WHAT WE’RE READING ELSEWHERE
The Trump Administration
The Trump administration aims to cut funding for university research in a multipronged attack on the culture and finances of higher education. The National Institutes of Health says it will cut billions of dollars in indirect costs for research, “such as facilities and administration, construction, maintenance, energy, and compliance,” including for projects already approved. As institutions scramble to see what work they can afford to continue, one association executive said university labs have already shut down and will continue to shut down. The administration said it is cutting waste and bloat. (Washington Post)
Some nonprofits, local governments, and others are still waiting for federal payments that were supposed to restart after two courts ordered the Trump administration to lift an across-the-board freeze on grants. Among the previously approved projects in limbo are an emergency shelter in Mississippi, wildfire prevention in Montana, and a fleet of electric school buses in Illinois. The grantees say they have received no explanation for the stoppage, but administration officials now say they are blocking payments on a grant-by-grant basis, pending reviews for irregularities. That approach has been permitted by a federal judge. (New York Times)
Schools around the country are figuring out how to respond to the administration’s orders to end their diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts. “More than 240 colleges … have eliminated some aspects of their programming, including diversity offices or race-based affinity groups,” by one count. The University of Akron has stopped funding an annual forum on race, although administrators also cited falling attendance in that decision, and the University of North Carolina at Asheville will no longer make a suite of diversity-focused classes a graduation requirement. Some higher-education institutions are laying low, waiting for the outcome of litigation over the orders, while some K-12 school systems, which are less reliant on federal funds, are openly defiant. (New York Times)
The Trump administration and its allies have levelled attacks on religious groups for helping migrants, reflecting an escalating attack from the White House on the role of nonprofits. Vice President JD Vance accused the Catholic Church of helping “illegal immigrants” in order to collect government grants, while right-wing provocateur Michael Flynn’s accusations of money laundering against Lutheran nonprofits was amplified by Elon Musk on X. Experts said it is a turnaround from decades of cooperation between the government and religious nonprofits that help the needy, including immigrants. They also said this new posture, combined with international-aid cutoffs, could imperil the human rights of religious minorities around the world that the United States has sought to protect. (Washington Post)
Most of the billionaire philanthropists who launched highly visible climate-related campaigns in the past few years have been quiet about the Trump administration’s work to gut environmental measures and promote fossil fuels. While Michael Bloomberg pledged to make up the United States’s contribution to the UN’s climate body after Trump pulled out of the Paris climate accord, Jeff Bezos, founder of the $10 billion Bezos Earth Fund, has made no public statement on Trump’s environmental policies. Neither has Bill Gates, Laurene Powell Jobs, or Marc Benioff. Some billionaire-funded foundations and tech companies reached for comment, however, said they were sticking with their plans to reduce their own emissions and support climate solutions. (New York Times)
In a first, President Donald Trump has removed all the members of the Kennedy Center’s board appointed by his predecessor and installed himself as chairman. The new board of Trump loyalists, in turn, has fired the federally funded nonprofit center’s president, Deborah Rutter, and named Richard Grenell as her interim replacement. Grenell served as the U.S. ambassador to Germany during the first Trump administration and has been a Fox News contributor. Of the takeover, Trump told reporters, “We’re going to make sure that it’s good and it’s not going to be woke.” (Washington Post)
Other News
A group of governments, philanthropies, and tech companies is launching an effort to harness artificial intelligence for the public good. The Current AI Foundation is being spearheaded by France, in collaboration with billionaire philanthropist Pierre Omidyar’s AI Collaborative, along with other donors, countries, and tech companies. It will seek to build A.I. models using public datasets currently held by governments, and ultimately to ensure that the technology is widely available and does not become a tool for a powerful few. The foundation, whose other backers include the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur, Patrick J. McGovern, and Ford foundations, starts with a $400 million endowment, and aims to raise $2.5 billion over five years. (Fortune — subscription)
Billionaire philanthropist Wendy Schmidt has bought a majority stake in one of the country’s premier documentary studios. Filmmaker Alex Gibney’s Jigsaw Productions, whose subjects have included Enron, Scientology, and state-sanctioned torture in the war on terror, will “broaden its editorial focus to include more stories on climate change and ocean health, topics that have been central” to Schmidt’s philanthropy. Gibney will continue to run the company, which has produced dozens of documentaries. Financial terms were not disclosed. (New York Times)
Charities and civic leaders in Los Angeles are mulling how best to spend the record $650 million-plus raised for wildfire recovery. Millions have already been spent, but many funders still do not have a clear idea of the most pressing needs. And once the emergency phase is over, foundations will need to parcel out the money over several years. One adviser with experience in fire recovery “encouraged foundations to see recovery as ‘a marathon of sprints’ and to hold on to enough money to help long term.” (Los Angeles Times)
NEW GRANT OPPORTUNITIES
Your Chronicle subscription includes free access to GrantStation’s database of grant opportunities.
Education: The Aim High grant competition, funded by New York Life Foundation and administered by the Afterschool Alliance, supports out-of-school time programs across the United States that prepare middle school students for success. In 2025, a total of 30 grants worth $1.8 million will be awarded to after-school, summer, or expanded learning programs serving middle school youth living in under-resourced communities. Grants of $20,000 or $100,000; application deadline March 7.
Financial Planning: The Foundation for Financial Planning provides annual grants to community-based and national nonprofit organizations for programs linking volunteer financial planners to people in need. Eligible programs must engage Certified Financial Planner professionals as volunteers, include one-on-one engagements between financial planner volunteers and pro bono clients, and help people in need of financial guidance or in a financial crisis who are underserved by the market and couldn’t ordinarily access quality, ethical advice. Grants range from $5,000 to $40,000; application deadline April 30.