A federal judge is preventing the cuts, at least for now, in 22 states.
The order is in place until further word from the court, Kelley said.
Government lawyers were also ordered to, within 24 hours, and at biweekly intervals thereafter, confirm with the judge that they are regularly disbursing medical research funding in the states, which include Arizona, California, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, and Oregon.
The new cap was set in the Feb. 7 directive at 15 percent, which is largely in line with private funding limits, and down from what the NIH said was an average of 27 percent to 28 percent.
Dr. Matthew Memoli is the acting NIH director while the Senate considers President Donald Trump’s nominee, Dr. Jay Bhattacharya.
In an emergency motion for a temporary restraining order, attorneys general representing the states alleged that institutions, if the change were allowed to go through, would lead to “catastrophic financial consequences, which could result in layoffs and furloughs, research program closures, financial defaults, and disruptions to clinical trials, potentially jeopardizing people’s lives and health.”
The states also said the change violates a law that prohibits the NIH from changing the cap on indirect research costs.
The government has not issued a response to the motion.
After granting the request for a restraining order, Kelley set a hearing on the matter for Feb. 21.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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