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Connecticut Congressional Delegation Applauds Attorney General Tong for Suing Trump Administration to Stop Dismantling of AmeriCorps

April 29, 2025

Hartford, CT - Today, members of the Connecticut Congressional Delegation joined Attorney General William Tong to announce a multistate lawsuit challenging the Trump Administration’s termination of AmeriCorps grants and the dismantling of the agency though an 85 percent reduction of its workforce. AmeriCorps is an independent federal agency tasked with engaging Americans in meaningful community-based service that directly address the country’s educational, public safety, and environmental needs — every year, the agency provides opportunities for more than 200,000 Americans to serve their communities. 

“President Trump and Elon Musk’s ‘DOGE’ is dismantling AmeriCorps by firing workers, dismissing volunteers nationwide, and terminating hundreds of millions of dollars in approved funding for youth, senior, and veterans’ services. No administration has the right to shutter these programs without support from Congress. I applaud Attorney General Tong and the coalition of states suing in court to protect our nation’s premiere national service agency from these drastic cuts and stand with the volunteers, including Connecticut residents, who were dismissed with no explanation by the Trump Administration,” said Rep. John B. Larson (CT-01).  

“Gutting AmeriCorps is an irrational, cruel and lawless blow to communities across Connecticut and the proud, longstanding tradition of giving back in our country. AmeriCorps members and senior volunteers in Connecticut help keep food pantries running, tutor children, assist homebound seniors, support our veterans, help combat the opioid epidemic, and more. Trump has zero authority to bypass Congress to unilaterally dismantle this important work,” said Attorney General Tong.  

“AmeriCorps’ hard-working volunteers across Connecticut have supported a variety of critical needs in our state from disaster recovery to public health outreach to youth mentoring. Trump and Musk are recklessly decimating community programs with proven success— another gut punch to dedicated public servants. Patriotic volunteers simply seek to give back to our nation and deserve better than Trump’s back of the hand. This cruel, shortsighted step shortchanges the nation, and I am pleased to see Attorney General Tong challenge these draconian cuts in the courts,” said Senator Richard Blumenthal. 

“Slashing a program that puts thousands of young Americans to work serving their country and communities is downright reckless—it cripples disaster relief, undercuts education, and weakens public health where it’s needed most,” said Senator Chris Murphy. “If you’re cutting national service while handing tax breaks to billionaires, you’re not serving the country—you’re serving yourself and your megarich buddies.” 

“State attorneys general are once again taking an important case to court to reverse Elon Musk’s unconstitutional decision to decimate AmeriCorps. I’m all for making our government work more efficiently, but indiscriminately slashing yet another agency that provides essential services to children, seniors, and veterans – including eastern CT’s highly successful Veterans’ Coffee House program – will not achieve that goal.  The free rein Elon Musk and DOGE have been given to cut services without oversight is irresponsible and cruel,” said Rep. Joe Courtney (CT-02). 

“The Trump Administration’s decision to dismiss National Civilian Community Corps student volunteers and move forward with mass layoffs at AmeriCorps is an attack on public service and civic engagement,” said Rep. Rosa DeLauro (CT-03). “These young people commit themselves to disaster relief, environmental protection, and community rebuilding. That is not waste. It’s exactly what government should do-improve the lives of Americans. I thank Attorney General Tong for continuing to fight back in court against hurtful policies like this one.” 

“Elon and DOGE seem to think AmeriCorps volunteers – who selflessly dedicate themselves to their fellow Americans by aiding in disaster recovery, delivering meals to the elderly, and supporting our veterans – qualify as waste, fraud, and abuse. He, and the rest of the officials involved need to justify that assessment before a judge and the American people. I’m proud that Connecticut, alongside a coalition of other states, is fighting back against the Trump Administration’s unlawful termination of the AmeriCorps’ staff and funding,” said Rep. Jim Himes (CT-04).  

"AmeriCorps programs are vital in empowering people to collaborate with local and state entities, addressing the most pressing challenges in our communities. The actions from the Executive Office and DOGE will disrupt essential services and betray the commitment to making a difference through service and volunteerism that AmeriCorps embodies. I support efforts by the attorneys general in challenging these absurd and ill-willed actions by the administration. It is imperative we ensure that AmeriCorps can continue its crucial work and that the intent of Congress in funding this organization is upheld,” said Rep. Jahana Hayes (CT-05). 

In early February, the Trump Administration issued an executive order directing every federal agency to plan to reduce the size of its workforce and prepare to initiate in large-scale reductions in force. Since then, AmeriCorps has placed at least 85 percent of its workforce on administrative leave immediately and notified employees that they would be terminated effective June 24, 2025. On April 25th, Connecticut received notice from the federal government of termination of its AmeriCorps grant programs which support volunteer and service effort.  

Attorney General Tong and a multistate coalition argue that by abruptly canceling critical grants and gutting AmeriCorps’ workforce, the Trump Administration is effectively shuttering the national volunteer agency and ending states’ abilities to support AmeriCorps programs within their borders. The coalition establishes that the Trump Administration has acted unlawfully in its gutting of AmeriCorps, violating both the Administrative Procedures Act and the separation of powers under the U.S. Constitution. Congress has created AmeriCorps and the programs it administers, and the President cannot incapacitate the agency’s ability to administer appropriated grants or carry out statutorily assigned duties. 

As of the 2024 program year, AmeriCorps engaged 2,255 members and volunteers across 253 service locations throughout Connecticut, contributing to a total investment of $12.4 million in the state. Locally, AmeriCorps programs secured over $2.9 million in external funding from businesses, foundations, public agencies, and other sources across Connecticut. 

 Attorney General Tong was joined by Maryland, Delaware, California, Colorado, Arizona, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, the District of Columbia, Kentucky, and Pennsylvania, in bringing this lawsuit.