Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Late grant won’t stop family aid, U.S. says

- RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

WASHINGTON — The Health and Human Services Department said Tuesday that “there will be no gaps in service” in the nation’s $260 million family planning program, even as it acknowledg­ed missing a fall deadline for providing critical grant informatio­n to local agencies.

In a statement Tuesday, the department said it remains committed to the program, which serves about 4 million women annually at family planning clinics. Some of those facilities are operated by Planned Parenthood, which separately provides abortions and has been the target of Republican efforts to deny it all government funding.

Known as Title X, the decades-old family planning program has generally enjoyed bipartisan support and routine funding renewals. It provides birth control and preventive medical care, mainly for low-income women. But federal grant money is expected to run out at the end of March, and until now, there had been no official acknowledg­ement or explanatio­n for delays in the funding process.

Health and Human Services tried to change that Tuesday.

“The Title X program is important to this administra­tion,” Valerie Huber, the department official currently in charge of the program, said in an email to clinics. “We are committed to the women and men who depend on Title X services and efforts are already underway to ensure that there will be no gaps in service while the funding announceme­nt is finalized.”

Concern about unexplaine­d delays had prompted Democratic lawmakers to write Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar last week.

“I’ve never seen anything like it before,” said Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Colo. “It seems to be a combinatio­n of ineptitude and ideology, and I don’t know which is going on.”

“Normally the grant applicatio­n would have been posted around early November, with a due date of Jan. 3,” added DeGette. “Both of those deadlines have blown by.”

The administra­tion official originally in charge of family planning abruptly resigned last month. Health and Human Services has had little to say about the departure.

The announceme­nt prompted relief from family planning clinics.

Clare Coleman, chief executive officer of the National Family Planning & Reproducti­ve Health Associatio­n, called it “welcome news.”

 ??  ?? DeGette
DeGette

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States