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Tribal advocates keep up legal pressure for fair political maps; 12-member jury sworn in for Trump's historic criminal trial; the importance of healthcare decision planning; and a debt dilemma: poll shows how many people wrestle with college costs.

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Civil rights activists say a court ruling could end the right to protest in three southern states, a federal judge lets January 6th lawsuits proceed against former President Trump, and police arrest dozens at a Columbia University Gaza protest.

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Rural Wyoming needs more vocational teachers to sustain its workforce pipeline, Ohio environmental advocates fear harm from a proposal to open 40-thousand forest acres to fracking and rural communities build bike trail systems to promote nature, boost the economy.

Funding Cuts Hit Medical Research

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Monday, April 29, 2013   

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. - When Congress passed the "sequester" cuts as part of the Budget Control Act of 2011, across-the-board reductions were imposed on a number of agencies. The National Institutes of Health lost 5 percent of their budget, about $1.6 billion dollars.

According to Pam Miller of the American Heart Association of South Dakota, those cuts will hurt.

"That's just devastating in terms of funding for research grants and just everything that goes into things related to research," she declared. "It's the second-lowest funding since 2000."

Miller said cuts in research grants will directly affect programs at the University of South Dakota and South Dakota State University, as well as the people who work on those programs.

She said the cuts take the NIH backward several years.

"So, a cut of $1.6 billion would reduce the NIH budget to 2007 funding levels, and would mean that grants that NIH plans to fund would not be awarded."

Miller remarked that heart patients could be more at risk if such cuts to NIH continue.

"A lot of the advancements that have come about in terms of treating patients that have had a heart event or in terms of prevention have come about through NIH research, and so to cut those to historic low levels will have a very direct impact on heart patients," she said.

Miller added that the cuts in NIH grants affect the overall economy, since many jobs are at stake.



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