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By GABRIELA AOUN ANGUEIRA, Associated Press
Eleven states and Kentuckyâs governor are suing the Trump administration over what they call âunlawful termsâ placed on federal funding critical to supporting local disaster and terrorism preparedness.
The predominantly Democratic-led states, which include Michigan, Oregon and Arizona, along with Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear sued the Department of Homeland Security and Federal Emergency Management Agency on Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Eugene, Oregon.
The states oppose a dramatic cut to the amount of time they are given to spend emergency management and homeland security grants, as well as an unprecedented requirement that they submit population counts omitting people removed under immigration law in order to receive emergency management funds. They argue the measures âerect inappropriate barriersâ to money for public safety and emergency response.
âThe Trump administration has repeatedly expressed a desire to diminish FEMAâs role and shift the burden of emergency management to the States, thus reverting to an inconsistent patchwork of disaster response across the Nation,â the states said in the complaint.
In a statement to The Associated Press, a DHS spokesperson said the changes were âpart of a methodical, reasonable effort to ensure that federal dollars are used effectively and in line with the administrationâs priorities and todayâs homeland security threats.â
The Federal Emergency Management Agency awards billions in emergency management and homeland security grants annually to states, tribes and territories. State and local agencies spend the money on staff salaries, preparedness training and equipment purchases.
The lawsuit centers on two grant programs, the $320 million Emergency Management Performance Grant and the $1 billion Homeland Security Grant Program.
EMPG awards are based on statesâ populations, determined through U.S. Census data. States received notices of their award amountsjust before the Sept. 30 end of the fiscal year.
But on Oct. 1, FEMA sent a âfunding holdâ to all grant recipients, informing them that funds would not be released until states provided âcertificationâ of their current populations, excluding individuals âremoved from the State pursuant to the immigration laws of the United States.â
FEMA said states had to explain their methodology and funds would be released upon âreview and approvalâ of that methodology.
The complaint calls the requirement âarbitrary and capricious,â adding that states do not keep âto-the-minuteâ population counts, it is the job of DHS to track immigration-related removals, and federal agencies are required by law to use Census data to allocate funding.
FEMA also shortened the time states had to spend the money from both grants from three years to just one. Plaintiff states said the change âimposes significant obstaclesâ on recipientsâ ability to use funds and makes the funding âlargely unusable.â
Both states and local governments depend heavily on the grants. The $6.6 million Arizona would receive from EMPG funds half of the stateâs emergency management operations, according to the complaint.
Oregonâs Department of Emergency Management estimates two-thirds of the stateâs counties would lose âsignificant or even all capacity to perform basic emergency management functionsâ without EMPG funding, according to a statement from Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfieldâs office.
The lawsuit is the latest of several brought against the Trump administration over changes and cancellations to FEMA funding. Trump has repeatedly said he wants to diminish FEMAâs role in disasters and put more responsibility on states.