The government promised millions to help teens avoid pregnancy. Now they are taking it back.
Trump officials are cutting $67 million in grants meant to teach teenagers about safe sex and birth control.
When young people do not get honest facts about their bodies, their whole lives can change in an instant. This week, a quiet decision in Washington made those facts much harder to find.
What Happened
Federal officials decided to end $67 million in grants. These funds went to groups working to stop teen pregnancy. Eighty separate projects across the country will lose their funding early.
These projects teach young people about birth control and relationships. They work in schools, clinics, and community centers.
The cuts mean these programs will end years before they were supposed to. Many groups say this will leave teenagers with nowhere to turn for advice.
What the money/evidence shows
- $67 million in total federal funds is being cut.
- 80 local projects across the United States will lose their money.
- The programs were supposed to run for five years but are ending early.
- The grants helped teach teenagers about birth control and how to avoid pregnancy.
- Teen pregnancy rates in the U.S. have been falling for years prior to this cut.
The Bigger Question
Why stop programs that are already working? If we want fewer teen parents, we have to give young people the tools to make smart choices.
Is this decision about saving money, or is it about control? Some people worry that the government wants to push a single moral view instead of using proven science.
The Other Side
Supporters of the cuts say the current programs do not work well. They believe the government should focus only on teaching teens not to have sex at all.
But major health studies show that teaching only abstinence does not keep teen pregnancy rates low.
What Happens Now
Local schools and clinics must now look for new ways to pay for these classes. Many will have to shut down their programs entirely.
This means thousands of teens will lose access to health classes this year. Parents will have to find other ways to talk to their kids about these tough topics.
What We Still Don't Know
- Where will the cut $67 million be spent instead?
- How many teens will actually lose access to sex education?
- Will teen pregnancy rates go up in the areas that lose these grants?
Source Note
This news comes from federal budget reports. All charges are allegations - HHS officials are presumed innocent until proven guilty.
Transparency notes
Published: Jun 23, 2026. No major post-publication update has been logged.
Spot an error or missing context? Email hi@kindjoe.com and we will review and correct if needed.
Sources
External source links were not provided in this article body. Our editors reference publicly available materials and update stories as new verified information arrives.
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