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Judge temporarily blocks Trump administration from dismantling library services agency

  • On May 1, 2025, District Judge Richard Leon issued a temporary order preventing the Trump administration from continuing efforts to dismantle the federal agency that supports museums and libraries across the United States.
  • The measure followed an executive order issued on March 14, 2025, aimed at downsizing the agency as part of a wider federal government reduction, which led to legal challenges from a major library advocacy group and a union representing federal employees.
  • Acting director Keith Sonderling had placed about 75 agency employees on leave, sent termination notices, fired the board members, and started canceling grants valued at over $266 million that support libraries nationwide.
  • Judge Leon described the harms from dismantling the agency as "neither speculative nor remediable" and issued a narrow restraining order barring further staff firings, contract cancellations, and agency dissolution while the lawsuit proceeds.
  • The order preserves funding crucial to many libraries, especially in rural and tribal areas, which face closures due to grant cuts making the lawsuit's outcome critical for ongoing public library services.
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APG of Wisconsin broke the news in on Tuesday, April 29, 2025.
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