Earlier this month, Morgan State University was gearing up to host a group of local K-12 students at the campusâs engineering school. The field trip was part of a series of programs intended to expose underrepresented students to STEM careers, funded by a roughly $450,000 contract with the U.S. Navy. Students planned to tour the historically Black universityâs artificial intelligence and cybersecurity labs.
But then the universityâs president, David K. Wilson, found out the Department of Defense had terminated the contract. As a result, the trip was canceled.
Stunned, Wilson said, his âfatherly instincts took over.â He declared the April 16 trip back on and said he would personally shell out the several thousand dollars it would take to bring the 80 students to campus.
âI just decided that this had to happen,â he said. âThere was no way on Godâs green earth that Morgan State University was going to deny these inquiring minds, these future innovators, possibly future engineers, an opportunity to find out what those disciplines were all about.â
HBCUs like Morgan State find themselves in a precarious position as federal agencies slash grants and contracts they associate with diversity, equity and inclusion to comply with President Trumpâs anti-DEI directives. Some have lost federal funds in Trumpâs first 100 days while others are trimming already lean budgets and launching fundraising campaigns to prepare for the worst.
HBCU leaders hope that the executive order Trump signed Wednesday to âpromote excellence and innovationâ at HBCUs and re-establish a White House initiative supporting them signals better times ahead for the institutions. Many can ill afford a financial hit.
While all kinds of higher ed institutions are facing federal grant cuts, the losses have greater potential for harm at HBCUs, some advocates say.
âThat money has to be replaced through some other stream, which is difficult when youâre dealing with fewer resources from the beginningâsome of that due to the historic underfunding of HBCUs and some of it because you are an institution that historically was founded on educating those whose educational opportunities are least,â said Terrell Strayhorn, director of the Center for the Study of HBCUs at Virginia Union University.
Though Wilson was able to save the field trip, he canât cover all of Morgan Stateâs federal funding losses out of his own pocketâor the universityâs coffers.
The research universityâlikely poised to achieve R-1, or very high research, status in the next Carnegie Classification cycleâhas had 17 federal grants suspended or terminated since Trumpâs anti-DEI directives were announced. Wilson said the total value of those grants equals about $13 million, though much of the money has already been spent, so the university stands to lose closer to $5 million. Officials are disputing one of the grants pulled from its Center for Equitable Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning Systems; Wilson believes the word âequitableâ is what likely triggered the termination, but he insists the center is really about creating âtrustworthyâ AI that draws on real research studies to deliver information.
âIâm hopeful that the reviewers will come to the same conclusion as we that this is the type of research that will really, really aid DOD in its mission,â Wilson said.
Whatâs at Stake
Some of the grants lost provided HBCUs with valuable supports and experiential learning opportunities for students, while others supported research, including on racial disparities.
Florida A&M University, for example, has received an annual grant from the National Institutes of Health for the last 40 years. The money has gone primarily to the universityâs pharmacy school and its Research Centers in Minority Institutions program to build up research infrastructure on campus. But the federal agency abruptly terminated the $16.3 million grant on March 21, effective immediately, explaining that the âaward no longer effectuates agency prioritiesâ and is linked to DEI, according to Seth Ablordeppey, interim dean of FAMUâs College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Institute of Public Health. The university is appealing the grant revocation.
The loss hit the institution hard. Ablordeppey said the labs that lost support were doing âstandard research, innovative research,â with a focus on a type of breast cancer that tends to be more prevalent in minority communities.
âTo say that the National Institutes of Health is no longer interested in breast cancer or pancreatic cancer just beats my mind ⊠DEI is not something we do here. We are open to anybody who wants to come here,â he said, noting that non-Black students attend HBCUs as well. He argued that âprecision medicine,â which takes different kinds of health disparities into account, is also important to the pharmaceutical field.
Ablordeppey fears the university wonât be able to afford the lab equipment graduate students use for their research, interfering with their academic trajectories. He also worries faculty members whose research relied on the federal money might leave the institution. He believes no fundraising effort could replace the amount lost.
âOur programs will suffer significantly as a result of this,â he said.
Strayhorn said itâs too early to fully assess how much funding has been cut or paused, or the ripple effects on HBCUs, but federal funding losses could easily âtranslate into staff cuts and compensation recalculation and furloughing of personnel,â responsible for everything from academic advising to career services, which will hurt students. He added that federal grants often fund student research opportunities and other forms of experiential learning that would otherwise be inaccessible to many students.
âSome people come out of high school and theyâve been exposed to the most complex microscopes. They already have had some sort of research experience,â he said. âThatâs not always the case for students who come to historically Black colleges, who come to college looking for those opportunities.â
He also believes federal funding lossesâespecially if paired with the possible demise of the Department of Educationâcould pose âexistential threatsâ to some of the smaller, less resourced HBCUs.
HBCUs could hardly survive the kinds of funding blows that Ivy League institutions like Columbia University, the University of Pennsylvania and Harvard University have sustained under the Trump administration, which has cut them off from hundreds of millions of dollars, even billions, in federal contracts and grants, said Harry Williams, president and CEO of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, which represents public HBCUs.
Harvardâwhich has resisted federal demands and sued the government in responseâand other institutions with sizable endowments can afford to âtake a real hard stanceâ and launch a âpublic fightâ over suspended funding, Williams said. But if an HBCU faced a federal funding loss of a similar size, âit would be devastating to our institutions, and it would be devastating to the country, too, because the students that weâre serving are students who are underserved, who are seeking access and who are moving their families and their communities to a higher level and creating a middle class.”
For wealthier institutions, âthe reality is they will weather it, and they will be fine,â he added. âWe canât afford a hit like that.â
A âStep in the Right Directionâ
But Williams and other HBCU advocates are hopeful that Trumpâs new executive order, which pledges to continue the White House Initiative on HBCUs and a Presidentâs Board of Advisors on HBCUs, is a positive sign that the administration ultimately supports them and sees their value.
The initiative, housed in the executive office of the president, will focus on fostering public-private partnerships that support HBCUs, upgrading HBCU infrastructure and implementing the HBCU PARTNERS Act, signed by Trump in 2020, which requires some federal agencies to submit plans for how theyâll make grant programs more accessible to HBCUs, according to the order.
Williams described the executive order as âa major step in the right direction.â
Lodriguez Murray, senior vice president of public policy and government affairs at the United Negro College Fund, which represents private HBCUs, said every president since Jimmy Carter has signed a similar executive order. But he believes the message is particularly powerful right now because it signals to federal agencies and federal and state lawmakers that the administration doesnât view HBCUs and DEI as interchangeable.
The order is âstating support for HBCUs ⊠at a time when the institutions could wrongfully be confused with DEI,â Murray said. âMaking sure that thereâs a distinction, and making sure that support is reaffirmed, for us, is the important thing.â
He noted that some HBCUs have had grants pulled because of âoverzealous bureaucrats who mistakenly believe that HBCUs are DEI, and DEI are HBCUsâ but heâs hopeful the executive order will serve as a correction to them and other lawmakers. He also hopes the presidentâs budget directs more federal dollars to HBCUs.
Williams emphasized that some grants to HBCUs that were previously frozen have been reinstated, adding to his sense of hope. He highlighted that the Trump administration initially suspended the 1890s Scholars program, a federal scholarship program for agriculture students at historically Black land-grant institutions, but reinstated it within weeks. So, he encourages institutions to think of pulled grants as on âpause,â not permanently lost.
âWe work with both sides, and we have an open dialogue with the administration,â he said. âAnd keeping that dialogue open is very important so that we can make calls when things occur, and we can get access to the people who are in the decision-making chain of command.â Itâs important that âwe are talking [to each other] and people are listening and theyâre responding.â