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USDA will move most of Washington staff "closer to" farmers

USDA will move most of Washington staff "closer to" farmers

Axios4 days ago
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) will shutter nearly all of its Washington, D.C. buildings and disperse most of its staff throughout the country, Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins announced on Thursday.
Why it matters: The USDA is one of several departments to majorly restructure during President Trump's second term, seeing more than 15,000 employees accept White House resignation offers.
State of play: Most of the Washington-area staff will relocate to five locations around the country, Rollins confirmed in a statement.
In a video message to employees, Rollins said that employees will be placed in Fort Collins, Colorado, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Missouri, Raleigh, North Carolina, and Salt Lake City.
Staff will receive details about their new assignments in the coming months.
The department will close nearly all of its D.C.-area buildings, except for the Whitten and Yates buildings on the National Mall.
What they're saying: Rollins said that the move is a cost-cutting one in step with Trump's agenda to slash the federal budget.
"President Trump has made it clear government needs to be scrutinized, and after this thorough review of USDA, the results show a bloated, expensive, and unsustainable organization," the department said in its statement.
"However, there will be no large-scale reductions in force, given that the department has already seen an exodus of 15,364 employees through the administration's deferred resignation plan."
Catch up quick: The department said last week that it fired 70 foreign contract researchers following a national security review intended to secure the U.S. food supply from adversaries that include Russia, China, North Korea and Iran.
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