Is Your Nonprofit Ready for the Biggest Fundraising Shift in Decades?

The Game Has Changed -- Are You Prepared?

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) just reshaped tax benefits associated with charitable giving.  Nonprofits that don't adapt to the new landscape quickly risk losing critical funding and jeopardizing long-term sustainability. 

Register now for a free, no-obligation webinar that will help nonprofit leaders build sustainable fundraising efforts and embed a culture of philanthropy within their organizations.

Details:
 FREE WEBINAR: Navigating the New Fundraising Landscape
 🗓️ Aug. 5, 2025 | ⏰ 1:00–2:30 PM EST / 10:00–11:30 AM PST (including live Q&A)
📍 Virtual (link provided upon registration)


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A U.S. District Court judge blocked the Trump administration’s effort to pause federal grant funding to state governments and nonprofit health and human service providers on Tuesday, January 28th, at 5 p.m. ET.

The memo calls for federal agencies to submit “detailed information on any programs, projects or activities subject to the pause” by February 7, 2025. The required information is in a spreadsheet that lists more than 2,000 programs that agencies must determine if any funding is related to undocumented immigrants, climate policy, diversity programs, or abortion. The list can be viewed in a summary on the New York Times website. The “Instructions for Federal Financial Assistance Program Analysis in Support of M-25-13” can be viewed on Politico.

Minutes before the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) memo temporarily freezing trillions of dollars of federal aid was set to take effect, Judge Loren AliKahn granted a “brief administrative stay” to preserve disbursements until Monday, February 3rd, at 5 p.m. EST. The judge will hold another hearing on Monday to decide if another injunction is needed. This means that disbursements for existing grants may continue, but new awards may not.

Further clarity was offered by the White House regarding the intent of the freeze and claiming that programs that directly support individual Americans would not be impacted, despite evidence that funds for Head Start and Medicaid programs had been frozen. The memo can be viewed on Politico.

Less than 24 hours after federal agencies received the OMB memo, the National Council of Nonprofits, the American Public Health Association, and other advocacy organizations filed a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction to halt its implementation. Separately, attorneys general from 22 states and the District of Columbia are seeking a court order to stop enforcement of OMB’s grant funding policy.

In an unprecedented move that could cripple vital health and human service programs across the country, the federal funding freeze, issued Monday, directs federal agencies to temporarily stop trillions of existing and new federal grant/loan dollars across all federal departments.

According to the memo:

According to a CNN report, federal agencies will be required to review more than 2,000 programs “to document whether each program has any funding related to undocumented immigrants, climate policy, diversity programs or abortion.”

Following an outcry from governors and nonprofits alike, OMB issued a guidance memo Tuesday afternoon explaining the funding pause:

However, given that terms like “woke gender ideology” have no clear definition, it is possible that federal agencies may be over-inclusive and pause funding on all or almost all grant or loan programs out of an abundance of caution.

Significant funding disruptions will impact:

Adjudicating the Trump administration’s new policy may take days, weeks, or months. But there is no time to waste — safety net health and human service providers, as well as state government agencies, must act now:

We know the incredible contributions that safety-net health and human service providers make in their communities and their work to improve the health and well-being of the people they serve.

Contact us with any questions you may have (425-494-9298 or info@atromitosconsulting.com). We will continue to share helpful information about this rapidly changing federal policy change as it becomes available.

Additional sources of important and valuable information include: