News and a Note to Members

April 1, 2025

The NYS Council continues to push state and federal lawmakers to mitigate the significant damage associated with recent federal grant cancellations. And while this is still at the top of our priority list, this afternoon AG’s across the country, including AG Letitia James representing NYS, filed court documents in Rhode Island seeking Injunctive Relief and a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO).  In similar instances, the courts have moved fast but there are no guarantees.

Based on my recent communications with state agency representatives, they may have been advised by the Executive to keep detailed information about the grant terminations close as the state continues to pursue a legal remedy.  I realize how daunting it has been for impacted providers to try and crosswalk the very minimal information you were given to try and figure out specifically which Programs and Services that you operate are impacted by the recissions. I am still pressing for the state agencies to provide far more concrete information on precisely which Programs and Services are impacted.  We want an official list.

Yesterday I was informed by a colleague in D.C. that SAMHSA had sent a letter to the single state authority in states across the country on 3/27/25 advising the state that it had 30 days to appeal the grant terminations.  I have not seen the letter and I do not know what the state will do on this front.  Obviously the state is pursuing immediate legal relief but it is unclear if the state will pursue a dual strategy where it files an administrative appeal while it seeks relief and restoration in the courts.  I have explained to the leaders in both state agencies that an administrative 30 day appeal process with SAMHSA/HHS without an interim strategy ($$) is still too long for most impacted provider organizations to go without resources they need to preserve programs.

All of this makes the need for state budget Contingency Fund accounts and immediate assistance from the NYS delegation in Washington that much more important.  You need resources right now.

The NYS Council is committed to pursuing immediate assistance from federal and state leaders and we will continue to do everything we can to push for greater transparency from state leaders.

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STATE BUDGET UPDATE
A state budget ‘extender bill’ through April 3rd was enacted today and another is expected to be passed on Thursday.  The extender provides short-term funding to maintain the State’s obligated expenses through April 3rd including payroll, fringe and unemployment insurance trust fund benefit payments.

Budget negotiations have remained focused on Governor Hochul’s policy priorities, including proposals related to expanding involuntary commitment, school cell phone bans, a mask ban and reforms to the State’s discovery laws.  Last week, Speaker Heastie lamented (publicly) that negotiations were stuck on what the Assembly sees as policy issues.  In the past, the Assembly has been reluctant to address what it considers to be pure policy during state budget (money/funding) negotiations, however, it sounds like negotiations on funding items will be minimal until there is 3-way agreement between the Governor, Senate and Assembly on these policy issues.

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April 01, 2025

Trump’s cuts hit mental health programs aimed at the hardest to treat youth and adults

ETHAN GERINGER-SAMETH, Crain’s Health Pulse, 4/1 

Federal cuts to the state Office of Mental Health could take an axe to parts of Gov. Kathy Hochul’s signature mental health agenda aimed at reaching the children and homeless adults with the most severe untreated mental illness.

The office is facing a $27 million reduction in federal grants under the Trump administration’s sweeping $12 billion cut to pandemic-era public health funding that was announced last week, which included approximately $360 million to the state and another $100 million to the city Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. While relatively small compared to reductions to the Health Department, which is set to lose more than $300 million, the cuts could have a surgical impact on the state’s mental health system by targeting the entry point to services for the hardest to reach and treat New Yorkers

The cuts would impact youth and adult assertive community treatment or ACT teams, which provide intensive services to homeless residents cycling through hospitalization and arrest, Hochul announced on Friday. Crisis stabilization and residential beds and 988 call centers would also see a wind down.

The ACT and stabilization programs are key links in what Hochul has called the “continuum of mental health,” which is based on the idea that a range of services are needed to meet the myriad of needs of homeless people transitioning from street-based outreach to stable residential treatment. The program pairs individuals with a team of medical providers, nurses, peer support, vocational and substance use specialists, making them much less likely to be the subject of an involuntary police removal, another key plank of Hochul’s mental health and subway safety plan, which she has carried out with Mayor Eric Adams.

Providers say the cuts will be devastating at a time when the programs need to be expanded. There are roughly 1,000 people in the city on the waitlist for ACT services and another 300 waiting for a similar program known as intensive mobile treatment.

“Having that be cut would be pretty cataclysmic for those who are the most in need,” said Dr. Troy Boyle, who runs an ACT program with seven teams serving 476 individuals at the Institute for Community Living, based in the Financial District.

The lost services will ultimately cost the state more in emergency care and incarceration, Boyle said, though the Institute for Community Living has not received notice that its ACT contract has been affected by the cuts.

“What you would see is a lot of people reverting back to more acute services, like hospitalizations, ER visits,” he said.

On Friday, Hochul acknowledged that New Yorkers will be hurt, stating, “no State in the nation that has the resources to backfill these sweeping cuts.” She has not said whether the state would make up the funding gaps another way or let the programs take a hit.

Last year, Hochul allocated $9.6 million to youth ACT programs, which launched in the city in 2022 to serve children coming from long-term or repeated hospitalization who need a high level of care. While the funding is small in the scheme of the governor’s current $252 billion executive budget proposal for the new fiscal year, providers say the backing is critical to keeping children out of the hospital.

“It would be disastrous for our kids,” said Abby Jeffrey, Assistant Vice President of Behavioral Health and Wellness at JCCA, which runs the only youth Act program in Brooklyn, serving 20 children with a months-long waitlist. The Midwood-based nonprofit was approved for a $3 million contract in 2022, of which $2 million has been spent so far, according to records kept by the state Comptroller’s office. JCCA has also not heard that its contract, which expires in 2026, has been affected, Jeffrey said.

“There’s really no comparable program in the city and state that could fill the void if something were to happen to youth ACT,” she said.

The governor’s office did not respond to requests for comment about the total funding spent on ACT or how many federal dollars the Office of Mental Health receives.


FEDERAL FUNDING CHECKLIST
The National Council of Nonprofits (NCN) created a federal funding checklist to provide initial steps that nonprofits should engage in when they learn that their federal grant or contract is terminated by a federal agency. A lot will be determined by the particular agency and language in your award agreement, but the checklist linked below provides some high-level guidance on steps to take.