The Trump administration has terminated more than half of all federal funding for gun violence prevention programs in the U.S., cutting $158 million in grants that had been directed to groups in cities like New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, DC, and Baltimore, reported Reuters.
Of the 145 community violence intervention (CVI) grants
totaling more than $300 million awarded through the U.S. Department of Justice,
69 grants were abruptly terminated, opens new tab in April,
according to government data analyzed by Reuters.
The elimination of CVI programs is part of a broader
rollback at the department's grant-issuing Office of Justice Programs,
which terminated
365 grants valued at $811 million in April, impacting a range of
public safety and victim services programs.
A DOJ official told Reuters the gun violence grants were
eliminated because they "no longer effectuate the program's goals or
agency's priorities." Thousands of Office of Justice Programs grants are
under review, the official said, and are being evaluated, among other things,
on how well they support law enforcement and combat violent crime.
The majority of CVI grants were originally funded through
the 2022 Bipartisan Safer Communities Act and part of a push by former
President Joe Biden to stem the rise of gun violence in America, including
establishing the first White House Office for Gun Violence Prevention.
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