WHAT WE’RE READING ELSEWHERE
As Donald Trump takes office a second time, the American Civil Liberties Union faces a tougher legal and political landscape than it did when it led the resistance to his first administration. Exhaustion and resignation among liberal activists and donors, a more conservative judiciary, and a more experienced and savvier cadre of people inside the second Trump administration will make the group’s battles more difficult. But ACLU Executive Director Anthony Romero predicted that activists and donors will come around as Trump begins to implement his policies this year. (Wall Street Journal — subscription)
A nonprofit-run app has become a lifeline for people in Los Angeles trying to track the path of the fires should they need to evacuate. Watch Duty, which relies on 200 volunteers and 15 full-time employees, has sometimes been more reliable than the official notification service. It has seen 2 million downloads since Jan. 7, and 14 million unique users over the past week, according to CEO John Mills, who said he set up the app in 2021 as a nonprofit because he has no wish to sell it and become a “disaster capitalist.” (New York Times)
Nonprofit clinics for low-income patients are being squeezed by a new law regulating what pharmaceutical companies can charge for certain drugs. Manufacturers sell those drugs at a discount to the clinics, and they must offer further discounts whenever they raise the price of the drugs above the rate of inflation. A 2024 law increased those “penalty” discounts so much that drug makers dropped their prices, wiping out the additional discounts for clinics. In response, some clinics have had to cut programs or switch patients to second-choice drugs, while some patients are paying considerably more out of pocket. (New York Times)
The Texas Supreme Court heard arguments Monday over whether the state’s attorney general can shut down a Catholic charity that provides aid to immigrants and poor people. Attorney General Ken Paxton has sought documents from Annunciation House, and ultimately its closure, but was thwarted by a lower court. The state argues that the charity harbors people who are in the country illegally and that religious protections do not confer immunity for violating immigration laws. The charity says the actions violate its religious freedom and that officials have failed to show that it conceals people from law enforcement. (Courthouse News Service)
A nonprofit that has opposed clean-energy measures, arguing they are a financial burden on minority households, has undisclosed ties to the fossil-fuel industry. The Energy Poverty Awareness Center, which last year helped kill a Maryland bill to ban natural gas in most new buildings, was launched with help from the Consumer Energy Alliance, most of whose members are “oil companies, gas utilities, and other firms that profit from fossil fuels.” An energy-policy researcher said the fossil fuel industry uses such groups as fronts “to obscure the harms this industry causes these communities.” EnPAC’s founder, former Baltimore Ravens player Gary Baxter, said it is an independent organization, and a spokesperson for CEA said the alliance’s early support of EnPAC was a “normal practice.” (Washington Post)
NEW GRANT OPPORTUNITIES
Your Chronicle subscription includes free access to GrantStation’s database of grant opportunities.
Archives: The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s Call for Proposals to Community-Based Archives will provide general operating support grants to community-based archives in the United States. The focus is on community-based archives that represent and serve communities marginalized due to oppression. These organizations gather and share materials as members of under-documented communities to preserve and celebrate their collective histories. Grants range from $25,000 to $100,000 over two years; application deadline is March 12.
The Outdoors: The National Park Trust’s Kids to Parks Day School Grants Program helps under-resourced U.S. schools and students to discover and explore parks, historic sites, public lands, and waters. Title I, pre-K through 12 classrooms in the U.S., including U.S. territories, are eligible to apply for grants of up to $1,000 for in-park experiences. Application deadline February 7.