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The changes are part of the Trump administration's ongoing efforts to cut down and streamline the federal workforce.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture says it plans to relocate thousands of employees to five offices around the country. But ...
Members of both parties on the U.S. Senate Agriculture Committee chastised a U.S. Department of Agriculture official ...
The surprise reorg announcement last week was a flash point at a hearing Thursday, where senators expressed displeasure about ...
During a Senate hearing, Stephen Vaden said the agency’s plan to move employees out of DC will reduce costs; senators ...
The USDA currently has 4,600 employees in the Washington, D.C. region, which will go down to no more than 2,000. The exact ...
The plan is not yet finalized and still subject to change, USDA Deputy Secretary Stephen Vaden repeatedly stressed to members ...
USDA's deputy secretary told lawmakers he doesn’t expect upcoming relocations will lead to significantly more employees leaving the agency.
The Trump administration’s 30-day consultation period surrounding the plan to reorganize the Agriculture Department began Tuesday, a USDA spokesperson told The Hagstrom Report in an email. Agriculture ...
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s plan to relocate thousands of Washington, D.C., employees to five regional hubs ...
The USDA said no jobs would be eliminated but that some federal employees would be asked to relocate to one of the five new ...