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Today โ€” 3 April 2025Main stream

GOP lawmakers question new spending on UW system, state corrections

2 April 2025 at 17:27

The heads of the Universities of Wisconsin system and the state Department of Corrections faced critical questions from Republican state lawmakers Tuesday over requests for new state funding.

The post GOP lawmakers question new spending on UW system, state corrections appeared first on WPR.

Before yesterdayMain stream

Trump administration suspends USDA grants for College of Menominee Nation in Wisconsin

31 March 2025 at 21:24

In the wake of sweeping federal funding cuts by the Trump Administration in recent weeks, U.S. Department of Agriculture grants that fund tribal colleges and universities in Wisconsin and beyond have vanished.

The post Trump administration suspends USDA grants for College of Menominee Nation in Wisconsin appeared first on WPR.

Wisconsin epilepsy research stalls without federal funds

25 March 2025 at 10:00

Scientists at UWโ€“Madison said they are struggling to advance study of a potential new epilepsy treatment after the Trump administration's pause on grant review meetings by the National Institutes of Health.

The post Wisconsin epilepsy research stalls without federal funds appeared first on WPR.

Sheโ€™s on a scholarship at a tribal college in Wisconsin. The Trump administration suspended the USDA grant that funded it.

Three people in silhouette in the door of a half-finished building
Reading Time: 4 minutes

This story was originally published by ProPublica.

Alexandria Ehlert has pursued a college education hoping to become a park ranger or climate scientist. Now sheโ€™s wondering whether sheโ€™ll ever finish her studies at College of Menominee Nation.

The scholarship that kept her afloat at the tribal college in Wisconsin vanished in recent weeks, and with it her optimism about completing her degrees there and continuing her studies at a four-year institution.

Ehlert is one of about 20 College of Menominee Nation students who rely on scholarships funded through a U.S. Department of Agriculture grant. The Trump administration suspended the grant amid widespread cost-cutting efforts. Unless other money can be found, Ehlert and the other scholarship students are in their final weeks on campus.

โ€œItโ€™s leaving me without a lot of hope,โ€ said Ehlert, a member of the Oneida nation. โ€œMaybe I should just get a warehouse job and drop school entirely.โ€

Many staff and students at the countryโ€™s 37 tribal colleges and universities, which rely heavily on federal dollars, have been alarmed by the suspension of crucial grants early in Donald Trumpโ€™s second presidency.

Even before he retook office, the schools essentially lived paycheck to paycheck. A 1978 law promised them a basic funding level, but Congress hasnโ€™t come close to fulfilling that obligation in decades. Today, the colleges get a quarter-billion dollars less per year than they should, when accounting for inflation, and receive almost nothing to build and maintain their campuses. Water pipes break frequently, roofs leak, ventilation systems fail and buildings crumble. Other than minuscule amounts of state funding in some cases and a smattering of private donations, tribal colleges that lose any federal funding have few other sources of income.

โ€œYou freeze our funding and ask us to wait six months to see how it shakes out, and we close,โ€ said Ahniwake Rose, president of the American Indian Higher Education Consortium, which lobbies for tribal colleges in Washington, D.C. โ€œThatโ€™s incredibly concerning.โ€

At least $7 million in USDA grants to tribal colleges and universities have been suspended, Rose said. The schoolsโ€™ concerns have been magnified by a lack of communication from federal agencies, which she attributed partly to many federal workers being laid off as the Trump administration has made across-the-board cuts to the federal bureaucracy.

Staff at the College of Menominee Nation were seeking reimbursement for $50,000 spent on research and other work conducted in January, when a federal website indicated a grant from the USDA had been suspended. It was a technical issue, they were told when they first reached someone at the agency, and they needed to contact technical support. But that didnโ€™t solve the problem. Then a few days later the department told the college to halt all grant activity, including Ehlertโ€™s scholarship, without explaining why or for how long.

The frozen grants are administered by the USDAโ€™s National Institute of Food and Agriculture, or NIFA. They stem from a 1994 law, the Equity in Educational Land-Grant Status Act, which designated the tribal colleges as land-grant institutions. Congress created the land-grant system in the 19th century to provide more funding for agricultural and vocational degrees.

The 1994 addition of tribal colleges to the list of land-grant institutions gave the schools access to more funding for specific projects, mostly focused on food and agriculture. Many grants funded food research and projects to increase the availability of food, which is particularly important in rural areas with fewer grocery stores and restaurants.

โ€œItโ€™s really precarious for tribal colleges,โ€ said Twyla Baker, president of Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College in North Dakota. Her college also lost access to NIFA funds that were paying for food research and a program that connects Indigenous farmers, ranchers and gardeners to each other. โ€œWe donโ€™t have large endowments to fall back on.โ€

Several other college presidents said they were preparing for the worst. Red Lake Nation College in Minnesota was freezing salaries, travel and hiring, said President Dan King. So was United Tribes Technical College in North Dakota, which paused renovation of a dormitory originally built as military barracks in 1900. ProPublica reported in October that tribal colleges need more than half a billion dollars to catch up on campus maintenance.

โ€œWeโ€™re hoping to get started soon, because we have a short construction season here,โ€ said Leander McDonald, president of the United Tribes college.

At Blackfeet Community College in northern Montana, a NIFA grant is helping to create a program to train workers for the Blackfeet tribeโ€™s new slaughterhouse. The college has started construction on a new building, but President Brad Hall worries that without access to promised federal funds, he might have to pause the project.

Man in blue shirt with an image of buffaloes poses inside a room.
Brad Hall, the schoolโ€™s president, on the campus of Blackfeet Community College in Browning, Montana. (Rebecca Stumpf for ProPublica)

Like other tribal college leaders, Hall hasnโ€™t been able to get clear answers from the USDA. Unlike some other schools, his college has been able to access federal funds, but he wonders for how long.

โ€œWithout the clarity and without the communication, itโ€™s very hard to make decisions right now,โ€ he said. โ€œWeโ€™re in a holding pattern, combined with a situation where the questions arenโ€™t being answered to our satisfaction.โ€

USDA spokespeople declined to answer questions. The agency emailed a written statement noting that โ€œNIFA programs are currently under review,โ€ but did not provide details on which grants have been suspended or for how long. The agency did not respond to requests for clarification.

Some tribal college leaders theorized they were targeted partly because of the formal name of the 1994 land-grant law: the Equity in Educational Land-Grant Status Act. The Trump administration has laid waste to federal spending on programs with โ€œdiversity,โ€ โ€œequityโ€ or โ€œinclusionโ€ in the names.

While โ€œequityโ€ often refers to fairness in relation to race or sex, in the 1994 bill, Congress used the word to highlight that tribal colleges would finally have access to the same funds that 19th-century laws had made available to other land-grant colleges and universities. A spokesperson for the organization that represents nontribal land-grant institutions, the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities, said he was not aware of any USDA funds to nontribal colleges being suspended.

Tribal colleges argue their funding is protected by treaties and the federal trust responsibility, a legal obligation requiring the United States to protect Indigenous resources, rights and assets. Cutting off funding to the tribal colleges is illegal, several university presidents said.

โ€œWe were promised education and health care and basic needs,โ€ said King at Red Lake Nation College. โ€œThe fact that weโ€™re being lumped in with these other programs โ€” well, weโ€™re not like them.โ€

The College of Menominee Nation was only a year into its game-changing $9 million USDA grant, which was funding workforce development, training students in local trades such as forestry, and improving food access for Indigenous people. The five-year grant was a โ€œonce-in-a-lifetime award,โ€ said college President Christopher Caldwell.

โ€œWe want our students to graduate and have healthy job opportunities,โ€ Caldwell said. โ€œNow it just kind of got cut off at the knees.โ€

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

Sheโ€™s on a scholarship at a tribal college in Wisconsin. The Trump administration suspended the USDA grant that funded it. is a post from Wisconsin Watch, a non-profit investigative news site covering Wisconsin since 2009. Please consider making a contribution to support our journalism.

Prospective UW-Madison grad students lose funding offers amid federal cuts

19 March 2025 at 10:00

Students enrolled in science Ph.D programs are typically paid and have their tuition covered. But with current federal funding uncertainties driven by the Trump administration, faculty scientists said they now have limited funds to offer students.

The post Prospective UW-Madison grad students lose funding offers amid federal cuts appeared first on WPR.

New film documents the closure of two-year college campuses in Wisconsin

14 March 2025 at 10:00

Director Ken Brosky believes the UW's two-year colleges are the embodiment of the Wisconsin Idea and should be supported rather than shuttered.

The post New film documents the closure of two-year college campuses in Wisconsin appeared first on WPR.

Trump administration warns UW-Madison it could lose federal funding

11 March 2025 at 15:58

The University of Wisconsin-Madison was one of 60 higher education institutions warned about a potential loss of federal funding if they fail to protect Jewish students.ย 

The post Trump administration warns UW-Madison it could lose federal funding appeared first on WPR.

UW leaders, Wisconsin medical researchers defend NIH funds amid uncertainty

6 March 2025 at 20:28

The remarks came a day after a federal judge temporarily blocked a policy from the Trump administration to cut millions of dollars from the NIH as part of its broader efforts to slash federal spending.

The post UW leaders, Wisconsin medical researchers defend NIH funds amid uncertainty appeared first on WPR.

Milwaukee School of Engineering is building a new AI learning center

4 March 2025 at 11:00

The Milwaukee School of Engineering is building a $76.5 million artificial intelligence learning center, which will house its new center for applied artificial intelligence.ย 

The post Milwaukee School of Engineering is building a new AI learning center appeared first on WPR.

A new dental professional degree is coming to Wisconsin

27 February 2025 at 20:59

Amid dental professional shortages in rural Wisconsin counties, the state authorized licensing and practice of dental therapy. One technical college is set to be the first in the state to offer a degree program for it.

The post A new dental professional degree is coming to Wisconsin appeared first on WPR.

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