Alliance Alert: The recent shutdown of 988鈥檚 dedicated LGBTQ+ youth crisis line is a devastating blow to young people who already face disproportionate risks of suicide, mental health distress, and social isolation. With LGBTQ+ youth more than three times as likely to attempt suicide than their peers, the loss of this lifeline is not just irresponsible鈥攊t鈥檚 dangerous.
The Alliance for Rights and Recovery calls on federal leaders to immediately restore and expand specialized support for LGBTQ+ youth and ensure they have access to affirming, trauma-informed crisis services. We also urge 黑料正能量 State to explore and fund state-level options to protect youth in crisis and to work in partnership with organizations like the Trevor Project to fill this critical gap.
Now more than ever, we must invest in life-saving mental health services and ensure no young person is left feeling alone or unseen. We will continue advocating for funding and legislation that affirms the dignity and mental health needs of LGBTQ+ communities.
As part of this effort, the Alliance will host panels on supporting LGBTQ+ populations and continuing critical services in the face of federal cuts at our Annual Conference this September. These sessions will bring together advocates, service providers, and people with lived experience to strategize on how we can protect services and advance equity鈥攅ven in the face of harmful federal actions.
Unbreakable! Harnessing Our Power, Building Our Resilience, Inspiring Hope and Courage
Alliance for Rights and Recovery 43rd聽Annual Conference
Villa Roma Resort and Conference Center | September 29-October 1, 2025
Register Today
Stay tuned for more information about speakers and the full program.
We encourage all advocates, providers, and allies to speak up, support efforts to restore the LGBTQ+ lifeline, and ensure every youth has access to compassionate support when they need it most.
Trump cuts shut down an LGBTQ+ youth suicide lifeline. What happens now?
By Melissa Hellmann | The Guardian | August 6, 2025
Becca Nordeen had just left a town hall for when she received some shocking news. As the senior vice-president of crisis intervention at the Trevor Project, a non-profit focused on suicide prevention for queer youth, Nordeen鈥檚 team had provided counseling to LGBTQ+ individuals through 988, a national suicide and crisis hotline, for nearly three years. But a few minutes after the meeting, Nordeen received an email notifying her that those services would be terminated in a month.
鈥淭here鈥檚 an emotional hangover of dealing with the grief and the work of shutting down the program,鈥 Nordeen said. 鈥淚n the days and weeks that have followed, we have looked at, 鈥榳ell, there are still young people who need us, and in our remaining service, how can we be there to meet that need?鈥欌
From 988鈥檚 inception, trained counselors had answered 1.5m online chats, calls or texts from LGBTQ+ youth in crisis. one of several groups contracted by the federal agency the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (Samhsa) to field calls from LGBTQ+ people, of the lifeline鈥檚 overall contacts. Nordeen鈥檚 team had responded to about half of the requests for services from the high-risk population. Samhsa cited financial constraints as the reason for closing its line geared toward the LGBTQ+ community, though opponents of the closure say that it was politically motivated.
The 988 general hotline still exists and specialized remain. But free, 24/7 counseling is no longer available for LGBTQ+ youth through the 鈥減ress 3鈥 option. According to 2023 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 20% of queer youth attempted suicide between 2022 and 2023. They are more than three times more likely to do so than their cisgender and heterosexual peers.
Since the closure of 988鈥檚 LGBTQ+ services on 17 July, Nordeen said that the Trevor Project has been 鈥減icking up the pieces鈥. The closure of the 988 lifeline has also meant that the Trevor Project lost the $25m federal contract that allowed the non-profit to more than double its impact by reaching 270,000 people. More than 200 counselors from the Trevor Project were let go upon the national lifeline鈥檚 termination. But through donations from individuals and foundations, the non-profit retained 30 counselors who will join their privately funded that started in 1998.
Now, the Trevor Project has 130 counselors to answer the 20% surge in calls over the past two months. It鈥檚 too early to predict how long the influx will last, said Nordeen, but in the meantime, she wants youth to know that the non-profit is still there to help them. Over the past couple of weeks, Nordeen鈥檚 team has monitored the volume of requests and reached out to off-duty counselors and their network of more than 400 volunteers to respond to calls and texts during influxes.
More than 53,000 people signed the Trevor Project鈥檚 to protect the lifeline, some of whom shared their personal experiences using it. One signer from California wrote that it saved their child鈥檚 life during a mental health crisis last year, and another person from Pennsylvania wrote that they had used the service countless times and would not be here today without it.
鈥淭hese youth resources make us the adults we are today,鈥 a signer from 黑料正能量 wrote in the petition. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not extras or luxuries, they鈥檙e lifelines. They鈥檙e the affirming spaces, the trusted adults 鈥 the moments where we were told: 鈥榊ou belong.鈥 Without them, many of us wouldn鈥檛 have made it.鈥
鈥楢n erasure of a population鈥
A Samhsa spokesperson told the Guardian in an email that the 鈥減ress 3鈥 option had run out of congressionally directed spending and that 鈥渃ontinued funding of the Press 3 option threatened to put the entire 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline in danger of massive reductions in service鈥. Congress had 聽for 988 in the 2025 federal fiscal year that began on 1 October 2024 and ends on 30 September 2025. The LGBTQ+ services were allotted $33m, which had been exhausted by June, Samhsa . 鈥淭he 988 Lifeline will continue to be a direct connection to immediate support for all Americans,鈥 the spokesperson said, 鈥渞egardless of their circumstances.鈥
But Dr Sunny Patel, a child psychiatrist and former senior adviser for children, youth and families at Samhsa, said that the agency was under pressure from the Trump administration to close 988鈥檚 鈥減ress 3鈥 option to adhere to aimed at initiatives. 鈥淥ne of the things that I find very challenging to believe is that it鈥檚 related to a lack of funding,鈥 Patel said.
, which created 988 and was signed into law by Donald Trump during his first term, specified that Samhsa must be prepared to provide specialized services for LGBTQ+ youth. But now, the Trump administration has taken a special interest in targeting the healthcare of transgender individuals, Patel said. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 want anything to do with LGBTQ populations,鈥 he added. 鈥淭here is this air of, 鈥榃ell, everything should be for everybody, and so why should we have any specialized services for anybody?鈥欌
Patel said that he believed that the agency was obliged to continue a lifesaving service, and that ending it would generate harm and confusion. 鈥淚 fear for the direction that we鈥檙e going in,鈥 Patel said, 鈥渨here there鈥檚 an erasure of a population and its needs.鈥
Mark Henson, the Trevor Project鈥檚 vice-president of government affairs and advocacy, is hopeful that the decision will be reversed, in light of support from who are pushing the Trump administration to reinstate the 988 lifeline. In the meantime, the non-profit is to try to hire more counselors to handle the potential for a continued surge in calls. And in July, the office of California鈥檚 governor, Gavin Newsom, announced that California would partner with the Trevor Project to train 988 counselors in the state to better serve LGBTQ+ youth.
鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to flood the zone in any way that we can, to the extent that resources allow us to keep these services going,鈥 Henson said, and to ensure that 鈥渢he LGBTQ+ youth know that there are services out there, that they belong, and that their life has value鈥.
鈥榃hat happens if there鈥檚 only one?鈥
When the announcement was made that the lifeline would be terminated, Henson heard from youth that they would use 988鈥檚 LGBTQ+ services as a backup if surges on the Trevor Project鈥檚 hotline prevented them from quickly accessing a counselor and vice versa. 鈥淚f there was an increase in wait time on one line, they would go to the other. There was an equilibration there that enabled them to have these multiple options,鈥 Henson said. Now, he said, youth are asking: 鈥淲hat happens if there鈥檚 only one?鈥
Specialized services from trained counselors provided a safe and affirming space for LGBTQ+ youth, Nordeen said, so that they felt less alone even if they did not have community or local support. 鈥淲hen you take that network away,鈥 Nordeen said, 鈥測ou are essentially invalidating that young person and their experiences and the crisis that they might feel.鈥
The specialized services were also effective because the counselors sometimes shared similar experiences to the callers and were better able to relate to those in crisis, said Hannah Wesolowski, chief advocacy officer at the National Alliance on Mental Illness (Nami), where she advocates for policies to help people affected by mental health conditions. Youth and LGBTQ+ people were the most aware of 988, she said, so she鈥檚 concerned that dropping services could lead to 鈥渢ragic outcomes鈥.
鈥淚 fear in this time of really heated political rhetoric and partisanship,鈥 Wesolowski said, 鈥渢hat this is another message point that tells young people: 鈥榊ou鈥檙e not important, you鈥檙e not the priority.鈥欌
Nami, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP) and other organizations are working with members of Congress to try to return funding to the hotline in the 2026 fiscal year, or to pass legislation that would require specialized services for LGBTQ+ people. And from a state level, Nami鈥檚 local chapters are brainstorming with politicians on potential crisis service options for queer youth in their nearby communities.
For Bob Gebbia, the CEO of AFSP, an organization that researches suicide prevention and that advocated for the formation of 988, it is ironic that the specialized service that received widespread bipartisan support during its creation is now the subject of fierce debate. The argument for maintaining LGBTQ+ services is simple, he said: it鈥檚 based on need. 鈥淚t isn鈥檛 a political issue,鈥 he said, 鈥渋t鈥檚 a public health issue.鈥
In the US, you can call or text the 聽on 988, chat on , or 聽to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In the UK, the youth suicide charity 聽can be contacted on 0800 068 4141 or email , and in the UK and Ireland 聽can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email 听辞谤 . In Australia, the crisis support service 聽is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at