Neronha Co-Leads 20-State Lawsuit to Block Cuts to Federal Health Department

Rhode Island’s AG says the sweeping changes to HHS — including mass layoffs and regional office closures — are illegal and threaten critical public health services across the state

Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha at a news conference Monday, May 5, 2025.
Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha at a news conference Monday, May 5, 2025.
Ian Donnis/The Public’s Radio
Share
Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha at a news conference Monday, May 5, 2025.
Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha at a news conference Monday, May 5, 2025.
Ian Donnis/The Public’s Radio
Neronha Co-Leads 20-State Lawsuit to Block Cuts to Federal Health Department
Copy

Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha is among 20 attorneys general backing a lawsuit to stop the Trump administration from making sweeping changes to the federal Health and Human Services Department and to restore cuts.

The complaint in U.S. District Court in Providence targets what Neronha called the Trump administration’s dismantling of HHS.

“A quarter of HHS’ staff — 20,000 employees — have been fired, half of the regional offices, including Boston — obviously of great importance to Rhode Island have been closed,” Neronha said Monday during a news conference in his office. “Functions like laboratory testing for disease, which only the federal government has the capability and the ability to do, have been abruptly terminated.”

Neronha said the changes are illegal since Congress, not the president or his cabinet, has the power to make them.

In Rhode Island, the state has lost $1.9 million in grants. The programs affected by HHS cuts include efforts addressing air quality, asthma, suicide prevention, maternal mortality, and nicotine and alcohol addiction.

“This dismantling of HHS has and will continue to harm Rhode Islanders in significant ways, including in ways that we can not yet foresee,” Neronha said.

The Trump administration has said it is targeting waste and fraud, and that cuts like those at HHS will represent more than $1 billion in savings for taxpayers.

Asked about that by a reporter, Neronha said, “These actions may save money, but they’re going to kill people. They’re not going to kill people like Donald Trump. He’s going to get the best healthcare in the world … Bottom line is, President Trump can go off to Cheyenne Mountain when he’s got a problem. The rest of us can’t.”

Neronha’s office said he is co-leading the lawsuit with Attorneys General Letitia James of New York and Nick Brown of Washington.

Also signing are AGs representing Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Michigan, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Vermont, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia.

The lawsuit calls on the court to stop the Trump administration’s cuts to HHS and restore changes already made.

On April 1, Neronha joined a group of AGs in a lawsuit against HHS Secretary Robert Kennedy Jr. and the Trump administration for cuts to state health funding. A temporary restraining order issued by a judge on April 4 temporarily reinstated the funding.

Affordable RI, seeded by the state’s largest health care union, backs policies including higher taxes on the wealthiest residents
AS220 co-founder says the city remains attractive to artists, but soaring housing costs could push many out
A manifesto for Tiny Gardens, a ‘visual spectacle’ concerto for percussion, St. Patrick’s Day parades and more
Victims who cooperated with investigators say the Massachusetts attorney general’s office has yet to release its long-promised report into abuse allegations in the Worcester, Springfield and Fall River dioceses
The downtown mall is in receivership and searching for a buyer as empty storefronts become harder to ignore
Extreme heat can have serious health consequences, but until recently, public health researchers only had imprecise tools to study it. Brown University Professor Allan Just is working to change that