California schools reeling from Trump’s AmeriCorps cuts


By Adam Echelman and Carolyn Jones, CalMatters

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AmeriCorps may have won a temporary legal reprieve to keep operating, but the long-term future looks bleak for the popular program that sends thousands of workers to California schools, food banks, health clinics, and disaster relief sites.

In an effort to rein in government spending, President Donald Trump cut funding for the program in April, prompting California and 23 other states to sue in a Maryland district court. In June, a federal judge granted a temporary injunction, reinstating California’s grants and allowing its AmeriCorps workers to return to their jobs. But many workers who are eligible to return have found other employment. 

Congress has already approved funding for AmeriCorps for the next fiscal year, which begins Aug. 1. The Trump administration has yet to release the money, which normally arrives earlier this summer. Josh Fryday, director of the state’s Office of Service and Community Engagement, said he didn’t know when the money would be available — or if it would get released at all. 

“The administration does not communicate with us,” he said in an interview. “Instead they make rash decisions that hurt our communities.” 

Even if the money does arrive this year, Trump’s recent budget proposal does not include money for AmeriCorps after 2026, which means the 32-year-old program may end unless another funding source comes through.

The loss of the program would have a deep impact on hundreds of California schools, particularly those serving low-income students, where AmeriCorps staffs tutoring, mentorship and after-school programs.

“The negative impact of these illegal DOGE cuts hurts our communities. It has nothing to do with efficiency or cutting bureaucracy — it makes us weaker,” Fryday said last week during a visit to an AmeriCorps program in Napa. “But California is not backing down.” 

Following April orders from Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency, California lost over 5,600 AmeriCorps public service workers and over $60 million in funding. 

The 24 states suing the federal government say that the money had been appropriated by Congress to provide crucial government service and that the Trump administration lacked the legal power to cut it. The injunction will remain in place until the court makes a final ruling. States that didn’t sue are exempt from the injunction and any future rulings.

The deadline for the California’s AmeriCorps workers to return was last week, but about half of them didn’t come back — often because they found other opportunities — leaving dire staffing shortages in programs that thousands of people rely on.

‘Like having a hand cut off’

In Napa County, school officials have been scrambling to fill dozens of vacancies and find money to create permanent jobs for AmeriCorps staffers. It’s been especially challenging with the slew of other education cuts schools are facing: the end of pandemic relief grants as well as White House cuts to after-school programs, migrant education and other programs.

AmeriCorps has been “invaluable,” said Napa County Superintendent Barbara Nemko. “They don’t earn a lot of money but they provide an incredible service. Losing them was like having a hand cut off.”

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