Leading a multistate coalition, California filed a new lawsuit March 6 against the Trump administration over the cancellation of millions of dollars in teacher preparation grants.
“When it comes to our children and teachers … they’re withholding this funding. That’s catastrophic,” Attorney General Rob Bonta told reporters Thursday. “This money should flow to avoid the catastrophe.”
The lawsuit alleged the U.S. Department of Education violated the Administrative Procedure Act when it arbitrarily terminated about $600 million in grants across the country that Congress authorized last year.
The grants address nationwide teacher shortages and improve teacher quality by educating, placing, and supporting new teachers in hard-to-staff schools, especially in rural and underserved communities, according to the lawsuit.
The programs are designed to create a pipeline for teachers serving rural and urban communities, and to fill math, science, bilingual, and special education positions, according to Bonta.
“We’re asking the court to immediately halt these cuts and allow funding to continue to flow into the state,” Bonta said.
Bonta said withholding the funds would contribute to a growing teacher shortage and could mean larger class sizes, canceled courses, and teachers taking on classes that aren’t in their specialty.
The Trump administration has pursued federal funding reductions in several areas since he took office Jan. 20 in an effort to identify wasteful spending, shrink the workforce, and boost efficiency in the federal government.
A request sent to the White House for more information on the education funding cut was not returned by publication time.

The state received a “boiler plate” letter about the reductions from federal government mentioning waste, fraud, and abuse, according to Bonta.
Congress had approved the funds last year to address teacher shortages in kindergarten through 12th-grade classrooms, and development needs, according to the lawsuit.
The federal cuts started Feb. 7, and included slashing a new five-year, $7.5 million grant to train and develop community-centered special education, STEM, and bilingual teachers in Los Angeles.
The program’s goal was to train and certify about 276 teachers and educators to place in high-need urban schools in the Los Angeles and Pasadena school districts.
The cuts also included terminating a new $2.4 million, five-year grant program run by the California State University, Chico, to address chronic teacher shortages in rural areas.
Another program on the chopping block is an $8.5 million grant to support a yearlong teacher residency that mentors future teachers.
The states are asking the judge to put a hold on the funding termination.
Mildred Garcia, the California State University chancellor, said the programs have proved to be “extraordinarily successful” at placing well-qualified and dedicated educators in some of the state’s highest-need districts.
“The elimination of funding to the Teacher Quality Partnership grants awarded to universities in the California State University system will cause widespread and irreparable harm to the students and school districts we are so honored to serve through these grants,” Garcia said during a press conference Thursday.

California joined 22 other attorneys general in the lawsuit, filed Jan. 28, asking the court to prevent Trump from freezing up to $3 trillion in federal assistance funding.