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Health department sees first direct impact of federal funding upheaval

MORGANTOWN — Monongalia County Health Department Chief Financial Officer Devan Smith was prepared to come into Thursday morning’s board of health meeting and report MCHD was so-far unscathed by the upheaval in federal funding initiated by the Trump administration.

Then, on Tuesday, federal health officials announced billions in COVID-related funds were being stopped.

The following day, the health department was notified by the National Association of County & City Health Officials that a contract through which MCHD was working with the health department in Fairfax County, Va to better engage healthcare facilities regarding infection prevention and control had been canceled.

As MCHD was working as a subcontractor, it must now go back to NACCHO to get paid for the work performed since Jan. 1. The $90,000 contract was set to expire at the end of June.

Smith said he’s identified additional grants that he believes could be in jeopardy. In those examples, MCHD is a subrecipient of funds passing through the state. Those grants would total about $83,000 to the health department.

“We’ve been talking to folks at the state to see if they’re hearing any notifications about rescission of funding at their level, because it would have the same impact, essentially,” he said. “As far as I’m aware, they have not received any formal rescission of funding that we receive as a subrecipient.”

MCHD Executive Director Anthony DeFelice said the health department is also closely following news that a funding freeze tied to Title X (family planning services) has been put in place.

He said the health department has yet to hear anything on that front.

“These are the things that we’re going to have to be monitoring,” DeFelice said. “We’re going to get some of these notices. We’re proactively checking the rest of our contracts.”

DeFelice previously estimated that 40% or more of the health department’s budget consists of federal grant funding coming from a variety of sources to fund the department’s numerous offerings.

“It’s really not clear how this is going to play out, because Congress hasn’t laid out clear policy priorities within their continuing resolution … Normally when there’s an appropriations act or there’s a continuing resolution, there’s instructions from Congress about how that funding is to be spent, and this continuing resolution doesn’t have that,” Smith explained. “So, that allows more discretion than is normal for this administration to choose and direct funding toward specific policy priorities. I don’t think that has really seen itself play out yet.”

Asked if the impacts to the health department could be substantial enough to force program cuts or staff reductions, Smith said he didn’t have any indication that the immediate impact would be that substantial.

Even so, he said the health department is “going to be looking hard at what we can afford,” as it prepares to present its 2025-’26 operating budget in the coming weeks.

“I firmly believe that we are going to continue to serve public health in a really meaningful and awesome way. We’re going to have some new things that we might even still be able to work on with community health promotion,” Health Officer Dr. Brian Huggins said. “But some of the services that we end up offering may change.”

Huggins noted the health department will add a revenue source in April, when it begins conducting occupational drug testing for employers.