logo
HHS to cut a fourth of its workforce

HHS to cut a fourth of its workforce

The Hill27-03-2025
'We aren't just reducing bureaucratic sprawl,' HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said in a statement. 'We are realigning the organization with its core mission and our new priorities in reversing the chronic disease epidemic.'
On the social media platform X, Kennedy acknowledged 'this will be a painful period for HHS.'
According to a press release from the department, a reorganization of HHS offices will eliminate roughly 10,000 positions. An additional 10,000 will be cut through measures like buyouts, early retirements and the Trump administrations 'Fork in the Road' severance offer.
With a current workforce of roughly 82,000, a 20,000-person reduction would represent a 24 percent cut in HHS staffers.
In an email to the American Federation of Government Employees union seen by The Hill, a representative from the Office of Human Resources (OHR) said the workforce reduction would primarily affect employees in 'administrative positions including human resources, information technology, procurement, and finance.'
The OHR representative estimated the number of affected employees would be between 8,000 and 10,000. Notices to employees may go out as soon as Friday, according to the email.
Democrats and health policy stakeholders were quick to warn of detrimental effects of the cuts on the U.S. health system.
'Do you know what Trump and RFK Jr. are doing about the measles outbreak? They are ripping away funding Congress already provided to respond to the outbreaks. They're stopping public health work in its tracks, even as this outbreak is threatening to spiral out of control,' Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) said
'What are they doing about the opioid crisis or maternal death rates or bird flu for that matter? More cuts and don't forget mass firings.'
Former Obama administration HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra warned that the mass layoffs had ' the makings of a manmade disaster.'
'Downgrading services for our elderly and our disabled, downgrading services for our mental health, downgrading our strategic preparedness and response capabilities – how can that be good for the health of any American?' Becerra wrote on social media.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Covid-19 drug company liquidates assets in Chapter 11 bankruptcy
Covid-19 drug company liquidates assets in Chapter 11 bankruptcy

Miami Herald

time25 minutes ago

  • Miami Herald

Covid-19 drug company liquidates assets in Chapter 11 bankruptcy

When the Covid-19 public health crisis began in the U.S. with the first confirmed case of the 2019 Novel Coronavirus in Washington state on Jan. 20, 2020, the terrifying pandemic was underway, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would report its first confirmed death from the virus on Feb. 29. By March 3, 2020, CDC reported 60 confirmed cases in 12 states. On March 13, the first Trump administration declared a national emergency, and states started implementing shutdowns on March 15, according to the CDC's timeline of Covid-19 events. Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter Biotechnology firms Pfizer-BioTech and Moderna Therapeutics began developing Covid-19 vaccines in March 2020, and by November 2020, each company's Covid-19 vaccine would be found 95% effective in clinical trials. Related: CVS rival pharmacy chain files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy Another biotech firm, Regeneron, in November received approval of an antibody treatment to significantly reduce virus levels within days. In December 2020, Covid-19 vaccinations began, and by Dec. 24, 1 million people had been vaccinated in the U.S. CDC said that by June 1, 2022, the U.S. reported over 84 million Covid-19 infections and over 1 million deaths. About a year later, Pfizer reported on its website that on May 5, 2023, the World Health Organization declared an end to the Covid-19 public health emergency, while the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services did the same on May 11, 2023. The healthcare industry's response to the Covid-19 pandemic was so effective that beginning on May 1, 2024, hospitals were no longer required to report Covid-19 hospital admissions, hospital capacity, or hospital occupancy data to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Healthcare Safety Network, according to the CDC website. The end of the crisis also ended the need for massive amounts of Covid-19 drugs. With the Covid-19 pandemic subsiding, companies that stepped forward to develop vaccines, drugs, and treatments during the crisis are now facing declining demand for their services to develop Covid-19 products. With no dire need for Covid-19 products, some drug companies have been forced to downsize or even shut down operations because of a lack of business opportunities. Essential drug manufacturer Aluchua Government Services Inc., which developed Covid-19 therapy drugs under U.S. government contracts, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy with plans to wind down operations and sell its assets. Related: Giant healthcare company files Chapter 11 bankruptcy seeking sale The Aluchua, Fla.-based pharmaceutical company filed its petition in the U.S Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware, listing $50 million in assets and $100 million to $500 million in liabilities. The debtor's largest creditors include United States International Development Finance Corp., owed $246 million; Defense Contract Management Agency, owed $11.95 million; and Sigma-Aldrich Inc. $1.33 million. Aluchua was founded in 1999 to develop new drugs and to increase efficacy of existing ones. In 2013, it was awarded a greenfield contract with the U.S. Department of Defense, and in February 2020, it was awarded a contract to develop an advanced monoclonal antibody therapy against Covid-19 infection. The Covid-19 drug was one of several that the debtor partnered with the U.S. government to develop and produce drugs, vaccines, and treatments. The debtor needed to file for Chapter 11 protection after demand for its services began to decline in late 2023 and certain government contracts were wound down or scaled back, according to Aluchua's Chief Restructuring Officer Janet R. Naifeh of FTI Consulting Inc. Aluchua's efforts to replace its government business with commercial contracts failed, which forced it to scale down production and lay off 125 employees from January through April 2025. It reduced its staff by another 67 employees on June 20 and July 1, which, combined with the earlier layoffs, amounted to termination of 80% of its workforce. The company employed 13 full-time and three temporary workers as of the petition date. The company marketed itself for sale beginning in February 2025, but was unable to complete a transaction and decided its only viable option was to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, wind down its business, and sell its assets. Related: Iconic retail chain closing its remaining stores in bankruptcy The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.

High lead levels lead to sudden day care closure
High lead levels lead to sudden day care closure

Axios

time25 minutes ago

  • Axios

High lead levels lead to sudden day care closure

High lead levels have led to a lease dispute and the sudden closure of an Algiers Point day care. Why it matters: The closure leaves 30 young New Orleanians and their families without day care, and raises questions about why state officials didn't make sure a lead test had happened before it even opened. Zoom in: The Crescent School announced its closure July 18 after a student was diagnosed with lead poisoning, day care owner Liza Drennon tells Axios New Orleans. When the diagnosis arrived, the student's home and the day care were tested, a Louisiana Department of Health spokesperson confirmed. Elevated lead levels were found both in the soil outside the school, where kids often play throughout the day, and in the dust inside its historic Algiers Point building, Drennon says. One of the city's oldest neighborhoods, it's known to have a denser concentration of lead in its soil. But the levels at the school were so high, Drennon says, she was forced to close immediately, pending remediation. Caveat: It's not clear if the student's diagnosis stemmed directly from exposure at the school, or whether other sources played a role. Drennon declined to put Axios in touch with the family, citing their request for privacy. Threat level: There is no safe level of lead for drinking water, according to the EPA, and soil contamination is of particular concern when children play in it. Go deeper: How to identify lead exposure symptoms. But like many other American cities built on aging infrastructure, New Orleans is grappling with high levels of the substance, which was commonly used in early construction. A massive project to discover and remove the city's lead water pipes, for example, has been in the works for years, but now faces delays due to contractor issues, the Times-Picayune reports. How it works: The day care facility should have been lead-tested before it opened its doors, according to an LDH spokeswoman, citing state law. While the Louisiana Department of Education ultimately licenses these facilities, it relies on LDH to ensure compliance with health guidelines, an LDOE spokesman said. But LDH's "pre-opening inspection" does not include lead testing, and documents outlining LDOE's physical facility requirements don't mention lead. Rather, LDH says it requires testing "only when LDH receives mandatory notification of a case of lead poisoning or lead exposure." In other words, Drennon was legally required to have the facility lead-tested, but it doesn't appear to be anyone's job to make sure she did it. Drennon says the Crescent School was fully licensed, with a license renewal from the Department of Education arriving just days before the student's lead test results. "I went through countless health inspections, fire inspections and Department of Education inspections," she says, noting that she wasn't aware of any specific lead test requirement. "If I had known I should have gotten a lead inspection, I would have and may never have moved into that building." Yes, but: Either way, the cost to remediate totaled up to about $30,000, a fee Drennon says she couldn't pay without some concessions from her landlord, the neighborhood's Knights of Columbus organization. Drennon, who says the language of her lease protects her landlord from responsibility for the presence of lead, says she asked for a lease extension and reduced rent so she could pay back a family loan for the remediation cost. But the KoC declined after an organization vote. The other side: The KoC saw the proposed rent reduction as "an unsustainably deep cut," according to an emailed statement from Ed Moise, who identified himself as the member who ran point on the school's lease. The group, he said, does not operate as a nonprofit and "must continue to meet certain obligations to maintain our charter. Currently, our options are to: merge with another council, become a non-chartered men's club, or disband, all of which we are currently exploring." "Unfortunately, our current financial situation makes it impossible for us to entertain Ms Drennan's offer," he said. What's next: The dispute is playing out in dramatic fashion in the small New Orleans neighborhood, with Facebook posts and some people even protesting Sunday services at the church affiliated with the local Knights of Columbus.

RFK Jr. greenlights removing preservative from flu shots
RFK Jr. greenlights removing preservative from flu shots

Axios

time25 minutes ago

  • Axios

RFK Jr. greenlights removing preservative from flu shots

The Health and Human Services Department on Wednesday said it adopted a recommendation from Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s vaccine advisers to remove from all influenza shots a preservative that anti-vaccine activists have suggested is linked to autism. Why it matters: The move hinged on the widely discredited belief that the mercury-containing compound, thimerosal, is harmful at the level at which it's included in vaccines. Despite the lack of evidence of harm, most Americans who get flu vaccines already receive products without thimerosal. The latest: Kennedy, in a statement, said the action fulfilled a promise to protect vulnerable populations from unnecessary mercury exposure. "Injecting any amount of mercury into children when safe, mercury-free alternatives exist defies common sense and public health responsibility," Kennedy said. "Today, we put safety first." The Centers for Disease Control customarily acts on such recommendations. But because the CDC lacks a full-time political leader, Kennedy signed the recommendation. HHS said that vaccine manufacturers confirmed that they have the capacity to replace multi-dose vials containing the preservative so that the federal Vaccines for Children program and adult vaccine supplies won't be interrupted. Kennedy's handpicked vaccine advisors voted 5-1 last month to no longer recommend that that Americans get flu shots containing thimerosal, following a presentation from a retired nurse and former president of Children's Health Defense, the anti-vaccine group with close ties to Kennedy.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store