Judge Issues Permanent Block on Trump Admin’s Change to NIH Indirect Cost Rate

5Mind. The Meme Platform
The Epoch Times Header

The administration said the court lacked jurisdiction and that NIH followed existing regulation.

A federal judge in Massachusetts issued a permanent injunction on April 4 blocking the Trump administration from reducing the amount of money the National Institutes of Health pays grant recipients for indirect costs, such as those for administration or maintenance of facilities.

The order solidifies a preliminary injunction U.S. District Judge Angel Kelly issued in March. Her more recent order vacated the NIH’s notice of change to the indirect cost rate. She also entered judgment in favor of various states and organizations on multiple legal claims they brought against the administration.

More specifically, she found in favor of the plaintiffs’ claim that the administration violated the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) by, among other things, not acting in accordance with law and acting in an arbitrary and capricious way.

Kelly said in March that the attempt to change the indirect cost rate conflicted with a regulation (45 C.F.R. § 75.414) on the issue by failing to offer procedures and decision-making criteria the administration would follow to justify deviations from a negotiated rate. She added that the administration did not comply with a step-by-step process mandated by the regulation and misinterpreted the scope of its authority in changing rates.

In its notice on Feb. 7, NIH said $9 billion was allocated in fiscal year 2023 to overhead expenses through its indirect cost rate, while the average indirect cost rate has averaged between 27 percent and 28 percent over time.

The agency said when announcing the new 15 percent ceiling that it is “obligated to carefully steward grant awards to ensure taxpayer dollars are used in ways that benefit the American people and improve their quality of life.”

In February, the Department of Justice (DOJ) told Kelly that it complied with the APA and existing regulations, and that Kelly didn’t have jurisdiction to block NIH’s policy. The DOJ said a law known as the Tucker Act vested jurisdiction over the case in the Court of Federal Claims “because Plaintiffs are effectively seeking damages for breach of contract—the regulations incorporated into their grant agreements.”

DOJ made a similar argument in appealing an order in a different case from another federal judge in Massachusetts that involved the administration’s attempt to cancel Department of Education grants over concerns about diversity, equity, and inclusion. The Supreme Court temporarily blocked the judge’s order on April 4.

By Sam Dorman

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

Contact Your Elected Officials
The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.

EU Commissar: Free Speech Is a Virus, Censorship the Vaccine

Ursula von der Leyen likened “malign information” to a virus, arguing society must be inoculated through “prebunking,” widely seen as censorship.

The family fault line

The future of humanity rests not upon government, but with the family. A principle that is as bold as it is true and profound.

Media is an Arm of the DNC

Those on the conservative right have realized both television, Hollywood, and the web have been biased in favor of the left and their causes and positions.

When Narrative Replaces Law

When media abandons its responsibility to inform and chooses to provoke, it does not distort truth. It creates the very chaos it then pretends to lament.

Behind the Curtain

At times people sense something is wrong. Events seem disconnected, yet together form a pattern of irrational policies, cultural shifts, and baffling narratives.

New York Civil Trial to Examine Liability in Teen Gender Surgery Case

The trial will determine liability for medical providers accused of malpractice in a gender dysphoria treatment involving surgery on a 16-year-old patient.

ICE Agent Involved in Shooting Is Getting Death Threats, Border Czar Says

Border czar Tom Homan defended ICE amid protests against the agency in the wake of the shooting death of a woman in Minneapolis.

Tens of Thousands Join Protests in Minneapolis After ICE Shooting

Tens of thousands of people took to the streets of Minneapolis on Jan. 10 to protest the shooting of Renée Nicole Good by an ICE officer,

Schools Increasingly Consider Rewarding Teachers for Results, Not Seniority

Across many states and hundreds of school districts, traditional teacher pay based on seniority is being replaced by merit and performance models.

Treasury Secretary Says US Can Easily Cover Any Tariff Refunds

The Treasury currently has $774 billion, more than enough to cover refunds if the Supreme Court rules against the government, Scott Bessent says.

Trump Declares National Emergency to Shield Venezuelan Oil Revenues Held in US Custody

Trump signed an EO declaring a national emergency to block courts or private creditors from seizing Venezuelan oil revenues held in U.S. Treasury accounts.

Trump Directs Purchase of $200 Billion in Mortgage Bonds

President Trump on Thursday ‍said the United States will purchase $200 billion ‌in mortgage bonds, with the goal of bringing down housing costs.

Trump Says US Will Begin Land Strikes on Cartels in Mexico

President Donald Trump announced in an interview aired Jan. 8 that the United States would begin launching strikes on cartels in Mexico.
spot_img

Related Articles