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In January, Civic Conversations welcomed Thomas Kaufman, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Biology at Indiana University, to discuss the impact of the loss of science funding in the United States. In 2025, over 3,800 grants from the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation were terminated or frozen by the Trump Administration. Indiana University and three other state universities lost approximately $24.5 million in federal research grants. According to Kaufman, the impact will be dramatic, saying, “Once expertise and personnel are lost, research programs are extremely difficult to restart” because those personnel move on. For instance, at IU, Kaufman says, physics training grants supporting six graduate students were terminated, meaning those students would not receive the training they need for scientific progress, and that international science talent will be lost as researchers move to other countries like China. “These short-sighted policies will harm public health and the U.S. competitiveness against countries like China,” said Kaufman.


