Live Updates:
Agency Guidance on Federal Funding
Last Updated: April 2, 2025, 9:37 AM ET
This page tracks the actions of 18 grant-making departments as executive orders are implemented, with a focus on their impact on federal funding programs. We will provide real-time updates on policy changes that affect funding opportunities and how these alterations shape the federal funding landscape. For a more comprehensive understanding, key executive orders are included at the bottom of the page to provide context for these developments, ensuring you stay informed about the evolving funding environment.
AGENCY GUIDANCE AND ANNOUNCEMENTS ON FEDERAL FUNDING
Department of Agriculture (USDA)
Agriculture Secretary: Brooke L. Rollins | Agency Website: Link
Secretary Rollins announces that USDA will release obligated funding under the Higher Blends Infrastructure Incentive Program (HBIIP) for 543 projects totaling $537 million in 29 states.
3/25/2025 - USDA Delivers on Rural Energy Commitments, Provides Path for Applicants to Support U.S. Energy Independence
Secretary Rollins announces the USDA will release previously obligated funding under the Rural Energy For America Program (REAP), Empowering Rural America (New ERA) and Powering Affordable Clean Energy (PACE) programs. Award recipients will have 30 days to review and voluntarily revise their project plans to align with President Trump’s Unleashing American Energy Executive Order, refocusing on expanding domestic energy production while removing Biden-era DEIA and climate mandates from previous proposals. USDA Rural Development is notifying awardees individually and requesting responses that include answers to specific questions and a brief narrative outlining any proposed changes.
2/21/2025 - Secretary Rollins Releases the First Tranche of Funding Under Review
Secretary Rollins announces that USDA will release approximately $20 million in contracts paused due to the review of USDA funding in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). Contracts for the Environmental Quality Incentive Program, the Conservation Stewardship Program, and the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program will have their funding resumed.
Secretary Rollins issues SM 1078-001, mandating that USDA funding decisions be based on meritocracy rather than identity-based criteria. The memorandum orders the rescission of all Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility (DEIA) programs, including the Special Emphasis Programs (SEP), as well as any requirements in funding applications that ask for demographic or identity-related information unless specifically required by law.
Department of Commerce (DOC)
Commerce Secretary: Howard Lutnick | Agency Website: Link
3/5/2025 - Statement from U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick on the BEAD Program
Secretary Lutnick announces a review of the $42.4 billion Broadband Equity Access and Deployment Program (BEAD) program to remove certain requirements established by the previous administration and allow for a more “tech-neutral approach.” Lutnick also states DOC will explore reducing government red tape that delays infrastructure construction. “Under the revamped BEAD program, all Americans will receive the benefit of the bargain that Congress intended. We’re going to deliver high-speed internet access, and we will do it efficiently and effectively at the lowest cost to taxpayers,” said Lutnick.
Department of Education (ED)
Education Secretary: Linda McMahon | Agency Website: Link
In a press release following the signing of the EO to close the Department of Education, Secretary McMahon announces that "closing the Department does not mean cutting off funds from those who depend on them—we will continue to support K-12 students, students with special needs, college student borrowers, and others who rely on essential programs."
3/11/2025 - U.S. Department of Education Initiates Reduction in Force
Secretary McMahon implements a 50% reduction in force (RIF) of the ED workforce as part of the Department's "final mission." According to the press release, the Department will continue to deliver on all statutory programs that fall under the agency’s purview, including formula funding, student loans, Pell Grants, funding for special needs students, and competitive grantmaking.
2/19/2025 - U.S. Department of Education Cancels Divisive and Wasteful Grants under the Comprehensive Centers Program
Secretary McMahon announces the cancelation of 18 grants totaling $226 million awarded under the Comprehensive Centers Program.
2/19/2025 - U.S. Department of Education Updates Guidance on COVID-19 Funding
Secretary McMahon announces updated policies regarding the remaining $4.4 billion in state funding for COVID-19 pandemic relief. Payments under the CARES Act, CRRSA Act, and ARP Act spent on allowable expenditures must now be paid by the states in advance and then submitted to the Department for reimbursement.
2/17/2025 - U.S. Department of Education Cuts Over $600 Million in Divisive Teacher Training Grants
Secretary McMahon announces cancelation of over $600 million in grants to institutions and nonprofits that were using department funding to train teachers and education agencies on “divisive” ideologies.
2/13/2025 - U.S. Department of Education Cancels Additional $350 Million in Woke Spending
Secretary McMahon cancels 14 contracts and grants to several Regional Educational Laboratories and Equity Assistance Centers, totaling over $350 million.
1/31/2025 - U.S. Department of Education Advances School Choice by Supporting Charter Schools
ED announces the State Entity Charter School Grant and the Charter Management Organization Grant programs will be revised to align with Trump-Vance Administration priorities. ED states that the revisions are necessary due to “excessive regulatory burdens and promoted discriminatory practices” implemented by the previous administration. The Department also makes available $33 million in grant funding for Charter Management Organizations for the Charter School Program (CSP) competition.
Department of Energy (DOE)
Energy Secretary: Chris Wright | Agency Website: Link
2/5/2025 - Secretary Wright Acts to “Unleash Golden Era of American Energy Dominance”
Secretary Wright signs his first order directing the Department of Energy to take immediate action to promote American energy initiatives in alignment with President Trump's executive orders. The directive outlines nine key actions that signify a strategic shift in federal funding priorities within the energy sector to “pursue a culture of transparency, performance, and common sense to succeed.” These initiatives are: 1) Advance Energy Addition, Not Subtraction, 2) Unleash American Energy Innovation, 3) Return to Regular Order on LNG Exports, 4) Promote Affordability and Consumer Choice in Home Appliances, 5) Refill the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), 6) Modernize America’s nuclear stockpile, 7) Unleash Commercial Nuclear Power in the United States, 8) Strengthen Grid Reliability and Security, and 9) Streamline Permitting and Identify Undue Burdens on American Energy.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
HHS Secretary: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. | Agency Website: Link
3/27/2025 - Fact Sheet: HHS’ Transformation to Make America Healthy Again
HHS announces a significant restructuring plan aimed at enhancing efficiency and reducing costs. This initiative includes reducing the workforce from 82,000 to 62,000 employees and consolidating 28 divisions into 15. Additionally, the plan introduces the Administration for a Healthy America (AHA) to centralize functions related to chronic care and disease prevention.
3/11/2025 - HHS Office of General Counsel Announces Reorganization Effort
Acting General Counsel of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Sean Keveney, announces the consolidation of regional offices from ten to four, maintaining Philadelphia, Atlanta, Kansas City (MO), and Denver. HHS states that the remaining four regional offices will “provide the same geographic support for regional HHS offices at lower operating costs.”
3/10/2025 - HHS DEIA Contracts Terminated (Last Updated 3/10/2025)
HHS Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs publishes a list of 79 contracts terminated in full or part since January 21, 2025.
Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
Homeland Security Secretary: Kristi Noem | Agency Website: Link
3/28/2025 - FEMA Grants
DHS has publishes a database on reduced spending for Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) grants.
3/28/2025 - CISA Grants
DHS has publishes a database on reduced spending for Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) grants.
3/20/2025 - Transparency of Contract Actions to Reduce Spending
DHS publishes a webpage to track canceled contracts, listing $892 million in federal funding that has been canceled that does not meet the current Administrative Priorities. They include:
CBP Contract Actions to Reduce Spending
USSS Contract Actions to Reduce Spending
USCG Contract Actions to Reduce Spending
ICE Contract Actions to Reduce Spending
USCIS Contract Actions to Reduce Spending
TSA Contract Actions to Reduce Spending
CISA Contract Actions to Reduce Spending
FEMA Contract Actions to Reduce Spending
FLETC Contract Actions to Reduce Spending
MGMT Contract Actions to Reduce Spending
3/12/2025 - Transparency of Grants Actions to Reduce Spending
DHS publishes a spreadsheet detailing actions related to financial assistance, such as terminating awards or canceling programs that do not meet the current Administrative Priorities.
2/20/2025 - A Snapshot of Trump’s First Month: Making America Safe Again
In this press release, DHS states that they have “frozen all grants to non-profit organizations that facilitate illegal immigration.” DHS did not specify which organizations have had their funds frozen, nor the grant programs involved.
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
HUD Secretary: Scott Turner | Agency Website: Link
2/20/2025 - HUD Cancels $4 Million in DEI Contracts
Secretary Turner announces $4 million in canceled contracts identified by HUD’s DOGE Task Force. Contracts were canceled on the basis that they were promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion.
2/13/2025 - HUD Secretary Scott Turner Launches DOGE Task Force to Eliminate Waste, Fraud and Abuse
Secretary Turner announces the HUD's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) Task Force that will review departmental spending. The task force will “examine how to best maximize the agency’s budget and ensure all programs, processes and personnel are working together to advance the purpose of the department.”
Department of the Interior (DOI)
Interior Secretary: Doug Burgum | Agency Website: Link
2/3/2025 - SO 3422 - Unleashing Alaska's Extraordinary Resource Potential
Secretary Burgum signs SO 3422, directing the Department to maximize Alaska’s natural resources. This Order revokes prior restrictions, reinstates key policies to facilitate energy and mineral production, and mandates expedited permitting and leasing processes (Sec. 6). Additionally, it prioritizes infrastructure development, including rights-of-way and easements, to support resource extraction and transportation. Under this directive, the Department’s Bureaus and Offices must implement action plans to accelerate energy projects, ensuring regulatory efficiency while advancing national economic and security interests.
2/3/2025 - SO 3421 - Achieving Prosperity through Deregulation
Secretary Burgum signs SO 3421 directing USDA Bureaus and Offices to identify at least 10 existing regulations for removal when proposing a new regulation. Additionally, agencies must offset any new regulatory costs by eliminating costs associated with at least 10 existing regulations, as permitted by law (Sec. 4).
2/3/2025 - SO 3418 - Unleashing American Energy
Secretary Burgum signs SO 3418, directing a comprehensive review of federal funding programs to ensure alignment with national energy priorities. The order mandates an immediate assessment of all grants, loans, contracts, and financial disbursements under the Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Sec. 4d). The Department will prioritize funding initiatives that expand domestic energy production, critical mineral development, and infrastructure improvements (Sec. 3a-c), while eliminating barriers that hinder energy investment (Sec. 4c). Additionally, Assistant Secretaries are directed to review and revise financial disbursement policies to ensure that funds support multiple-use energy development and do not favor renewable energy over other resource projects unless required by law (Sec. 4c).
2/3/2025 - SO 3417 - Addressing the National Energy Emergency
Secretary Burgum signs SO 3417, mandating the identification and use of emergency and existing legal authorities to accelerate domestic energy production, critical mineral development, and infrastructure expansion. Burgum directs DOI Bureaus and Offices to submit plans within 15 days to expedite the permitting, leasing, refining, transportation, and exportation of energy resources, particularly in high-demand regions such as Alaska, the West Coast, and the Northeast (Sec. 4).
1/30/2025 - SO 3416 - Ending DEI Programs and Gender Ideology Extremism
Secretary Burgum signs SO 3416, directing the termination of all DEIA and Environmental Justice programs within the Department, discontinuing equity-related grants, contracts, and funding initiatives. It mandates a review of past policies to ensure funding and programs prioritize merit and compliance over equity-based criteria (Sec. 4c).
Department of Justice (DOJ)
Attorney General: Pam Bondi | Agency Website: Link
No agency guidance is available at this time.
Department of Labor (DOL)
Labor Secretary: Lori Chavez-DeRemer | Agency Website: Link
3/27/2025 - Rescission of Training and Employment Guidance Letter (TEGL) No. 10-23
DOL rescinds Rescission of Training and Employment Guidance Letter (TEGL) No. 10-23: Reducing Administrative Barriers to Improve Customer Experience in Grant Programs Administered by the Employment and Training Administration (ETA). This guidance was intended to provide grant recipients with direction in developing policies, procedures, and practices that reduce unnecessary administrative barriers to serving customers seeking employment and training services.
Department of State (DOS) & U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
Secretary of State: Marco Rubio | Agency Website: Link
1/26/2025 - Implementing the President’s Executive Order on Reevaluating and Realigning United States Foreign Aid
Secretary Rubio pauses all U.S. foreign assistance funded by or through the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) for review, consistent with the Executive Order on Reevaluating and Realigning United States Foreign Aid.
Department of Transportation (DOT)
Transportation Secretary: Sean Duffy | Agency Website: Link
Secretary Sean P. Duffy announces the rescission of two Biden-era memorandums: the “Policy on Using Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Resources to Build a Better America” and “Policy on Using Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Resources to Build a Better America.”
Secretary Duffy signs a memorandum directing Secretarial Officers and Heads of Operating Administrations to identify and eliminate all Biden-era programs, policies, activities, rules, and orders that promote climate change activism, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives, racial equity, gender identity policies, environmental justice, and other partisan objectives.
Department of the Treasury (TREAS)
Treasury Secretary: Scott Bessent | Agency Website: Link
No agency guidance is available at this time.
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
Veterans Affairs Secretary: Doug Collins | Agency Website: Link
3/3/2025 - VA to terminate 585 non-mission-critical or duplicative contracts
The Department of Veterans Affairs announces the cancelation of 585 non-mission-critical or duplicative contracts, totaling about $1.8 billon. After accounting for the money already spent on the contracts, the VA estimates that $900 million will be redirected back toward health care, benefits and services for VA beneficiaries. The 585 contract cancelations are the first step in VA’s comprehensive and ongoing audit of roughly 90,000 department contracts worth more than $67 billion.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
EPA Administrator: Lee Zeldin | Agency Website: Link
3/25/2025 - EPA updates Terms and Conditions
EPA implements several modifications to its General Terms and Conditions, which have implications for grant recipients. The key changes are as follows:
Federal Anti-Discrimination Laws (T&C #54): A new term has been introduced emphasizing compliance with federal anti-discrimination statutes.
Termination Provisions (T&C #3): The EPA has added a provision allowing for the termination of awards that no longer align with program goals or agency priorities.
Updates to 40 CFR Part 33 (T&C #27): Revisions have been made in accordance with a class exception to certain subparts of 40 CFR Part 33 (Participation By Disadvantaged Business Enterprises In U.S EPA Programs)
Administrative Priorities (T&Cs #8, #42, #47): Adjustments have been made to these terms to reflect current administration priorities.
3/12/2025 - EPA Launches Biggest Deregulatory Action in U.S. History
Administrator Zeldin launches a major deregulatory initiative to lower costs and stimulate economic growth by revising key energy, manufacturing, and automotive regulations. These deregulations aim to streamline compliance requirements, promote job creation, and enhance American energy independence. EPA will focus on deregulation in areas that affect power plants, vehicle emissions, and air quality standards to give states greater flexibility.
3/12/2025 - EPA Announces Action to Implement POTUS’s Termination of Biden-Harris Electric Vehicle Mandate
Administrator Zeldin announces that the EPA is reconsidering the Multi-Pollutant Emissions Standards for light-duty and medium-duty vehicles for model years 2027 and later, as well as the greenhouse gas emissions standards for heavy-duty vehicles. Additionally, the EPA is reevaluating other components of the Biden administration’s “Clean Trucks Plan,” which includes the 2022 Heavy-Duty Nitrous Oxide (NOx) rule.
3/11/2025 - Administrator Zeldin Terminates Biden-Harris $20B 'Gold Bar' Grants
Administrator Zeldin announces the termination of Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund (GGRF) grant agreements with the National Clean Investment Fund and Clean Communities Investment Accelerator. According to the press release, EPA plans to re-obligate appropriated funds in the GGRF with “enhanced controls.”
In a fourth round of cuts, Administrator Zeldin and EPA's DOGE office cancels more than 400 additional grants across nine programs, totaling $1.7 billion.
Administrator Zeldin cancels another 21 grants totaling $116,449.76. With this third round of EPA cuts, the total amount of canceled EPA contracts reaches $287 million.
Administrator Zeldin announces a second round of canceled grants totaling over $60 million in federal funding. According to the EPA press release, the 20 rescinded grants were mainly related to DEI initiatives and environmental justice programs, although specific details on which grants were canceled were not provided.
2/14/2025 - EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin Cancels Nine More Contracts, Saving Nearly $60 Million
Administrator Zeldin announces nearly $60 million in canceled contracts from nine projects related to DEI, environmental justice, and more. “At President Trump’s direction, EPA, with the assistance of DOGE, are reviewing every dollar spent,” said Zeldin.
2/4/2025 - EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin Announces EPA’s “Powering the Great American Comeback” Initiative
Administrator Zeldin unveils the "Powering the Great American Comeback" initiative, outlining the agency’s priorities under President Trump’s administration. This initiative focuses on five key pillars aimed at advancing environmental protection while prioritizing economic growth. They include (1) Clean Air, Land, and Water for Every American: Ensuring access to clean resources while supporting emergency response efforts; (2) Restore American Energy Dominance: Driving energy independence and lowering costs for families and businesses; (3) Permitting Reform, Cooperative Federalism, and Cross-Agency Partnership: Streamlining regulatory processes to boost investment and job creation; (4) Make the United States the Artificial Intelligence Capital of the World: Positioning the U.S. as the global hub for artificial intelligence development; and (5)Protecting and Bringing Back American Auto Jobs: Strengthening domestic manufacturing and bringing back industry jobs.
National Science Foundation (NSF)
NSF Director: Sethuraman Panchanathan | Agency Website: Link
Live Page - NSF Implementation of Recent Executive Orders
This page provides information regarding recent executive orders and their impact on the NSF. This page is being updated as new information becomes available. Also on this page is a list of frequently asked questions, along with a webform to submit your own questions.
2/2/2025 - Information for NSF awardees
Access to the Award Cash Management Service (ACM$) is restored and the system is available to accept payment requests.
2/2/2025 - Information for proposers
NSF proposal processing and review activities have resumed and are ongoing. NSF will update relevant funding opportunities. A list of open funding opportunities can be found on the NSF Funding Search page.
Small Business Administration (SBA)
SBA Administrator: Kelly Loeffler | Agency Website: Link
3/10/2025 - SBA Announces Made in America Manufacturing Initiative
Administrator Loeffler announces SBA's new Made in America Manufacturing Initiative to restore American economic dominance and national security by empowering small manufacturers. This initiative will support President Trump’s agenda to create good-paying jobs, secure supply chains, and promote fair trade.
2/24/2025 - SBA Administrator Loeffler Issues Memo on Day One Priorities
Administrator Loeffler issues a Day One memo outlining her top priorities for the agency. Priorities will focus on three main areas: (1) supporting President Trump’s “America First” agenda, (2) eliminating wasteful spending and fraud, and (3) empowering small businesses.
KEY EXECUTIVE ORDERS ON FEDERAL FUNDING
3/31/2025 - Establishing the United States Investment Accelerator
This order directs the Secretary of Commerce, with the Secretary of the Treasury and the Assistant to the President for Economic Policy, to establish the Office of Investment Accelerator within the Department of Commerce. The new office will be responsible for overseeing the CHIPS Program Office within the DOC and implementing the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022.
3/20/2025 - Immediate Measures to Increase American Mineral Production
This order aims to increase U.S. mineral production and strengthen national security by reducing reliance on foreign sources. It mandates agencies to expedite mineral project approvals, prioritize federal lands for mining, and enhance public-private partnerships for capital investment. Key agencies like the Departments of Defense, Interior, Energy, and Agriculture will play central roles in facilitating the implementation of the EO.
3/20/2025 - Improving Education Outcomes by Empowering Parents, States, and Communities
This order outlines plans to close the Department of Education, returning control of educational functions to state and local authorities.
3/19/2025 - Achieving Efficiency Through State and Local Preparedness
This order simplifies federal preparedness and response policies, enabling state and local governments to better understand and meet the needs of their citizens. It also establishes a National Resilience Strategy to outline priorities and methods for strengthening the nation’s resilience.
3/14/2025 - Additional Rescissions of Harmful Executive Orders and Actions
The order rescinds several prior actions implemented by the previous administration. It revokes orders that had increased the minimum wage for federal contractors, allocated Defense Production Act funding for domestic manufacturing, and promoted biotechnology and biomanufacturing innovation. Additionally, it rolls back funding support for Tribal Nations, workforce development programs, and domestic investment initiatives.
2/26/2025 - Implementing The President’s “Department of Government Efficiency” Cost Efficiency Initiative
This order requires Agency heads must review current contracts and grants to identify those that can be terminated or modified to reduce federal spending and to pause payouts lacking justification. Agency heads, and their DOGE team leads, must create a centralized system to record all payments issued under covered contracts and grants. Each payment must have a written justification from the approving employees.
2/19/2025 - Commencing the Reduction of the Federal Bureaucracy
This order directs agencies to reduce non-essential government functions, eliminate certain advisory committees, and scale back specific programs. It aims to streamline operations, minimize waste, and reduce federal spending. Key measures include the closure of several entities and a mandate for agencies to identify further reductions.
2/19/2025 - Ensuring Accountability for All Agencies
This order focuses on enhancing transparency, efficiency, and oversight in federal agencies. It outlines measures to improve performance, accountability, and public trust by setting clearer standards, strengthening internal reviews, and ensuring compliance with legal and ethical guidelines. Agencies are required to report on their progress and implement stricter evaluation mechanisms.
2/19/2025 - Ending Illegal Discrimination and Restoring Merit-Based Opportunity
This order prohibits racial preferences in federal employment, contracting, and education programs. It directs agencies to review and eliminate policies that grant advantages based on race, sex, or other characteristics.
2/19/2025 - Ending Radical And Wasteful Government DEI Programs And Preferencing
This order directs the elimination of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs across the federal government, citing concerns about discrimination and wasteful spending. It mandates the termination of DEI-related offices, policies, and training while requiring agencies to assess the costs and impacts of previous DEI initiatives. The order emphasizes a shift toward merit-based federal employment and contracting.
2/18/2025 - Radical Transparency About Wasteful Spending
This order directs federal agencies to publicly disclose details of terminated programs, canceled contracts, and discontinued grants. The initiative aims to enhance accountability by informing taxpayers about spending decisions that do not align with national interests.
This order directs federal agencies to review funding provided to nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and ensure that future funding aligns with U.S. national interests. Agencies must assess whether funded NGOs support the administration’s priorities and adjust allocations accordingly.
1/31/2025 - Unleashing Prosperity Through Deregulation
This order seeks to alleviate regulatory burdens by instituting a “10-for-1” rule, requiring agencies to eliminate 10 existing regulations for every new regulation proposed. It aims to reduce compliance costs for businesses and increase economic growth, competitiveness, and national security. For fiscal year 2025, agencies must ensure that the costs of new regulations, after offsetting repealed ones, are minimized.
1/29/2025 - Expanding Educational Freedom and Opportunity for Families
This order aims to enhance parental choice in K-12 education by supporting state-based educational freedom initiatives. It directs federal agencies to integrate educational choice into discretionary grant programs and explore funding mechanisms for military and low-income families.
1/29/2025 - Ending Radical Indoctrination in K-12 Schooling
This order mandates a strategy to stop federal funding for programs that support such ideologies, protect parental rights, and uphold laws like FERPA and Title IX. The order directs agencies to review and prevent the misuse of funds for advancing controversial educational practices in schools and teacher training.
1/24/2025 - Unleashing Alaska’s Extraordinary Resource Potential
This order aims to maximize the development of Alaska’s natural resources to strengthen domestic economic and national security. The order directs agencies to expedite resource development, prioritize liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects, and rescind restrictive regulations from previous administrations. It mandates actions such as rescinding certain environmental restrictions and expediting permitting for energy infrastructure.
1/20/2025 - Unleashing American Energy
This order aims to promote energy exploration and production, particularly from federal lands, to strengthen U.S. energy independence and security. It focuses on removing regulatory barriers to energy resources, encouraging job creation, and reducing energy costs. The order also supports the development of critical minerals, energy infrastructure, and energy technologies, while ensuring that federal funding aligns with these priorities. Additionally, it directs agencies to review and revise actions that may hinder domestic energy growth.