Food Bank of Wyoming recently learned it will not receive $535,000 that was promised in a 2023 grant — one of the many casualties of President Donald Trump’s elimination and freeze of congressionally approved, Biden-era federal programs.

The elimination of the Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement — a grant aimed at feeding the most vulnerable while connecting Wyoming ag producers with local eaters — comes at a time when “the food insecurity need in Wyoming is at its highest level in 10 years,” Food Bank of Wyoming Executive Director Jill Stillwagon told Oil City News.

Funding for Wyoming’s Home Energy Savings program, which the Wyoming Energy Authority recently established after navigating months of red tape and collecting input from Wyoming residents, is considered “frozen.” Administrators have received no indication of whether it will ultimately be axed or allowed to continue, according to state officials. That puts $69 million in hard-fought-for federal funds in limbo when skyrocketing electric bills are an increasing threat to low-income households.

The administration’s on-again, off-again whiplash of threats and exceptions to federal programs — further complicated by ongoing court battles and the Elon Musk-led purge of federal employees — throws into question perhaps hundreds of millions of dollars that could go to Wyoming communities and households.

“Our office is getting information program by program, if we receive any updates at all.”

Michael Pearlman, Communications Director for Gov. Mark Gordon

Federal officials have mostly declined to answer questions or provide even basic information, making it hard, if not impossible to know how much money is at stake.

State officials say it’s extremely difficult to account for the status of hundreds of grant applications and awards because they are being managed by various state agencies, individual communities and other groups. When WyoFile asked Dru Palmer — manager of Wyoming’s State Grants Integration office, which was created to help reel in Biden-era federal dollars — for an accounting or estimate, the inquiry was forwarded to Gov. Mark Gordon’s office.

“Right now, a lot is still up in the air in this space,” Gordon’s Communications Director Michael Pearlman told WyoFile via email. “Our office is getting information program by program, if we receive any updates at all. Each federal agency is issuing its own guidance in terms of what programs can move forward, and which ones are still paused.”

‘Tip of the iceberg’

The Lander-based Wyoming Outdoor Council has identified more than $100 million that the state, Northern Arapaho and Eastern Shoshone tribes and other entities have applied for under the Inflation Reduction Act and Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that is now either terminated or “frozen,” according to the council’s Energy and Climate Associate Jonathan Williams. In addition to the Home Energy Savings program, there’s a freeze on Solar for All grant money totaling some $30 million, which includes a potential $8 million dedicated to the Wind River Indian Reservation.

A rooftop solar installation. (Western Area Power/Flickr)

Wyoming’s Solar for All grant award also dedicated money for workforce training to install solar infrastructure, specifically in low-income and tribal communities.

Some Wyoming ag producers — who are desperate to survive rising electric costs — have invested tens of thousands of dollars in solar installations, Williams added, with expectations to receive rebates via the long-standing Rural Energy for America Program. But those rebates also appear to be in question.

“We think this is the tip of the iceberg,” Williams said.

There could be as much as $2 billion at stake in Wyoming, according to a Grist report. But Williams says it’s nearly impossible to know for certain.

The council recently hosted a public webinar highlighting its concerns regarding programs “gone dark” as well as the potential benefits if the flow of federal grant dollars is allowed to move forward.

“A lot of these programs would just help residents save money — help communities save money,” Williams told dozens of webinar attendees on Thursday, adding that the vast majority of grants are one-time investments. “There’s certainly some other co-benefits, as well, worth acknowledging. I’m thinking specifically of human health impacts, the ability of communities and tribes to respond to natural emergencies like wildfire and drought and, certainly, just quality of life.”

Looking north from downtown Shoshoni in 2018. (Andrew Graham/WyoFile)

Though Wyoming’s congressional delegation opposed the Biden-era initiatives, they eventually joined state leaders in efforts to train local municipalities and others in grant writing seminars and provided other resources to help Wyoming communities take advantage of the opportunities.

“These aren’t abstract government initiatives,” the outdoor council’s Tribal Engagement Coordinator Big Wind Carpenter said. “They really are helping benefit our communities here on the ground in Wyoming … We’re talking about weatherization, energy efficiency upgrades — these are fundamental building blocks to allow residents to access services that they otherwise couldn’t afford.”

What municipalities are saying

City officials in Cheyenne — where technology and manufacturing have been booming for years, and where city staff is deft at pulling in grant dollars — say there’s unanswered questions regarding supposedly settled federal grants as well as those in the pipeline.

Sens. John Barrasso and Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyoming) give virtual remarks at the state’s first annual federal funding summit in Sheridan on June 14, 2023. (Maggie Mullen/WyoFile)

“What I’m hearing from our federal partners is, ‘Just proceed as you have been until you hear otherwise’ and ‘Don’t do anything that could be used as a reason or an excuse to cancel your grant,'” Cheyenne’s Economic Resource Administrator Renee Smith told WyoFile. 

In some cases, she said, particularly with grants administered by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, city and state officials sometimes hear of grant status updates before the regional office is informed. Staff at the U.S. Forest Service, according to Smith, have said they’re worried about the ability to process grants due to personnel cuts made by the Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency.   

“We were going to go after a couple of Forest Service grants and, basically, everything just got shut down,” Smith said. One of the city’s in-the-pipe grants via the U.S. Department of Agriculture Urban and Community Forestry program was paused for a few weeks before federal officials resumed processing it, she said. 

The city is still pinning hopes on an EPA grant to conduct a greenhouse-gas inventory which, if one is completed, qualifies Cheyenne and Laramie County to “unlock” many more potential grants for community solar and other renewable energy projects, Smith said. But the Trump administration has indicated a massive budget cut for the agency.

“That’s going to have massive, massive repercussions in our state,” Smith said, adding that EPA-administered grants help fill a major funding need in Wyoming for municipal water infrastructure.

What worries Smith the most, however, is that federal agencies are not accepting new applications for grant programs.

“I honestly think that we will see the impacts, not this year, but next year,” Smith said. “There are no grants for me to apply for right now. There’s nothing. So if I’m not writing grants, we’re not getting grants next year to do infrastructure projects next year.

“I’m less worried about our existing programs because we have contracts in place,” she added. 

A contingent of Wyoming community advocates and town officials will sojourn to Washington D.C. this week, according to multiple sources who spoke to WyoFile, to plead for support of federal dollars already promised to Wyoming. Meantime, Gordon and Wyoming’s congressional delegation, they say, have been making the case for exceptions under the sweeping cuts.

“They are listening,” Smith said.

Dustin Bleizeffer covers energy and climate at WyoFile. He has worked as a coal miner, an oilfield mechanic, and for more than 25 years as a statewide reporter and editor primarily covering the energy...

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  1. People don’t understand how many programs are funded under grants, programs inside government itself. You look at the application processes and you wonder if the extreme definition of how narrowly funds can be spent and the admin required to apply and administer, the thought comes to mind, it may be more cost effective to simply increase operating budgets and use a more streamlined carrot and stick approach, issuing priorities for funding at recommended levels with a simple accounting system that upon an unacceptable review, deducts funds from the next general operating budget. This could lead to a sharing of standard specifications, etc. The opposite philosophy is to gut general operating funds and make all or as much as possible funding under these administration-heavy grant processes. Its a big, constant balancing act.

  2. Just for the record Larry according to a 7 Nov 2024 article in Consumer Affairs, federal debt increased by approximately $8.2 Trillion. As of the date of that article the debt had only increased by $6.2 Trillion. The smallest increase in the debt in the last 30 years was under Democrat Bill Clinton ($1.4 Trillion) so electing Republicans who repeatedly give tax breaks to the ultra-rich will never balance the budget. If you want to solve the problem institute a simple tax code: You made (a)$xxx.xx, your tax rate is (b)xx%, multiply (a) by (b) submit your payment. No deductions no exceptions. They could reduce everyone’s tax rate and still balance the budget.

  3. Since our red states receive more federal money per capita, our red states will take the biggest hit. We need a whole herd of rhinos to stampede.

  4. What I hope is that MAGA states will take a second look at their politics. And ask ,What is skimming down the Federal Government going to do for us? And what will happen to the money we had? The possibly good news coming from Trump and Dodge debacle is that a new or different political party will emerge in a confirmed Republican bastion like Wyoming.

  5. I’m wondering if this isn’t another Trump ploy to aggrandize himself. Blame all the problems on former administrations; cut all the funding, and then walk back in with his own “recovery aid”, claiming he, alone, “fixed it”.

  6. “He wants to suck our blood? That is not what I voted for when I voted for Dracula.” — BILL MAHER.

  7. Isn’t this what MAGA Wyoming voted for? How are they going to give all those tax breaks to the rich and subsidies to Musk to play rocketman if they don’t cut our services? I think this is what’s called karma.

  8. Yep the deficit is out of control. However .. “What goes around, Comes around” The “RED STATES’ are getting clobbered now by big tax breaks for the rich with every Republican administration since the Reagan days. The sadness of this is the chaos it is creating, not to mention that so many have become reliant on the federal funding to put food on the table, and our vets that we so like to send to war take it in the shorts.

  9. The irony of the whole thing is that I think people who voted for Trump assumed that they would get more efficient, cost effective government. One that cuts out any fat. Turns out some of the fat being cut out is their own. What they are really getting is a shotgun, slipshod approach. Totally chaotic, without rhyme or reason. As near as I can figure out it’s all coming from that unelected bureaucrat Elon Musk. Hold on to your shorts folks, they are just getting started. There is another thing that continues to irritate me and that being the 2017 tax cut that Trump rammed through. It mostly was a tax cut for the rich and corporations. It was supposed to increase tax revenue through increased investment and business activity. Reagan’s old trickle down theory. Remember Mike Enzi? He was at continual war with the national deficit and voted for that tax cut. Did it increase revenue and decrease the national debt? Hell no it didn’t and he should have known better. It increased the national debt substantially.

    1. Musk ,an unelected official,wouldn’t be able to do what he’s doing without Trump’s permission and encouragement. Blame Trump!!

  10. Had the majority of our voters watched and listened to actual news reporting, rather than just the Trump channels of Fox, News Max, and Truth Social, they wouldn’t be surprised at the fix we are now in. Trump and his billionaire cabinet have long demonstrated that they are out for themselves to create an authoritarian government. But so many voters decided to swallow the endless lies and elect him. Now, we live with the results. I’m sorry that you were lied to, but let’s come together to take our country back.

    1. Bob. More money the government spends the higher inflation goes. Higher inflation goes the more your dollar is devalued. Look at how it devalued under Biden/Democrats. But Trump didn’t start this nasty cycle. It has been on going for 50 plus years. Are you happy with your utility costs for your home? Get ready. Natural gas is going to rise. Stopping drilling for natural gas under Joe will have dire consequences. Drilling never kept up with draw down and depletion. Guess what? Solar-Wind isn’t powering the grid like coal or natural gas does 24/7. Prices are and will rise due to short sighted Biden.

      1. How many verses of “it’s all Biden’s fault” do we have to hear before this song is finally pulled from the airwaves? The Republican Party used to be the party of personal responsibility. Trump shattered this; he and his minions can’t deflect responsibility for their actions fast enough. Take back your party, Republicans! If you’re not going to do this, stop blaming everybody else for the Trump administration’s ineptitudes.

        1. Also Wyoming itself does not tax residents adequately. For example , when I sold a cabin on two beautiful acres near Dubois, I got creamed with taxes on the profit because I had moved to Colorado. If I’d stayed in Wyoming I wouldn’t have had to pay taxes on the increase. .

  11. I realize that many, if not most, Wyoming Trump votors weren’t expecting the chaos that is consuming our country – and their state – right now.

    I’m hopeful that issues like this one are opening voters’ eyes to reality, that this administration doesn’t have the people’s best interest in mind.

  12. When you pay taxes, you hope you’ll get something back. Under Dumpy, the oligarchs will get it instead. Like many of Trumps businesses, he will ruin the economy and take care of himself.

  13. It’s money that has to be printed out of thin air backed by what is in Joe Biden’s depends. $37 Trillion in debt is more money that actually exists in entire world money supply!!! We are BROKE folks.

    1. We are broke because GOP gives huge tax breaks to Musk and his buddies. We will be even more broke next year with slumping economy and all those laid off or deported who won’t be paying taxes in 2025. Wake up…