The federal government’s $11.4 billion clawback of COVID-19-era funding to state and local health department funding has sent Texas public health agencies scrambling to make sense of its impact.
Judge Robert Pitman says inmates who sued the state could win their case but that the fix is not easy or cheap.
Dramatic cuts to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services could affect state and local health department in Texas, because those agencies rely on federal funding for a variety of public ...
Cronyism,” the Democrat told us on Inside Texas Politics. “And I’m very worried about the DFW Metroplex.” The Congressman also told us he doesn’t know exactly how many federal employees ...
A Texas Catholic charity group that sued the federal government this month over budget cuts says it will drop its lawsuit as payments from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS ...
The Trump administration this week announced plans to clawback $11 billion in pandemic-era grants that could harm local Texas public health departments as they battle a historic measles outbreak.
But the $15,000 does not fully reflect the dollars districts receive from the state to serve students, according to a Texas Tribune analysis. It includes federal pandemic relief funds that have ...
About two-thirds of Texas prisons are not fully air conditioned, and dozens of inmates have died in the sweltering heat.
MCKINNEY, Texas — While Texas continues to address ... HHS also canceled billions in federal grants that states used to track infectious diseases, such as measles. Forty-one Texans have been ...
The judge ruled Texas prison cell temperatures, which regularly exceed 90 and 100 degrees, likely violate rights against ...