on Saturday, bringing brief downpours, gusty winds, and lightning, especially in southern Indiana. A severe thunderstorm warning briefly occurred in Harrison County but has since expired. Showers and storms are pushing east, with rain expected to taper off through the evening. Sunday will start dry but bring another round of scattered afternoon storms, similar to Saturday. A stronger front on Monday will bring more widespread rain and a chance of stronger storms by Tuesday morning. Cooler, less humid air is expected midweek, with a hot and dry 4th of July forecast.

WLKY meteorologist Eric Zernich Saturday evening forecast

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