Federal Update and More: PLEASE TAKE ACTION

March 26, 2025

Last night the NYS Council encouraged all members to begin weighing in with state lawmakers and with the Governor’s Office regarding the urgent need for a Contingency Fund for OASAS and for OMH, that will allow the Offices to mitigate and manage the crisis created by the termination of several important SAMHSA federal grant programs.  If you have not already done so, please take a few moments right now to go online and generate letters to your Assembly and Senate representatives, and to the Executive, requesting the Contingency Funds be established in the final state budget agreement.   Here’s the link you can use to generate letters:  https://nyscouncil.org/advocacy-action-center/ 

Right now and until I see definitive lists of specific Programs and Services that are in some way impacted by the terminations, I am going to share information with you that helps us to figure this out together but please wait for further instructions from each of the state agencies that are working to get clarity from SAMHSA and to identify the range of impacted services and the specific impact to providers.

First, below is a list OASAS used in January ’25 for all SAPT supplemental providers to give everyone instructions about vouchering.  the SAMHSA SAPT Block Grant Supplemental 1 & 2 are two of the grant programs being terminated as of 3/24/25:

  • Addiction Fellowship
  • Alumni Association
  • College Prevention Initiative – Downstate
  • Community Prevention and Intervention Project
  • Prevention Community Coalitions Round 2
  • Electronic Medical Record
  • Homeless Shelter In Reach
  • Outreach and Engagement Services (clinic model)
  • Street Outreach Round 2
  • Paid Prevention Internship Round 2
  • WISE/SBIRTTransitional Safety UnitsYouth Voices Matter
  • Collaboration with NYSED
  • Tribal Youth Clubhouses

On the OMH side, it is still not clear to me which specific CMHS Block Grant Supplemental Programs are impacted. The following SAMHSA federal grant programs are terminated as of 3/24/25.   I have attached two documents that will:  1) refresh your memory as to NYS uses of these funds (Report dated 2021 – attached),  and a Report that speaks to the range of OMH programs and services funded in part or in full by the grants ( report for the Legislature dated 2024 – attached).  Covid Mitigation Grant (B09SM085902 / 21B3NYCMHSC6)Covid Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act (CRRSAA) Grant (B09SM083990 / 21B1NYCMHSC5)American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) (B09SM085374 / 21B1NYCMHSC6)
Stand by for more information.

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 DAY OF ACTION:MAKE THREE CALLS TODAY (WEDNESDAY MARCH 26) TO SUPPORT 7.8% TARGETED INFLATIONARY INCREASE FORMENTAL HEALTH/SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER SERVICES IN FY 2025-26 STATE BUDGETAs the April 1 deadline for a state budget approaches, we urge all members to call  Governor Hochul’s office, Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie on Wednesday, March 26, 2025, to urge the final budget include a flexible 7.8% targeted inflationary increase (TII) for mental health and substance use disorder services. Budget negotiations continue around the clock so it is imperative we make our voices heard. 

ACTION NEEDED

1. Call Governor Hochul’s Office at (518) 474-8390.
2. Call Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins at (518) 455-2585.
3. Call Assembly Speaker Heastie at (518) 455-3791. 

SCRIPT

Good Morning/Afternoon. I am calling to urge you to ensure that the final state budget includes a 7.8% targeted inflationary increase for community-based behavioral health not-for-profits providing critical services and supports. This increase is needed to support rising inflationary costs for programs, and to support our valued workforce.

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(from the Congressional Progressive Caucus Center, 3/25/25)

Where things stand

Earlier this month, Congress funded the government through September 30 while giving the President new power to decide how taxpayer dollars are spent, taking resources away from Americans’ health care and education, and boosting funding for the Pentagon and mass deportations. A lot of ink has been spilled covering that issue, so I won’t rehash it here—but if you want a brass tacks summary, check out our last update, What the CR fight is really about.At the same time, President Trump and Elon Musk’s attacks on working families have continued, as have lawsuits challenging them. Below are a few examples of recent administration actions and their impacts: 
Social Security is being overwhelmed following Musk-mandated cuts. Callers face hours-long hold times, the agency’s website keeps crashing, homebound and homeless beneficiaries can’t set up direct deposits or verify their identity, and staff literally can’t get paper and pens for Social Security offices. DOGE has put veterans’ care in jeopardy. Cancer treatments have been cancelled, calls from veterans in crisis have been answered by staff without the training to handle their cases, and basic functions like sterilizing medical supplies and filling prescriptions have been put on the chopping block. Education plans could mean firing almost 300,000 teachers. As the administration works to (illegally) abolish the Department of Education, it’s also gearing up to end Title I grants. This Civil Rights-era program helps level the playing field for students in underfunded schools in low-income areas. This cut could force nearly 300,000 teachers out of classrooms nationwide.  
What’s next
With government funding out of the way until September, Congress can turn back to moving the President’s legislative agenda—risking millions of Americans’ access to Medicaid and food for kids to widen tax loopholes for billionaires and corporations. Check out our last update with more details on those plans. As a reminder: Congress plans to use a fast-track process called “reconciliation” to advance this agenda. You can find more details about that process here. For now, I’ll run through a couple of the biggest unanswered questions.
The House and Senate still need to pick a plan…
Last month, the GOP-run House and Senate passed budget resolutions to tee up the reconciliation process. However, the chambers did not approve the same budget resolution. Think of these budget resolutions like an outline. The House and Senate need to agree to an identical outline before they can start filling it out—and right now, there are a lot of differences between those outlines. You can read about those differences hereAre the chambers getting closer to a compromise product? Kind of. For example, Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) is now onboard with raising the debt ceiling as part of a reconciliation bill—a Trump priority and part of the House-approved proposal. Some of his colleagues, not so much, but we’ll see if that opposition holds if/when the President amps up the pressure. Notably, using reconciliation to raise the debt limit could force the GOP to get the package through Congress by its self-imposed deadline. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) announced this morning that the U.S. will default on its debts by August or September without congressional action. I’ll get into timeline questions more below, and you can find a refresher on the debt ceiling hereOn top of agreeing to exactly what they want to pass, congressional Republicans must deal with a hefty math problem. Reconciliation bills cannot increase the deficit after 10 years. So, if a policy increases the federal deficit without corresponding spending cuts, that policy must wind down or expire to avoid violating this rule. Why does this matter? The Trump tax package from his first term gave massive tax breaks to billionaires and corporations that are set to expire this year. Extending those tax breaks for the mega-rich will cost at least $4 trillion over 10 years—and the President wants to extend them permanentlyRepublicans in Congress know that making cuts deep enough to pass permanent tax giveaways and comply with reconciliation’s rules isn’t politically tenable, because it’s not possible to do without taking away people’s health care. Some Republicans are already uncomfortable with their leaders’ plans to kick people off Medicaid to pay for a decade of tax breaks for the wealthy—let alone permanent onesBut congressional Republicans have proposed a way to get around this $4 trillion-plus cost: change what “cost” means. They argue that because the expensive tax breaks are already in-place, extending them is not a new cost for the government—which, they claim, means it’s not a cost at all. And if it’s not a cost at all, they don’t have to make unpopular cuts to satisfy reconciliation’s rules. The Senate’s parliamentarian will decide whether this argument, often called the “current policy baseline,” passes muster under reconciliation’s rules. If she says no, Republicans could retool their plans, ignore her, or fire her—a rare move, but one with precedent. Either way, if Congress proceeds with this new approach to, well, math, it will be a lot easier to approve a gargantuan handout to billionaires and corporations—potentially in perpetuity. We’ll keep you posted on how this issue progresses. One more thing: if you’re confused by the idea that something with a $4 trillion price tag could suddenly be considered free, the New York Times published a series of metaphors to try and make this make sense. 
…and a plan to move their plan. 
GOP leaders now seem aligned on when they might agree to that compromise budget resolution/outline I mentioned earlier: the week of April 7. Beyond that, things get murky. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) has talked about getting a final bill to the President to sign by Memorial Day, while Senate Majority Leader Thune predicts July at the earliest. Some senators are placing their bets on fall. Again: if they want to raise the debt limit as part of this effort, they’re probably looking at an August or September hard deadline to do so. Is that possible? While your author doesn’t make predictions, I can offer some historical perspective. During the last Trump administration, Congress used reconciliation to give tax breaks to the rich—the same ones Republicans now want to extend before they expire. That tax package kicked off with a budget resolution that Congress approved on October 26, 2017. President Trump signed the final package into law on December 22, less than two months later. So, yes, it’s possible to move a reconciliation bill through Congress by Memorial Day (two months from now). That doesn’t mean it’s likely. First, the 2017 tax package was a lot narrower than what Congress wants to do now. Second, the 2017 package wasn’t paid for with corresponding cuts. This time, deficit hawks are insisting that it must be. Of course, if the “current policy baseline” argument discussed above wins the day, deficit hardliners could be less of a roadblock. Not to mention, we just saw some GOP lawmakers vote to advance the House proposal to raise the debt ceiling as part of reconciliation despite never supporting a debt limit hike in the past, and vote for a continuing resolution (i.e., a stopgap government funding bill) despite never voting for one previously. Positions seem more malleable this year than they used to be.Bottom line: comparing today’s reconciliation timeline to the 2017 tax package isn’t apples-to-apples, but it shows what’s possible—if optimistic. We’ll keep you posted on what Republicans’ legislative agenda ends up including, what lands on the cutting room floor, and the big moments to watch. While we wait for further information from OMH, I have attached two documents related to the OMH Community Mental Health Block Grant supplemental grants so you can get a feel for the breadth of impact that may be experienced by providers.