Inside the NSF’s Effort to Scour Research Grants for Violations of Trump’s Orders
The U.S. National Science Foundation has unfrozen grant funding, but it continues to scrutinize research projects, sowing turmoil
The National Science Foundation, headquartered in Alexandria, Virginia, funds about 25 percent of basic US academic research.
The US National Science Foundation (NSF), a major funder of basic academic research, announced yesterday that it has reopened a website that distributes money from research grants to scientists. The move comes after a week of confusion and frustration for NSF-funded researchers in which the agency froze their funding — including for postdoctoral fellowships — and said it was reviewing grants worth billions of dollars to comply with President Donald Trump’s directives to terminate funding for diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) efforts and to scrub all federal resources of these terms.
Although the funds are unfrozen after a federal judge issued an order blocking the US government from freezing grant money, the NSF has said it will continue its review.
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To better understand what is happening inside the NSF and what the future might hold, Nature spoke to six NSF staff members, who were granted anonymity because they were not authorized to speak with the press. All expressed strong concerns about recent agency decisions, especially to freeze funds.
“People are trying to understand what’s going on,” says one NSF employee. “The freeze in funding was, and continues to be, completely confusing to everyone.”
An NSF spokesperson declined to comment about the agency’s actions and instead pointed Nature to information on the NSF website about its implementation of Trump’s executive orders.
In the first hours of his presidency, Trump signed a barrage of executive orders, which are decrees that direct the US government’s actions but that cannot change existing laws. The orders aimed to reshape US policy on climate science, public health, the federal workforce and more. A week later, the Trump administration issued a memo freezing all federal grants. That 28 January memo was temporarily blocked by a federal judge minutes before it would have taken effect, and the White House then rescinded it. But White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt posted on the social-media platform X that Trump’s executive orders on federal funding would “remain in full force”. In response, the NSF froze its funds and cancelled a week’s worth of grant reviews, which are used to determine which projects are funded.
To more permanently halt the funding freeze, 22 states and the District of Columbia sued the federal government and its agencies. Two federal judges have since temporarily blocked the funding freeze, hinting that it might be an overreach that lacks proper authority.
There is no clear timeline for how long the judges’ temporary holds will last, but even if they are lifted in an appeal, the NSF could have a hard time legally terminating grants, because their funds are appropriated by the US Congress, meaning they are protected by law, says Deborah Pearlstein, a specialist in law and public policy at Princeton University in New Jersey.
The NSF spokesperson did not respond to a query about concerns that Trump’s executive orders are at odds with the agency’s responsibilities, as codified in law.
The NSF has not publicly shared details of how it is continuing to examine research grants and flag those in violation of Trump’s orders, but NSF employees shared documents with Nature clarifying the process.
Nature has seen the criteria for flagging grants, which call for programme officers to look for “broadening participation” language, foreign assistance, climate science, domestic energy, and “discriminatory programs, including illegal DEI”.
Action for grants can include cancelling, archiving or modifying them, with a deadline of 7 February. A team of five to eight NSF staff members will then review any revised grants, which will go to the Office of the Director for approval.
“We already reviewed all of these,” says one NSF employee, referring to the fact that grant proposals go through extensive vetting before being funded.“It’s really frightening and ridiculous.” Another shares those concerns but says that faced with Trump’s orders, “NSF is doing an honest job, as painful as it can be.”
The funding uncertainty has left NSF-funded scientists confused as to whether they can continue their research and whether the agency will honour its existing grants.
Last week, more than 100 postdoctoral fellows who receive their salaries directly from the agency were locked out of the payment system, leaving them wondering how they would make ends meet. Although the system is now back online, postdocs who spoke to Nature say that they are still concerned about how they might be impacted by the ongoing funding review. “Funding was abruptly cut and reluctantly restored,” a postdoc who requested anonymity out of fear of retribution told Nature. “Why should I think it’s here to stay?”
The agency has not articulated to researchers how it is vetting grants beyond a smattering of “cryptic communiques”, Barnes says. Because all NSF grant applications are mandated by the US Congress to describe their “broader impacts” on society, which includes a plan to increase the participation of women and underrepresented minorities in science, researchers are worried that any award could be on the chopping block.
“NSF requires us to design these projects to be impactful to the highest number of people possible,” Barnes says. “That’s our duty as scientists funded by public taxpayer dollars.”
Some scientists say they see opportunity in the uproar. “Broadening participation in STEM goes beyond racial, ethnic, gender identity — it goes to ensuring all the talented minds out there have the opportunity to contribute to our STEM workforce”, including those from rural, poor areas, says Suzanne Barbour, a biochemist at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, who chairs a panel that advises the NSF on how to encourage the participation of underrepresented groups in the sciences. “Hopefully this conversation turns into action that results in investments in STEM education.”
Others are worried about how delaying research grants can be especially damaging for early-career researchers. “Grants don’t just generate knowledge or output now,” says Wei Yang Tham, an economist at the University of Toronto in Canada who studies the phenomenon. “They’ve become a way that we support the training of future scientists.”
This article is reproduced with permission and was first published on February 3, 2025.
Dan Garisto is a freelance science journalist.
Max Kozlov is a science journalist at Nature whose work has appeared in the Atlantic, Nature, Quanta Magazine and Science, among other publications.
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Source: www.scientificamerican.com