Students and staff have been left reeling after the US State Department issued a temporary 15-day pause on federal funding for all current and future grant disbursements this year, which took effect on February 12.
“While we have no indication that funding will be discontinued permanently, the ripple effect of uncertainty caused by the State Department’s action without notice, explanation or public statement, is profound,” Melissa Torres, president of the Forum on Education Abroad told The PIE News.
“At present, there is no additional detail, nor has a rationale been provided,” said Torres, who confirmed that grantees had been contacted by the department but there had been no official announcement of the pause.
“Without the immediate resumption of funding, there may be large numbers of international educators laid off, impacting local communities and economies,” added Torres, explaining that the funds do not only go directly to students but also pay the staff who make these programs happen.
Among the impacted initiatives are the Fulbright Program, IDEAS Program, Gilman Scholarship and Critical Languages Scholarships.
The lack of information given about what the State Department intends to do has caused confusion among providers, with some Fulbright locations told by local embassies to pause their work, while others initially paused but have since resumed.
“It is unclear why certain students are receiving different instructions,” said Torres.
With some FY2025 grant awards already pulled from the State Department’s website, some recipients are hesitant to reopen program applications without the promise of forthcoming funding, explained Torres.
Furthermore, it’s uncertain whether those currently studying abroad will be impacted by funding delays. Students who made plans based on the promise of future Gilman funding, might have to cancel study abroad programs this spring or summer.
Fulbright – perhaps the most well-known US program – alone offers over 2,200 grants annually to domestic students and brings in roughly 4,000 international students each year to study or carry out research in the US.
On top of the immediate impact on students and educators, Torres said the absence of the grants would “unquestionably” make the US “weaker, less secure, and less economically competitive”, with the business community and society more broadly missing out on future leaders studying in the US.
The Forum for Education Abroad said that it is working with leading sector bodies to coordinate a response to the “rapidly unfolding” situation, urging affected institutions to collect financial data and stories about the immediate impact of the cause.
NAFSA asked members in the field to complete a questionnaire to inform their advocacy about how the funding pause and other executive orders relating to DEI, extreme vetting of international students and NIH research funding are impacting them.