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Wednesday, March 26, 2025

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Trump signs new executive order to change election rules; NC student loan borrowers could be left behind in Ed Dept. dismantling; Getting a read on SD's incarceration woes and improving re-entry; Nebraska LGBTQ+ group builds community with 'friend raiser.'

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'Textgate' draws congressional scrutiny. Trump policies on campus protests and federal workforce cuts are prompting lawsuits as their impacts on economic stability and weather data become clearer.

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Cuts to Medicaid and frozen funding for broadband are both likely to have a negative impact on rural healthcare, which is already struggling. Plus, lawsuits over the mass firing of federal workers have huge implications for public lands.

NV Sen. Rosen calls on Trump to backtrack federal funding freeze

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Friday, January 31, 2025   

The Trump administration this week reversed a decision to freeze federal loans and grants -- but only after it led to mass confusion among organizations and schools around the country, and a backlash from states, including Nevada.

The White House said the pause is needed to verify whether federal spending is in line with President Donald Trump's priorities.

Sen. Jacky Rosen, D-Nev., said she's been swamped with questions from nonprofits, service providers and community stakeholders, who depend on federal dollars to support a wide range of programs that help Nevadans. She called the president's action "reckless."

"My office has received hundreds of calls and emails from Nevadans who are rightfully concerned just about what this would mean for them, for their families, for their jobs," she said.

The National Council of Nonprofits filed a lawsuit against freezing federal funds. A federal judge also blocked the directive until a hearing this coming Monday. There's still some confusion about exactly what was rescinded -- the funding freeze, or the original memo from the Office of Management and Budget that outlined the freeze.

Rosen alleged that a decision to stop the flow of federal dollars, even temporarily, would have a direct impact on public safety by keeping funds from reaching law enforcement officers, firefighters and other first responders. She said these folks and others depend on this money for the tools they need to do "their jobs safely and protect communities effectively."

"Equipment like the emergency vehicles they travel in, the protective suits they put on, the helmets they were, the oxygen tanks that they carry so they can breathe fresh air while they save someone's life," she said.

Rosen is among those calling on Trump to permanently and fully rescind the executive order to freeze those federal funds.


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