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Commerce refires probationary employees as court order lifts

Commerce refires probationary employees as court order lifts

Yahoo16-04-2025

The Commerce Department and its National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) are already refiring probationary employees after a temporary court restraining order was lifted.
The Trump administration first attempted to get rid of the employees, who were recently hired or promoted, en masse earlier this year, but it was halted by a temporary court restraining order, and employees were brought back to the government on administrative leave.
That restraining order was lifted last week, and the Commerce Department began to fire them again.
It's not clear whether other federal departments also moved to refire their probationary workers after the court order expired. The Commerce Department appears to be carrying out some of the administration's most aggressive efforts to cut federal workers as it moves to slash the civil service workforce and government spending.
The Commerce Department did not respond to The Hill's request for comment.
'It's ridiculous. They're playing with us,' said Tom Di Liberto, a climate scientist and public affairs specialist at NOAA who was fired, rehired and fired again last week.
'You're treating us like we're enemies of the state,' Di Liberto said. 'It's just very, very, very frustrating, especially knowing that the court cases are still ongoing, so we still might get reinstated again. We have no idea. And these are people's lives. They rely on this money.'
NOAA, an agency that researches weather, climate and oceans, appears to be a particular target of cuts from the administration's Department of Government Efficiency. A proposal that leaked last week called for a 27 percent cut to the agency and the elimination of its Oceanic and Atmospheric Research office.
'What's happening is unnecessary, cruel, and deeply life-altering. I know, because I'm one of you and I'm feeling the same heartbreak and uncertainty,' Rachel Brittin, another NOAA worker who was let go, said in a post on LinkedIn.
However, the refirings stretch well beyond the oceans and weather agency.
Two employees with the International Trade Administration told The Hill that they too were refired after the restraining order expired. They asked to remain anonymous to prevent limitations on their future job prospects.
One of the employees said they were a single parent who relied on the income from their job to remain afloat — income that's now gone in light of the government's actions.
'I tried to apply for Medicaid here; we were denied,' the person said, adding they were able to get emergency access to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). 'I had to go to a pantry to get food.'
'A lot of us live paycheck-to-paycheck,' the person said.
The other employee moved from the Washington, D.C., area to another state for their job. This person worked for the federal government helping to promote exports coming from the Republican-led state where they were stationed.
'A business in [this state] could essentially walk into my office and have the entire world at their disposal just by me reaching out to my counterparts in Chile, in Australia, in Brazil,' the person said.
'I absolutely think our work helps the economy,' they said.
Last month, a court ruling forced the Commerce Department and other agencies to reinstate federal workers. Many workers received a notice saying they would be reinstated but would be put on 'paid, non-duty status' — essentially being paid not to work.
However, at least one Commerce employee told The Hill that even while the restraining order was in place, their reinstatement had been rescinded.
Ashley Smith, who trained patent officers in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, shared an email with The Hill from March that said her reinstatement 'will not proceed as previously communicated' despite the court order.
Smith, a mother of two and Air Force veteran, said she was not given an explanation of why she was not given the pay that was temporarily awarded to others in her cohort.
'It's really causing a problem,' Smith told The Hill. 'I still have bills. I still have rent to pay … I'm a single parent of two.'
The patent office declined to comment when reached by The Hill at the time.
Meanwhile, what will ultimately happen to the temporary workers is not clear, as the court cases surrounding their employment are still ongoing. Various government agencies are also still considering large-scale firings of employees across the board.
Julia Shapero contributed.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Early Monday evening, after a few hundred people ignored dispersal orders near the Federal Building, police — firing less-lethal munitions and tossing flash-bang grenades — pushed protesters into Little Tokyo, where businesses and the Japanese American National Museum were heavily vandalized. Daylight Tuesday brought a starkly different scene: volunteers scrubbing graffiti from the exterior of the museum, which highlights the painful lessons of Japanese Americans' mass incarceration during World War II. After seeing images of the vandalism on her social media feeds, Kimiko Carpenter, a West L.A. mom and hospice volunteer, stopped at Anawalt Lumber to buy $50 worth of rags, gloves, scraping brushes and canisters of graffiti remover. She drove downtown and rolled up her sleeves. Wiping sweat off her brow with the elbow of her white button-down shirt, Carpenter said she had no official affiliation with the museum but was half Japanese and had volunteered there years ago as a teenager. Working to remove the spray paint scrawled across the windows felt like a tangible thing she could do for a few hours before she had to pick up her young children from school. Shortly before the curfew went into effect Tuesday night, hundreds of people led by a coalition of faith leaders marched from Grand Park to the Edward R. Roybal Federal Building on Los Angeles Street, stepping in front of another, more contentious protest group. As the faith leaders arrived and asked their group to take a knee and pray on the building's steps, Department of Homeland Security officers trained pepper-ball guns on clergy members, and National Guard members tensed their riot shields. 'We see that you are putting on your masks; you don't need them,' Rev. Eddie Anderson, pastor of McCarty Memorial Christian Church and a leader with LA Voice, said to the officers and guardsmen. 'The people have gathered together to remind you there is a higher power. To remind you that in Los Angeles everybody is free, and no human is illegal.' When the clock struck 8 p.m., the religious group left. A few dozen people remained. Someone threw a glass bottle at officers from a nearby pedestrian bridge. Officers on horseback wove chaotically through traffic, knocking a protester to the ground. Within 30 minutes, the familiar sounds of LAPD less-lethal munition launchers and screaming demonstrators filled downtown again. The next morning, Woodson showed up to the quiet Federal Building, where she and a handful of other young women were outnumbered by journalists. "My plan today was to make as much noise as possible," she said. "Trump likes to try to suppress our voices. ICE wants to suppress our voices. LAPD wants to suppress our voices. I'll be damned — I refuse. As a Black person in the United States, I'm not gonna have my voice suppressed anymore.' Around 11:20 a.m. Wednesday, five camouflaged National Guard members lined up on the building's front steps, standing behind clear riot shields. At the sight of them, Woodson tied her bandanna around her face and started marching back and forth, screaming: "Immigrants are not the problem! Immigrants are never the problem!" Marching quietly behind her, a Mexican flag draped over her shoulders, was 19-year-old Michelle Hernandez, a daughter of Mexican immigrants who lives in East L.A. and had been worried about family members and friends during the ICE raids. She spoke softly but said she wanted "to be a voice for those who cannot speak." She said it hurt to see Latino police officers and federal agents involved in the immigration crackdown and that it was "very heartbreaking seeing your own people betray you." As the young women marched, several Latino maintenance workers snaked a power hose across the Federal Building steps, paying no mind to the heavily-armed National Guard soldiers as they sprayed away graffiti. One worker, a 67-year-old from East L.A., said he was glad to see the soldiers outside the building where he had been employed for the last 20 years because he figured the vandalism would have been worse without them. George Dutton, a UCLA professor who teaches Southeast Asian history, stood by himself in front of the Federal Building steps, holding up a sign that read: "It's Called the Constitution You F—" as the young women walked back and forth behind him. Dutton, who was taking a break from grading final exams, was not surprised at the quiet. 'It speaks to the various paradoxes around this — it's a movement that ebbs and flows,' he said. 'I see soldiers carrying guns and wearing fatigues, so maybe they're trying to create the idea that this is a war zone," he added. "And if you did a tight shot on one of these National Guardsmen, you might actually cast that impression. But if you pull back, you get the big picture and you realize that, no, it's literally manufactured.' Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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