Illinois seeks dismissal of Trump's sanctuary city lawsuit
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President Donald Trump speaks before Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is sworn in as HHS Secretary in the Oval Office, Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025, in Washington (Photo/Alex Brandon).

A federal judge in New York on Tuesday blocked the Trump administration from clawing back over $1 billion in pandemic-era relief funds which had previously been earmarked for schools nationwide.

In a terse, two-page preliminary injunction, U.S. District Judge Edgardo Ramos, a Barack Obama appointee, barred the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) and Secretary Linda McMahon from cutting off access to the funds at issue “during the pendency of this litigation or until further order of the Court.”

On March 28, McMahon issued a two-page letter to state education officials, informing them of plans to cut off some $1.1 billion in federal funding grants intended to help low-income students and address long-term effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on education.

“The Department has concluded that the further extension of the liquidation period for the aforementioned grants, already well past the period of performance, was not justified,” the letter reads. “You and your subrecipients have had ample time to liquidate obligations.”

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Litigation quickly followed.

In early April, led by New York Attorney General Letitia James, 17 states sued the Trump administration, alleging violations of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), the long-standing federal law that governs the actions of administrative agencies.

In their 55-page complaint, the plaintiffs argued the funding in question “provides essential support for a wide range of critical education programs and services needed to address, among other things, the impact of lost instructional time; students’ academic, social, and emotional needs; the safety of school environments; and the disproportionate impact of the coronavirus on economically disadvantaged students.”

In the letter, McMahon essentially announced a same-day cessation of access to American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding — with one small caveat. The DOE left open the possibility of extensions to each state’s so-called “liquidation period” on an “individual project-specific basis.”

The plaintiffs, for their part, alleged the DOE “abruptly and arbitrarily reversed course” without warning — after previously giving states until March 2026 to access the disputed funds.

Motions practice ensued.

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