The Office of the Governor of the State of Connecticut

03/25/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/25/2026 11:09

Governor Lamont, Coalition of Governors Urge HHS Secretary Kennedy to Immediately Release Title X Funds

(HARTFORD, CT) - Governor Ned Lamont and the governors of 18 other states and territories today sent a letterto U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., urging the immediate renewal of Title X family planning grants, warning that a lapse in funding will cut off access to critical reproductive health care for millions of Americans.

With funding currently set to expire on March 31, 2026, Title X grantees across nearly every state now face a potential funding lapse that will disrupt care through March 2027. The governors are calling on HHS to renew existing Title X grantees immediately for a one-year funding extension, ensuring no lapse in services for patients who rely on this critical program.

The letter was facilitated by the Reproductive Freedom Alliance, a nonpartisan coalition of governors working together to protect and expand reproductive freedom across the United States. Connecticut has been a member of the alliance since it was established in 2023.

Their full letter is as follows:

March 25, 2026

The Honorable Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
Secretary of Health and Human Services
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
200 Independence Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20201

Dear Secretary Kennedy,

As members of the Reproductive Freedom Alliance, a nonpartisan coalition of 23 Governors committed to protecting access to reproductive health care, we write to urge HHS to quickly move forward the next round of Title X funding to ensure no lapses in funding or service.

Governors have long played an important role in improving health outcomes for those in their states - indeed, that is one of their most critical obligations in public service - and protecting and ensuring access to safe and effective health care is a key priority for RFA Governors. Title X is a critical program that serves about 2.8 million patients each year, ensuring continuous access to contraception and other sexual health services for underinsured and uninsured people across the country. Title X service grantees provide essential services such as preventive care, cancer screening, sexually transmitted infection testing and treatment, and other services for patients who may otherwise never see a health care provider.

On February 3, 2026, President Trump signed into law the FY 2026 Health and Human Services appropriations bill, which included $286.5 million for Title X. This budget appropriation continues a long tradition of support for this federal/state partnership program that has consistently shared strong bipartisan support. This funding is part of a 5-year grant cycle, which began in 2022. Grants are typically renewed by April 1st of each year, and Title X grantees receive instructions or guidance about applying for renewals months in advance of a new funding cycle to give grantees sufficient time to submit applications for federal review and approval.

However, service providers only received the non-competing continuation application on March 13, 2026 and were required to submit the applications just seven days later. This extremely short timeline raises significant concerns that these applications will not be reviewed and approved before March 31st. With the April 1, 2026 renewal deadline fast approaching, Title X service grantees, including state governments or nonprofit agencies in nearly every state, risk a lapse in funding to support critical health care in Title-X funded health centers through March of 2027. The Reproductive Freedom Alliance urges the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to renew existing grantees immediately for a one-year funding extension before March 31st. The funding is critically necessary to ensure continuous care for patients who rely on Title X providers.

According to the Commonwealth Fund, "[t]he Title X Family Planning Program provides equitable and reliable access to contraception nationwide and is a critical funding stream for building and maintaining the overall health of people in the United States." Moreover, with recent budget cuts to Medicaid, "an estimated 15.9 million people, including 5.7 million women of reproductive age, will lose Medicaid coverage," making access to contraception and sexual health care through Title X even more important.

To quote the Office of Population Affairs within HHS:

The Title X family planning program is a critical part of America's public health safety net, serving as a point of entry into care for nearly 195 million over the program's more than 50-year history. . . Title X family planning clinics have played a critical role in ensuring access to a broad range of family planning and preventive health services. The HHS Office of Population Affairs (OPA) funds Title X family planning service grant recipients who support hundreds of subrecipients and thousands of service sites.

Title X service grantees provide excellent services, ensuring that services are appropriate and that the quality of the service delivery is "consistent with nationally recognized standards of care." Once admitted to the program, "Title X grantees provide clients with a broad range of medically approved family planning services, which includes all Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved contraceptive products and natural family planning methods" as well as support in achieving pregnancy, basic infertility services, and "other preconception health services."

Title X recipients provide care "through a network of health care providers, including federally qualified health centers, public health departments, hospitals and community-based clinics."

Moreover, Title X services are extremely cost effective, "saving $7 in Medicaid-related expenses for every dollar spent" and successful at improving overall health, including by helping "people avoid pregnancies they do not want and plan and space pregnancies they do want, which decreases the risk of complications like preterm birth and low-birth-weight births." In addition to contraceptive care, Title X-funded clinics also provide a wide range of other critical health services, such as cancer screenings, STI and HIV testing, cardiovascular health checks and referrals to primary care. OPA and other experts have also long recognized that for many Title X patients, Title X services are the only health care services they receive all year.

RFA urges HHS to act quickly to ensure that this appropriated Title X funding is released on time, so that service providers in our states and states across the country can continue to provide these essential, time-sensitive services.

Sincerely,

Andy Beshear
Governor of Kentucky

Tony Evers
Governor of Wisconsin

Bob Ferguson
Governor of Washington

Lourdes A. Leon Guerrero
Governor of Guam

Maura Healey
Governor of Massachusetts

Katie Hobbs
Governor of Arizona

Kathy Hochul
Governor of New York

Tina Kotek
Governor of Oregon

Ned Lamont
Governor of Connecticut

Michelle Lujan Grisham
Governor of New Mexico

Daniel J. McKee
Governor of Rhode Island

Matt Meyer
Governor of Delaware

Wes Moore
Governor of Maryland

Gavin Newsom
Governor of California

Jared Polis
Governor of Colorado

JB Pritzker
Governor of Illinois

Josh Shapiro
Governor of Pennsylvania

Josh Stein
Governor of North Carolina

Gretchen Whitmer
Governor of Michigan

**Download: Letter from coalition of governors urging Secretary Kennedy to release Title X funds

The Office of the Governor of the State of Connecticut published this content on March 25, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on March 25, 2026 at 17:09 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]