MENA Newswire, WASHINGTON: The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has reversed the abrupt cancellation of nearly $2 billion in federal grants supporting mental health and substance use services, after a swift backlash from lawmakers, advocates and providers who warned the move would disrupt treatment and crisis programs nationwide. The terminations were issued through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, which oversees a large portfolio of grants used by states, nonprofits and community organizations.

Grant recipients began receiving termination notices late Tuesday indicating their awards would end, affecting roughly 2,000 grants, according to accounts from providers and public statements from officials and lawmakers. The cancellations touched programs tied to addiction recovery support, opioid overdose prevention, mental health services for children and families, and efforts that distribute overdose reversal medication. Many organizations said they were forced to immediately consider layoffs, cancel programming and halt vendor commitments as they assessed whether funding had ended.
By Wednesday night, HHS began moving to undo the decision, with restoration messages circulating and officials signaling the terminations would be rescinded. Even then, many providers reported continued uncertainty because they received conflicting communications, including follow up emails reiterating the original terminations in the early hours of Thursday. HHS and SAMHSA later issued confirmation that the grants would be reinstated, prompting recipients to begin reversing cancellations and recontacting staff and partners.
The episode rippled through local health systems that rely on federal dollars to sustain behavioral health access, particularly in underserved areas. Providers said grant funding supports outreach to people at risk of overdose, training for clinicians and peer counselors, crisis stabilization, and services aimed at populations with elevated need, including first responders and pregnant and postpartum patients. State and local agencies that coordinate treatment networks also reported confusion as they tried to determine which programs would continue and which contracts might be paused.
Behavioral health funding whiplash hits providers
The rapid reversal did not immediately eliminate operational damage. Some organizations said staffing decisions and program schedules were already in motion by the time restoration notices arrived, while others said they were waiting for individualized confirmation that specific awards had been reinstated. Providers described the challenge of maintaining continuity for patients while navigating changing federal guidance, and several organizations said the sudden cut and reinstatement created administrative burdens that could linger even if funding ultimately remains in place.
Lawmakers from the Democratic Party sharply criticized the initial cancellations and the manner in which they were communicated. Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, said the move created avoidable disruption for programs serving people with mental illness and substance use disorders. Sen. Tammy Baldwin also criticized the handling of the funding actions and called for clearer, steadier administration of grants that states and communities use for frontline services.
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. faced questions from lawmakers and advocates as the department worked to confirm that funding would be restored. The grants fall within SAMHSA’s role in supporting treatment capacity and prevention initiatives through discretionary awards, in addition to the agency’s broader responsibilities tied to behavioral health policy and technical assistance. The restoration announcement provided relief to many recipients, but providers said they needed formal documentation for each award before fully reinstating spending plans.
Restoration announced, but paperwork and timing remain key
The reinstatement process continued into Thursday as organizations sought written assurance that their awards were active and that reimbursement and drawdown mechanisms would proceed. Providers said they were reviewing grant portals, contacting federal project officers and reconciling budgets to determine whether scheduled activities could resume without interruption. Some recipients said they were reassessing contingency plans created during the brief gap, including whether to rebuild canceled trainings and service events and how to communicate the changes to patients and community partners.
The funding reversal arrives as the U.S. continues to face high demand for mental health care and ongoing pressures from substance use disorders, including opioid related harms. Local providers said the grants are often used to fill gaps that private insurance and state budgets do not cover, such as street outreach, peer recovery support, harm reduction supplies, and rapid connection to treatment. For recipients, the central issue in the days ahead is administrative clarity: confirmation that grant terms, reporting requirements and payment systems align with the reinstated awards.
