Category Archives: WMAL News Now Headlines

Layoffs begin at U.S. health agencies charged with tracking disease, researching and regulating food

Layoffs begin at U.S. health agencies charged with tracking disease, researching and regulating food

Employees across the massive U.S. Department of Health and Human Services began receiving notices of dismissal on Tuesday in a major overhaul expected to ultimately lay off up to 10,000 people. The notices come just days after President Trump moved to strip workers of their collective bargaining rights at HHS and other agencies throughout the government. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s announced…Read more

Trump says Zelenskyy trying to ‘renegotiate’ rare earths deal

Trump says Zelenskyy trying to ‘renegotiate’ rare earths deal

President Trump says Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will have “big problems” if he tries to rework a deal that would provide rare earth minerals to the U.S. as payment for American support during the Russian invasion. The back-and-forth over the deal has been a source of contention between Mr. Trump and Kyiv even as both sides say they’re optimistic about reaching an agreement…Read more

Appeals court upholds Judge Boasberg’s blockade on Venezuelan gang deportations

Appeals court upholds Judge Boasberg’s blockade on Venezuelan gang deportations

A federal appeals court on Wednesday upheld a judge’s blockade on President Trump using the Alien Enemies Act to deport Venezuelan gang suspects, saying the administration appears to be stretching the law too far. The 2-1 decision by the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia leaves U.S. District Judge James Boasberg’s restraining order in place, marking a setback…Read more

Trump: April tariffs on foreign goods might be ‘lenient,’ not equal retaliation

Trump: April tariffs on foreign goods might be ‘lenient,’ not equal retaliation

President Trump says his April tariffs on foreign goods will be “more lenient than reciprocal.” Mr. Trump’s comment suggests the White House will be nuanced in how it taxes goods from an array of nations on April 2, instead of assigning a tariff number that corresponds directly to how nations tax U.S. goods. “I’ll probably be more lenient than reciprocal, because if I was reciprocal, that would…Read more

Trump has Mike Waltz’s back amid fallout over group chat discussing Houthi strike

Trump has Mike Waltz’s back amid fallout over group chat discussing Houthi strike

President Trump on Tuesday said he still has confidence in national security Mike Waltz after a snafu in which an Atlantic editor was added to a group text where high-level administration officials discussed plans to launch airstrikes against Houthi militants in Yemen. “Michael Waltz has learned a lesson and he’s a good man,” Mr. Trump said in an interview with NBC News. Mr. Trump stressed…Read more

Federal judge rules DOGE broke privacy rules in accessing Education Department files

Federal judge rules DOGE broke privacy rules in accessing Education Department files

A federal judge in Maryland issued an injunction Monday against President Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency, ruling that it trampled on privacy rules when it gained “seemingly unfettered” access to the Education Department’s personnel files. U.S. District Judge Deborah Boardman said the administration never gave a good enough explanation for why DOGE needed that access…Read more

Secret JFK assassination files released by Trump include info on Oswald’s connection to Russia

Secret JFK assassination files released by Trump include info on Oswald’s connection to Russia

The Trump administration Tuesday posted online thousands of previously classified documents related to the 1963 assassination of President Kennedy, fulfilling a top promise to let the public see the long-hidden material. The National Archives and Records Administration began posting 80,000 pages of material on its website shortly after 7 p.m. None of the material is hidden under redactions…Read more

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Category Archives: WMAL News Now Headlines

Layoffs begin at U.S. health agencies charged with tracking disease, researching and regulating food

Layoffs begin at U.S. health agencies charged with tracking disease, researching and regulating food

By Carla K. Johnson – Associated Press – Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Employees across the massive U.S. Department of Health and Human Services began receiving notices of dismissal on Tuesday in a major overhaul expected to ultimately lay off up to 10,000 people. The notices come just days after President Trump moved to strip workers of their collective bargaining rights at HHS and other agencies throughout the government.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s announced a plan last week to remake HHS, which, through its agencies, is responsible for tracking health trends and disease outbreaks, conducting and funding medical research, monitoring the safety of food and medicine, and administering health insurance programs for nearly half of the country.

The plan would consolidate agencies that oversee billions of dollars for addiction services and community health centers across the country under a new office called the Administration for a Healthy America.

The layoffs are expected to shrink HHS to 62,000 positions, lopping off nearly a quarter of its staff – 10,000 jobs through layoffs and another 10,000 workers who took early retirement and voluntary separation offers.

Democratic Sen. Patty Murray of Washington predicted the cuts will have ramifications when natural disasters strike or infectious diseases, like the ongoing measles outbreak, spread.

“They may as well be renaming it the Department of Disease because their plan is putting lives in serious jeopardy,” Murray said Friday during a call with reporters.

Beyond layoffs at federal health agencies, cuts are beginning to happen at state and local health departments as a result of an HHS move last week to pull back more than $11 billion in COVID-19-related funds. Local and state health officials are still assessing the impact, but some health departments have already identified hundreds of jobs that stand to be eliminated because of lost funding, “some of them overnight, some of them are already gone,” said Lori Tremmel Freeman, chief executive of the National Association of County and City Health Officials.

Union representatives for HHS employees received a notice Thursday that between 8,000 to 10,000 employees will be terminated. The department’s leadership will target positions in human resources, procurement, finance and information technology. Positions in “high cost regions” or that have been deemed “redundant” will be the focus of the layoffs.

Kennedy criticized the department he oversees as an inefficient “sprawling bureaucracy” in a Thursday video announcing the restructuring, and said the department’s $1.7 trillion yearly budget, “has failed to improve the health of Americans.”

“I want to promise you now that we’re going to do more with less,” Kennedy said.

HHS on Thursday provided a breakdown of some of the cuts.

• 3,500 jobs at the Food and Drug Administration, which inspects and sets safety standards for medications, medical devices and foods.

• 2,400 jobs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which monitors for infectious disease outbreaks and works with public health agencies nationwide.

• 1,200 jobs at the National Institutes of Health, the world’s leading health and medical research institution.

• 300 jobs at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which oversees the Affordable Care Act marketplace, Medicare and Medicaid.

At the CDC, most employees have not been unionized, but interest rose sharply this year as the Trump administration took steps to reduce the federal workforce. Roughly 2,000 CDC employees in Atlanta belonged to the American Federation of Government Employees local bargaining unit, with hundreds more who had petitioned to join this week being added.

But on Thursday night, Trump signed an executive order that would end collective bargaining for a large number of federal agencies, including the CDC and other health agencies.

The erosion of collective bargaining rights was decried by some Democratic lawmakers.

“President Trump’s brazen attempt to strip the majority of federal employees of their union rights robs these workers of their hard-fought protections. This will only give Elon Musk more power to dismantle the people’s government with as little resistance from dedicated civil servants as possible – further weakening the federal government’s ability to serve the American people,” according to a joint statement Friday by U.S. Rep. Gerald Connolly and U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott, both of Virginia.

Trump says Zelenskyy trying to ‘renegotiate’ rare earths deal

Trump says Zelenskyy trying to ‘renegotiate’ rare earths deal

President Trump says Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will have “big problems” if he tries to rework a deal that would provide rare earth minerals to the U.S. as payment for American support during the Russian invasion. The back-and-forth over the deal has been a source of contention between Mr. Trump and Kyiv even as both sides say they’re optimistic about reaching an agreement…Continue Reading

Appeals court upholds Judge Boasberg’s blockade on Venezuelan gang deportations

Appeals court upholds Judge Boasberg’s blockade on Venezuelan gang deportations

A federal appeals court on Wednesday upheld a judge’s blockade on President Trump using the Alien Enemies Act to deport Venezuelan gang suspects, saying the administration appears to be stretching the law too far. The 2-1 decision by the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia leaves U.S. District Judge James Boasberg’s restraining order in place, marking a setback…Continue Reading

Trump: April tariffs on foreign goods might be ‘lenient,’ not equal retaliation

Trump: April tariffs on foreign goods might be ‘lenient,’ not equal retaliation

President Trump says his April tariffs on foreign goods will be “more lenient than reciprocal.” Mr. Trump’s comment suggests the White House will be nuanced in how it taxes goods from an array of nations on April 2, instead of assigning a tariff number that corresponds directly to how nations tax U.S. goods. “I’ll probably be more lenient than reciprocal, because if I was reciprocal, that would…Continue Reading

Trump has Mike Waltz’s back amid fallout over group chat discussing Houthi strike

Trump has Mike Waltz’s back amid fallout over group chat discussing Houthi strike

President Trump on Tuesday said he still has confidence in national security Mike Waltz after a snafu in which an Atlantic editor was added to a group text where high-level administration officials discussed plans to launch airstrikes against Houthi militants in Yemen. “Michael Waltz has learned a lesson and he’s a good man,” Mr. Trump said in an interview with NBC News. Mr. Trump stressed…Continue Reading

Federal judge rules DOGE broke privacy rules in accessing Education Department files

Federal judge rules DOGE broke privacy rules in accessing Education Department files

A federal judge in Maryland issued an injunction Monday against President Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency, ruling that it trampled on privacy rules when it gained “seemingly unfettered” access to the Education Department’s personnel files. U.S. District Judge Deborah Boardman said the administration never gave a good enough explanation for why DOGE needed that access…Continue Reading

Brothels’ operator headed to prison; D.C.-area clientele shielded from public view

Brothels’ operator headed to prison; D.C.-area clientele shielded from public view

The operators and clients of an interstate brothel network shut down in 2023 are beginning to suffer consequences — except in Northern Virginia. A federal court sentenced the top manager of the prostitution ring with brothels in suburban Washington and in Massachusetts to prison this week. A Massachusetts court…Continue Reading

FBI agent critical of agency since Trump’s first term is charged with disclosing confidential files

FBI agent critical of agency since Trump’s first term is charged with disclosing confidential files

An FBI agent and whistleblower who criticized the agency going back to President Trump’s first term was arrested this week at New York’s JFK International Airport and charged with illegally disclosing classified documents. Jonathan Buma, who worked in counterintelligence, was taken into custody Monday…Continue Reading

Secret JFK assassination files released by Trump include info on Oswald’s connection to Russia

Secret JFK assassination files released by Trump include info on Oswald’s connection to Russia

The Trump administration Tuesday posted online thousands of previously classified documents related to the 1963 assassination of President Kennedy, fulfilling a top promise to let the public see the long-hidden material. The National Archives and Records Administration began posting 80,000 pages of material on its website shortly after 7 p.m. None of the material is hidden under redactions…Continue Reading

Trump rails against judge for trying to block El Salvador deportation flights

Trump rails against judge for trying to block El Salvador deportation flights

President Trump on Tuesday singled out an Obama-appointed federal judge as a “troublemaker and agitator” for demanding the return of a deportation flight carrying illegal immigrants to El Salvador. Mr. Trump, posting on Truth Social, did not mention U.S. District Judge James E. Boasberg by name, but his target…Continue Reading

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