California and a coalition of other states are filing a lawsuit against the Trump administration over the Department of Government Efficiency’s cuts to the AmeriCorps national service program, according the governor’s office said Tuesday.
The lawsuit argues that the cuts are essentially eliminating the national agency and blocking the states’ ability to support AmeriCorps programs within their own jurisdiction, the governor’s office said in a news release. It comes after DOGE placed most national AmeriCorps staff members on leave, discharged volunteers from AmeriCorps’s National Civilian Community Corps and instructed the agency to cut $400 million in grants.
“Service sits at the very core of who we are as Americans. California is suing the Trump administration to defend thousands of hardworking service members and the communities they serve,” Governor Gavin Newsom said in a statement. “These actions by President Trump and Elon Musk not only threaten our funding – they vandalize our values. We’re going to fight to stop them.”
The cuts have shaken local nonprofits that rely on volunteers and grants from AmeriCorps to carry out their missions, leaving many scrambling and scenario-planning ahead of an uncertain future and some preparing for the potential of losing this integral support.
The state received notification Friday that AmeriCorps grant programs would be terminated. In 2024, the state had 6,150 volunteers working at more than 1,200 locations such as homeless shelters, veterans facilities, schools, food banks and more, the governor’s office said. Many AmeriCorps volunteers responded during the Los Angeles wildfires at the beginning of the year by supporting 26,000 households and distributing 21,000 food boxes.
These volunteers “bring out the best in America and in our communities,” said California Attorney General Rob Bonta in a statement.
“By abruptly canceling critical grants and gutting AmeriCorps’ workforce and volunteers, DOGE is dismantling AmeriCorps without any concern for the thousands of people who are ready and eager to serve their country — or for those whose communities are stronger because of this public service,” Bonta said. “California has repeatedly taken action to hold the Trump Administration and DOGE accountable to the law — and we stand prepared to do it again to protect AmeriCorps and the vital services it provides.”
Related Articles
As Elon Musk nears end of 130-day DOGE stint, he’s $113 billion down
California consumer confidence falls to lowest since December 2020
Santa Clara County, SF take aim at Elon Musk’s DOGE in latest lawsuit against the Trump administration
Harvard University, under pressure from Trump administration, renames its DEI office
Numbers that matter from the first 100 days of Trump’s second term
The state is continuing to recruit for the California Service Corps program, the governor’s office said. The program hosts about 10,000 members in several service agencies.
In 2024, AmeriCorps volunteers in California completed more than 4 million hours of service and planted nearly 40,000 trees.
“DOGE isn’t just cutting jobs — they’re attacking the very people who keep California strong,” said GO-Serve Director Josh Fryday. “They’re coming after the service members who responded to the LA fires, the tutors helping our kids and the young leaders caring for our seniors. It’s outrageous, it’s illegal and we won’t back down.
“In California, we’re not just defending service — we’re strengthening it. California is doubling down, and we trust the courts will strike this down and uphold the values we fight for every day.”