A couple of days ago we got a well-nigh hysterical message from the provost about proposed new regulations from OMB on the use of federal grants. He didn't actually say what was in the proposal, but he steered us to some resources. Here's a good one. As the Education Council tells us, "The OMB proposal is long, complex, and most easily summarized as an attempt to exert more political oversight and control over federal funds." I'll just give you a few highlights.
The . . . proposed regulations . . . seek to prevent federal funds from being used “to fund, promote, encourage, subsidize, or facilitate” the “denial by the recipient of the sex binary in humans or the notion that sex is a chosen or mutable characteristic,”
Proposed section 200.205(b)(2), which applies to discretionary grants and cooperative agreements, would also seek to prohibit the use of federal dollars to “to fund, promote, encourage, subsidize, or facilitate . . . initiatives that compromise public safety or promote anti-American values.” These terms are vague and recipients may not know how funding agencies will interpret them or what conduct or program content would be considered a threat to public safety or as something “anti-American.”
Proposed section 200.218, which applies to grants and cooperative agreements, instructs agencies to “eliminate the use of disparate-impact liability in all contexts relevant to Federal awards." . . . The proposed regulation includes, as part of this prohibition, using federal funds to support “disparate-impact studies, disparate impact litigation, or other related activities.” The scope here seems sweeping, especially for grantees that conduct research “studies,” which often focus on issues that disproportionately affect people of certain races or sexes.
Proposed section 200.202, which applies to grants and cooperative agreements, would require agencies, among other things, to design federal programs with clear goals and objectives that “[a]lign with administration policies and priorities.” Likewise, section 200.205(b)(1), which applies to discretionary grants and cooperative agreements would require that “where applicable and to the extent consistent with applicable law” discretionary awards “demonstrably advance the President’s policy priorities.”
OMB’s proposal also includes procedural changes that could pose major obstacles to recipients’ receipt and continuity of federal funds. The Administration has an unprecedented record of attempting to freeze, cancel, and terminate federal grants. Many of these attempts have been successfully challenged in court. With this proposed rule, OMB seeks to further codify into agencies’ regulations its preferred funding process—one that infuses political and policy preferences into grantmaking and provides the Executive Branch with broad power over appropriated funds.
Academy Health, the association for health services research, writes:
Unlike recent executive actions that may be reversed by future administrations or the courts, this proposed rule would codify sweeping changes to federal grantmaking in regulation. AcademyHealth argues that the proposal would introduce political review into the grantmaking process by requiring senior political appointees to approve awards, fundamentally changing the role of peer review in determining which research receives federal support. The rule would also prohibit federal funding for activities related to DEI, gender ideology, and disparate-impact liability. These are restrictions that could significantly limit health disparities research and other studies that rely on demographic analyses. It would expand agencies’ authority to suspend or terminate grants and restrict researchers’ ability to publish, collaborate internationally, attend scientific conferences, and disseminate findings.
In other words, if I get a federal grant for research I have to use it to promote far right, racist ideology, and I cannot study any subjects that they don't want me to. Research grants will no longer be awarded based on scoring by peer reviewers, but by political appointees. This means the end of any meaningful science in public health. We might as well go out of business.