tr?id=&ev=PageView&noscript=

Virginia repro clinics face uncertainty as Trump administration halts federal health funding

By Jessica F. Simmons

April 4, 2025

Planned Parenthood clinics across the nation brace for fallout from sudden Title X freeze

Planned Parenthood clinics across Virginia are bracing for disruption after the Trump administration abruptly froze federal funding for reproductive health care, a move that could jeopardize access to contraception, cancer screenings, and STI testing for low-income patients.

On Sunday, nine Planned Parenthood affiliates—serving patients in at least 20 states, including Virginia—received notice that some or all of their Title X Family Planning program funding would be suspended as of April 1. The decision, which arrived without public explanation, has left providers scrambling to assess the fallout.

RELATED: Amid growing threats to repro rights in Virginia, a local clinic is still trying to expand access

“The reporters I’ve been talking to know a lot more than we do,” said RaeAnn Pickett, director of communications for the Virginia League for Planned Parenthood. “This announcement is causing chaos and confusion, as has every decision that has been made recently, and so we’re the latest ones to have to figure this out—and we will.”

Beyond the immediate impact on funding, the administration is also allegedly demanding that affected clinics turn over patient names—including those of undocumented individuals—within 10 days, a move that has alarmed privacy advocates. 

Pickett, however, said she was unaware of such a request, calling it “horrifying.”

A critical program at risk

Title X, a bipartisan program established in 1970, is the country’s only federal initiative specifically dedicated to providing affordable reproductive health care to people with low incomes. More than 300 Planned Parenthood affiliates participate in the program, relying on it to offer essential services.

In Virginia, Title X funding helps support clinics in Richmond, Virginia Beach, and Hampton, providing care to thousands of patients each year. Without it, providers warn that access to critical health services—including birth control, cancer screenings, and STI testing—could be severely reduced.

In a statement, Alexis McGill Johnson, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Action Fund, condemned the decision, calling it an attack on health care access.

“President Trump and Elon Musk are pushing their dangerous political agenda, stripping health care access from people nationwide, and not giving a second thought to the devastation they will cause,” Johnson said. “We know what happens when health care providers cannot use Title X funding: People across the country suffer, cancers go undetected, access to birth control is severely reduced, and the nation’s STI crisis worsens.”

National implications

The decision aligns with Project 2025, a policy blueprint for the second Trump presidency that calls for defunding Planned Parenthood and shifting federal family planning resources toward so-called “fertility awareness-based methods and supplies.”

READ MORE: Project 2025 would threaten women’s access to emergency contraception

During his first term as president, Trump imposed a domestic gag rule that blocked Title X funding for reproductive health clinics if they refused to stop abortion-related services.

According to Planned Parenthood, its Title X-funded clinics provided more than:

  • 400,000 cancer screening and prevention services in 2023
  • 2 million birth control services
  • 5 million STI services
  • 1.5 million patient visits

Polling suggests the move is widely unpopular. Nearly 8 in 10 voters (77%) oppose defunding Planned Parenthood’s Title X services, including 63% of Trump voters.

RELATED: Misinformation about birth control is rampant on social media, alarming doctors

Virginia clinics in limbo

As of Monday, Virginia clinics were still operating as usual, and Pickett said “patient care has not been impacted at this point.” But she urged patients to continue seeking care and donors and advocates to offer support to the providers who need it now.

“Planned Parenthood, as a provider of reproductive health care, is going to need and continues to run on the support of others,” Pickett said. “And I think that for those who are passionate about supporting Planned Parenthood, they… should think about using that health center for services like primary care: keeping up to date on vaccinations, and then also their sexual health care; stopping by and saying hello, or just writing a thank you card for the local clinic workers.”

For now, Virginia clinics are left in limbo, waiting to see whether the administration’s decision is a temporary maneuver or a more permanent restructuring of federal reproductive health funding.

READ MORE: Virginia House Republican admits most Virginians support abortion rights before voting against them

  • Jessica F. Simmons

    Jessica F. Simmons is a Reporter & Strategic Communications Producer for COURIER, covering community stories and public policies across the country. Featured in print, broadcast, and radio journalism, her work shows her passion for local storytelling and amplifying issues that matter to communities nationwide.

Related Stories
Share This