Funding for prevention of teen pregnancy cut by Trump’s HHS : NPR

by Curtis Jones
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A LiFT workshop in the Navaho Nation in Arizona. The evidence-based course has teens bring a trusted adult with them to learn about relationships, safe sex and preventing pregnancy.

Hózhǫ́ Horizons


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Hózhǫ́ Horizons

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Last July, the Trump administration issued a notice to the dozens of organizations receiving Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program grants.

“Program materials are expected [to] reflect the immutable biological reality of sex, not radical gender ideology, and may not promote anti-American ideologies such as discriminatory equity ideology,” the document reads, listing five executive orders organizations needed to comply with to keep their grants. “Programs with such unauthorized content are not eligible for federal funding.”

Grantees scrambled to adapt to the new requirements. One of them, Healthy Futures of Texas, provides sexual health education in community centers, school districts, and juvenile justice and faith communities in San Antonio, Dallas, and the Rio Grande Valley in Texas.

“We had to essentially adapt and revise all of the already approved curricula to be in alignment with the executive orders — so that for us was 11 different programs that we adapted,” explains Ginger Mullaney, the organization’s president and CEO.

The process took months. “After all of that work, we were re-awarded and all of our programs have been deemed in compliance,” she says. “We have submitted progress reports thus far and our programs were still in alignment even up until recently — in November, we submitted another adaptation for a program and were approved.”

So two weeks ago, when the organization’s $2 million annual grant was canceled, effective immediately, Mullaney was stunned.

In fact, in late June, the federal Department of Health and Human Services canceled all but a dozen Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program grants, totaling $66 million for grantees across the country. Grantees included a wide range of organizations from public health departments and universities, to Planned Parenthood and Bethany Christian Services affiliates. The five-year grants had two years left to go.

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