The U.S. government has frozen roughly $18 billion in federal funding for New York City infrastructure projects, citing possible violations of constitutional rules tied to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices. The Office of Management and Budget confirmed the freeze, which affects major initiatives including the Second Avenue Subway extension and the Hudson River Tunnel.
The move follows a new Department of Transportation (DOT) interim rule curbing the use of race- or gender-based preferences in federal funding decisions. As part of the review, DOT has already suspended a $300 million payment while audits determine whether contracts awarded under the projects breached anti-discrimination laws.
City officials have sharply criticised the decision, warning that halting federal support could stall thousands of jobs, disrupt ongoing construction, and drive up costs. They argue the freeze is politically driven and undermines long-promised upgrades to one of the nation’s busiest transit systems.
The timing compounds existing strains: a federal government shutdown has already complicated contract oversight, while the funding freeze introduces fresh uncertainty for investors and contractors. Analysts warn prolonged delays could damage confidence in other federally backed projects.
The outcome now depends on the federal review. If violations are found, New York may need to renegotiate contract terms—or risk losing funding altogether. If cleared, payments could resume, though the disruption has already exposed the vulnerability of infrastructure projects reliant on federal dollars.
Beyond New York, the freeze signals a wider policy shift in Washington, raising the prospect that DEI-linked programmes across the country may soon face greater scrutiny. For New York City, the immediate challenge is keeping construction timelines intact as political battles play out over federal support.