US government stops counting money it never paid to states and tribes
What happened
The US Interior Department removed references to unspent funds from its regulations. These funds were promised to states and tribes before 2007 but Congress never actually paid them out.
Why it matters
This change cleans up the books by removing a phantom liability. It means the government will no longer track money it never appropriated. For states and tribes, it closes the door on funds they were promised but never received.
The signal
Watch for any new legislation that might replace these rescinded funds with actual appropriations, or if states and tribes challenge this removal.