![In November 2023, KYCC plants street trees along roads in Koreatown, Los Angeles, where green space is limited. The organization planned to carry out a tree-planting project from this year through 2027 under a contract with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. However, the promised federal funding was suddenly canceled. [Courtesy of KYCC]](https://www.koreadailyus.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/0428-newsletter-treeplanting.jpg)
In what can only be described as a sudden and unilateral blow, the federal government has abruptly cut funding to several Korean American nonprofit organizations, forcing them to halt vital community services midstream.
These are not speculative programs or initiatives awaiting approval—they are projects that were already underway, backed by contracts and federal commitments. Yet, in a move that reflects indifference at best and targeted neglect at worst, even these active programs have now been defunded.
The Koreatown Youth and Community Center (KYCC), a cornerstone of civic support in Los Angeles’s Koreatown, received a letter from the U.S. Department of Agriculture stating that a tree-planting initiative—contracted and scheduled to run through 2027—was being canceled before it could even begin.
The organization also saw funding withdrawn from a storytelling project meant to highlight the lives of local small business owners and from a drug prevention program targeting youth of color. “It’s highly unusual for the federal government to walk away from programs that have already started,” said a KYCC official. But “unusual” is now becoming the new normal under the Trump administration’s austerity push.
These budget cuts are not random—they are deliberate reductions targeting diversity, equity, inclusion (DEI), addiction recovery, education, healthcare, and immigrant support services. Led by the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), the administration claims these cuts are necessary to reduce federal debt.
But the immediate result is that vulnerable communities are left without critical lifelines, and the nonprofits serving them are left scrambling.
One such group, Mission City Clinic Network (MCCN), opened a clinic on Wilshire Boulevard specifically to support undocumented immigrants who were recently made eligible for Medi-Cal under California policy. Hundreds of Korean Americans and other community members have received care through this facility.
Now, with federal support vanishing, the clinic is racing to raise private funds to stay afloat. Director Mark Lee warned that once the federal funding stops—likely in January—the state alone will not be able to sustain the coverage. “We are left hoping that local governments will step in to support undocumented and low-income patients,” he said.
The most heartbreaking aspect of these cutbacks isn’t the political maneuvering or the bureaucratic chaos—it’s the human cost. KYCC Director Johng Ho Song noted that entire teams have been hired based on these federal contracts.
With funding gone, so are their jobs, and with them, the services intended for the community’s most vulnerable members. “It’s devastating,” he said, “not just for us as an organization, but for the people we serve. They are the ones losing the most.”
And the situation may only worsen. According to the LA Daily News, if Congress—which is now under Republican control—adopts the Trump administration’s proposed 2026 budget, Southern California’s nonprofits will face even deeper financial strain and wider service cuts.
When the government breaks its own contracts, it doesn’t just default on a piece of paper—it defaults on the people who depend on those promises.
Korean-American nonprofits have long filled gaps in public services, often stretching limited resources to meet overwhelming needs. The sudden withdrawal of federal support isn’t just poor governance. It’s a betrayal.
By Mooyoung Lee [lee.mooyoung@koreadaily.com]