09/26/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/26/2025 14:42
Published on Friday, September 26, 2025
Attorney General Peter F. Neronha today joined a coalition of 17 attorneys general in suing U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) for threatening to pull funding for longstanding teen reproductive and sexual health education programs from states unless they remove language concerning gender identity. The coalition is seeking declaratory and injunctive relief preventing HHS from demanding substantive changes to the gender and sexual health courses administered as part of the Personal Responsibility Education Program (PREP).
In Rhode Island, approximately $600,000 in PREP grant funding is at risk.
"This federal funding is not the President's to withhold, and he knows it," said Attorney General Neronha. "We've been through this before, in fact, most of our cases against this Administration are nearly identical to this one. We are not under the illusion that the President is confused about the basic tenets of the separation of powers, nor do we believe the federal government believes they can win these cases on merit. This Administration is attempting to overwhelm our democracy by slowing normalizing the President's authoritarian tendencies with every unlawful overreach. He'd rather engage in culture wars than do anything of value or substance that would better the lives of the American people. We will continue to fight, and win, because while our democracy may be fragile, it's also worth the battle."
On April 14, 2025, the Administration for Children and Families (ACF), a division of HHS, sent a letter to multiple states, including Rhode Island, asking that their Departments of Health submit current curricula and programmatic materials that are used and are relevant to the PREP grant.
On August 26, 2025, ACF sent a letter to the Rhode Island Department of Health (RIDOH) identifying a number of portions of its curriculum, demanding that said portions be removed from Rhode Island's PREP curricula and materials within 60 days or they may terminate grant funding. Specifically, ACF objected to program materials that mentioned the existence of gender identity and to a statement which asserts that "[h]owever someone identifies, they should feel safe, respected and included."
The coalition asserts that the actions of HHS violate the federal Administrative Procedure Act as well as the United States Constitution. Congress created the grant programs with clear statutory requirements that are at direct odds with the Trump Administration's conditions. By unilaterally imposing these conditions, the Administration usurps Congress' spending power and violates the separation of powers.
Through the complaint, the coalition asks the Court to declare the defendants' conditions unlawful, order the conditions vacated, and enjoin the defendants from implementing or enforcing the conditions.
Joining Attorney General Neronha in today's lawsuit are the attorneys general of Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Massachusetts, Maryland, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Washington, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia.
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