
'We have to try lifting ourselves': USAID workers fired months ago are still scrambling for jobs
'We have to try lifting ourselves': USAID workers fired months ago are still scrambling for jobs
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Fired USAID employees applauded leaving DC office for last time
Demonstrators outside the USAID offices in Washington, D.C., broke into applause as fired employees returned to pick up their belongings.
They were among the first of the federal employees to lose their jobs, and months later, laid off workers for the U.S. Agency for International Development are still struggling to regain their footing.
Wayan Vota, who spent decades improving technology across developing countries, created a Substack site to help his former colleagues search for new jobs. But he doesn't have one himself.
Sara Gopalan, who worked as a USAID contractor for 20 years, surveyed nearly 100 other humanitarian aid workers who, like her, are currently searching for new employment.
Roughly 95% said they had lost savings and retirement funds, 60% lost access to health care, and 37% have already lost their housing. Many said they will have trouble paying their bills in the coming months.
"The job market is now flooded with these highly-skilled professionals, many of whom have dedicated 10, 20, 30, or even 40 years to international development work," said Gopalan, of Silver Spring, Maryland, who has applied for more than a dozen jobs. "The burden of pivoting after, say 30 years, feels insurmountable and weighs heavily on their heart."
The former aid workers also reported experiencing anxiety, depression, grief, stress, and even shame. It wasn't just the loss of a job, Gopalan said, it was the destruction of their career and their life's passion.
Those feelings resonate with Lindsay Alemi, a contracted worker who lost her job in March.
"I worked through three administrations and worked through all of the ebbs and flows, as we helped some of the poorest regions in the world," said Alemi, 39, who also lives in Silver Spring.
"To have done everything as a good Samaritan your whole life and then to see people call USAID a scam and a fraud, is gut-wrenching," said Alemi, who has done humanitarian work since she was in college. "This is more than just a job for us, this is a calling."
Federal aid misunderstanding
Billionaire and top Trump adviser Elon Musk called USAID a "criminal organization" earlier this year, without providing evidence, saying it was "time for it to die."
The aid organization was the first target in the massive cuts that Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has made across the federal government in what he calls an attack on wasteful spending.
Microsoft founder and philanthropist Bill Gates slammed Musk and the administration for the USAID cutbacks, saying they would lead to the death of millions of children around the world. 'The picture of the world's richest man killing the world's poorest children is not a pretty one,' Gates said in an early May interview with the Financial Times.
And though Americans like to complain about how many of their tax dollars support the rest of the world, nearly 9 in 10 Americans (86%) overestimate how much of the federal budget goes to international aid, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation poll released in March.
USAID comprises less than 1% of the U.S. federal budget, roughly $40 billion a year. About $1 for every $167 the government allocates is used for foreign aid. For decades, USAID has had bipartisan support in Congress because it built good-will for the United States abroad, helped combat infectious diseases that might spread here, and prevented local problems from becoming global ones.
The KFF poll found that two-thirds of Americans agree with Gates that eliminating USAID will lead to more illness and death globally, but almost half (47%) believe that dissolving it will reduce the deficit and help fund domestic programs.
Of those surveyed, believe the U.S. spends too much on foreign aid, but when they were informed that foreign aid accounts for a tiny percentage of spending, that percentage dropped to 50% among Republicans, 39% among independents and just 15% of Democrats.
"We live in the largest country that is willing and wants to support others; there's a moral obligation to lift those less fortunate," Vota said. "Now, we have to try lifting ourselves."
Job hunting after USAID
Vota had been working as a senior digital management adviser, in a role primarily funded by USAID. For two decades, he'd worked to improve technology across Africa and Asia, including in Nigeria, Ghana, Zambia, Malawi, Tanzania, and Indonesia.
Now 52, Vota told USA TODAY he was recently passed over for a private sector tech job because, despite his time in "crazy" cities like Jakarta, he was told they doubted he could keep up with the pace.
Another hiring manager near his Chapel Hill, North Carolina home worried Vota wouldn't be a good salesman, though Vota let him know: "I have convinced adult men in Tanzania to go for voluntary medical circumcision, and I increased our rate of circumcision by 50% …If I can convince grown men to get circumcised, I think I can sell plumbing supplies in North Carolina."
He didn't get the job.
The Substack site Vota created the day after he was laid off, called Career Pivot, helps his former USAID colleagues update their resumes and actively search for new jobs.
The free site features job listings as well as mental health resources, discussion boards, and networking events. A major emphasis of Career Pivot is helping former federal employees and contractors translate their skills into terms the private sector understands.
The site has more than 12,000 subscribers, he said, many of whom are mid-to-senior-level staffers who have spent the majority of their professional lives in the international development field.
"There are thousands ofhumanitarian workers with deep, rich, beautiful experiences who are self-motivated and dedicated, who are struggling to define their value to private sector employers who speak a completely different language," said Vota, comparing the site to a startup which now also helps former federal employees from other agencies.
Struggling to 'do less good' in the world
Gopalan, 42, a married mother of three kids, is among those using Career Pivot. has spent more than 20 years working as a USAID contractor for five organizations monitoring, evaluating and creating policies for USAID-funded programming for developing countries, before being put on a DOGE-implemented administrative leave. Her job ends June 1.
On hold: US Supreme Court halts reinstatement of fired federal employees
Gopalan said, according to USAID Stop-Work, a coalition including current and former USAID-related employees and other supporters, nearly 177,000 jobs have been lost among governments and institutions involved in global assistance.
"Whether these are American federal workers or those who receive USAID funding, the dismantling has been done so chaotically, it has caused such irreparable damage, and is so unnecessary to do to public servants," Nidhi Bouri, USAID's former deputy assistant administrator for Global Health, told USA TODAY.
Many of the displaced humanitarian workers are suffering from "layoff trauma," said Dr. Anne Justus, an American Clinical Psychologist living and working in Cairo since 2007. The sudden loss of a job that is appreciated worldwide, but demeaned by many in their homeland, is devastating, Justus said.
"These people are certainly not doing it to be wealthy; they truly want to do global community building, and the ripple effect is widespread and enormous," said Justus, who recently gave a presentation to Vota's Career Pivot members. "They are not even sure about what they are going next."
Whatever jobs the former humanitarian workers may hold going forward, it might not compare to the impactful work they did, said Charles Kenny, a senior fellow for the Center for Global Development. He said those workers who were let go in similar shuttering agencies, including the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Education, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, for example, are facing similar circumstances.
"These are smart, enterprising and driven people, and some will find jobs they like a lot less because it might mean doing a lot less good in the world," Kenny said. "I hope they will find them rewarding in whatever capacity."
'Will I have a job?': Federal workers full of uncertainty, fear over Trump, DOGE plans
Open to career change
As a project manager for a USAID-funded nonprofit, Alemi worked to prevent malnutrition and starvation in Zimbabwe and Madagascar. Her programs spent tens of millions of tax dollars buying crops grown in America ‒ which now may not have a buyer, harming Americans as well as Africans, she said.
Diplomacy dismantled: USAID aimed for 'soft power' but ended up in DOGE's crosshairs. Here's how.
Alemi has applied for about 30 jobs, but other than a few rejections, she's heard nothing. The mother of four said she's getting worried she might lose the home she and her partner bought in 2021 with a 3% mortgage interest rate, less than half the national average.
"No good news yet," Alemi said. "There's nowhere to go for everybody in our sector, so you may have to be open to making an entire career change."
Still, Alemi, Gopalan and Vota say they remain optimistic.
"My dream is that I hope I can get a job by the end of summer," Vota said. "I don't know if that will happen. "

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
8 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Food for starving children worldwide is still sitting in a Rhode Island warehouse. It's a case study in DOGE aftermath.
Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up But the backlog remains. The nearly 200,000 US government-branded boxes are stuck in North Kingston, and Edesia's founder, Navyn Salem, says she has no idea when—or if—they'll be shipped. Each box can bring one child back from starvation. Advertisement 'What are children supposed to do when we tell them that they need to keep their hearts beating for another six months?' Salem said in an interview. 'Can you imagine if your child dies because you didn't have the equivalent of $1 a day to give them this life-saving food?' Edesia has spent months trying to get answers on a system broken by the Department of Government Efficiency, which Musk formerly ran. And even if the government reversed course tomorrow, it will still take weeks, if not months, to get any of the medicinal food to the children worldwide who need it. Advertisement Edesia's plight has become a case study not only in how quickly DOGE disrupted the federal government, but how long it is taking to undo its mistakes. Despite repeated public statements from top officials that they've resumed the program, deep spending cuts and an overhaul of the foreign aid apparatus have left Edesia in limbo. In the meantime, Edesia and supportive Democratic lawmakers have been trying every avenue — including recruiting Republican colleagues — to correct the issue. Edesia and a similar organization based in Georgia, MANA Nutrition, have for years made a fortified peanut-based paste called to digest regular food. Edesia, named for the Roman goddess of food, says it has fed 25 million children since its opening in 2010. Most of the nonprofit's funding came from USAID. In January, after DOGE decimated USAID, Edesia Eventually, the money came, but now Salem says the product, which is technically owned by the US government, is sitting in her warehouse because the shipping and distribution system that sent the food around the world was run by USAID experts. With the agency's staff essentially terminated and its work set to transition to the State Department as of July 1, Salem has spent weeks contacting anyone in government she can reach through a 'a patchwork of emails and phone calls' to try to get food around the world. Advertisement 'The only thing the government has to do is sign a piece of paper that says, 'It's going to ship here,'' Salem said. 'It's sitting here. It's been paid for by taxpayer dollars. If we're trying to gain efficiencies, we're not being successful, currently.' The State Department denies that it is the hold up, but it did not explain where the breakdown occurred. They referred the Globe to a 'We are proud to continue working with our local partners to deliver life-saving ready-to-use therapeutic food,' a State Department spokesperson said in an unsigned statement. 'As for the warehouse, this is simply stock waiting for pickup, but they aren't waiting on the State Department.' Edesia's cause has been taken up in Washington by Rhode Island lawmakers including Representatives Seth Magaziner and Gabe Amo. Magaziner has given a speech on the House floor every day it is in session since late April to try to bring attention to the issue. He's at 26 and counting. He has been working closely with Republican Georgia Representative Austin Scott, who represents MANA Nutrition, to try to get the administration's attention through a more ideologically friendly messenger. Advertisement 'Every time he talks to the administration they say the right thing and then a few weeks go by and nothing has changed,' Magaziner told the Globe. 'The damage that was done by Elon Musk in just a couple months is going to take a long time to undo. … Irrespective of whether he found any actual waste or not, a lot of good programs were hurt in the meantime and no doubt many innocent lives were lost.' Amo, who sits on the committee that oversees the State Department, had a fiery exchange with Rubio last month at a hearing in which Rubio insisted the problem was fixed and denied his agency was the source of any further issues. 'No children are dying on my watch,' Rubio told Amo as he asked about the boxes in Edesia's warehouse. 'That food is being distributed now.' Calculating the human toll of the delayed food has been difficult, but Amo has been in regular contact with the State Department about Edesia's ordeal. He believes the administration staff are trying to resolve the problems but failed to understand the complexity of the network. USAID's systems were for not just paying for the RUTF, but they also were also identifying where it was needed and distributing it in dangerous and impoverished parts of the world. Advertisement 'It's a little bit of Whac-A-Mole,' Amo said. 'You have an interlocking set of contracts and agreements that can be upset when you make arbitrary decisions that don't see the whole enterprise of how this moves from farm to human being.' Scott, the Georgia Republican working with Magaziner, defended the administration's mission of identifying waste and said he's confident the issues with MANA Nutrition and Edesia will be resolved. 'If you read the book on Elon Musk, I mean, the way he built his companies is to tear it down to the minimum and then build it back up,' Scott said. 'I would have preferred that we measure twice and cut once, if you will, but ... a lot of things they exposed about where US tax dollars were going, that they shouldn't have been going, needed to be done.' Senator Shelly Moore Capito, a West Virginia Republican who worked to get DOGE cuts in her state and others reversed, said she's helping some Democrats now, but under Democratic administrations, they've also had to help her. 'I don't think that's so highly unusual,' she said. Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock, a Democrat who has been working to restore shipments and payments to MANA Nutrition, said he has personally spoken with Rubio, a former Senate colleague, and some progress was made as a result. But he feels the administration still doesn't understand the urgency and importance of the situation. 'What we saw was an administration that came in literally with a chainsaw and cutting without knowing or caring what they were cutting,' Warnock said. 'And so now, not only are millions of lives at stake, not only are children literally dying as a result of this, the tragic insult and irony is that they're dying while these products, literally, sit on shelves. Make it make sense.' Advertisement Tal Kopan can be reached at


American Press
a day ago
- American Press
Foreign exchange student reflects on year in the US
This year's DeRidder Rotary Club scholarship recipients are Helena Thompson, Grace Lovitt, Gabriel McKee, Victor Storer, Hunter Gill, Mikayla Bonds and Collin Nortman. Five of the recipients are pictured with Club President Erin Chesnutt. (Special to the American Press) The Rotary Club of DeRidder has given out more than $500,000 in scholarships for over 60 years — and they awarded $20,000 more this month. Scholarships were presented to seven students who were required to write an essay, achieve an ACT composite score of 19 or higher, maintain a 3.0 grade-point average and create a short video introducing themselves and stating where they plan to attend school in the fall. Club President Erin Chesnutt said this is the second year the program has been offered to students attending traditional colleges and universities and those entering vocational or trade schools. This year's recipients are Helena Thompson, Grace Lovitt and Gabriel McKee of Rosepine High School; Victor Storer of Merryville High School; Hunter Gill and Mikayla Bonds of DeRidder High School; and Collin Nortman of East Beauregard High School. The guest speaker for this month's Rotary Club meeting was Dou Sugisawa, an exchange student from Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan, who has been studying at Comeaux High School in Lafayette. She was hosted by Paula Mendoza, who is the Rotarian Club of Lafayette treasurer and Rotarian District Youth Exchange Officer. She has hosted Sugisawa — whose father is a rotarian in Japan — for 11 months. 'I got to see the world through Dou's eyes and experience things that we normally take for granted. She is the most courageous person I've ever met; she's jumped into everything I would put in front of her,' Mendoza said. Sugisawa finished her sophomore school year in Lafayette with a 3.9 GPA and took the ACT test for fun and made a 23. Mendoza said Sugisawa can accomplish anything she sets her mind to and considers herself lucky to have witnessed her extraordinary growth. Sugisawa was Mendoza's first rotarian foreign exchange student. Mendoza said a month before Sugisawa's stay with her, they started emailing back and forth. They met for the first time in Baton Rouge the day Sugisawa arrived in America. Mendoza said she has learned a lot from Sugisawa — such as the different customs between the two countries and how Americans can be louder and more boisterous while the Japanese are traditionally very quiet. Mendoza said the first few weeks Sugisawa was with her, she'd ask her how her day had gone in school. She said Sugisawa initially told her she doesn't like to talk about 'personal things.' Within three weeks, however, Sugisawa said she would look forward to telling Mendoza about her day at school. Sugisawa also started calling Mendoza 'Mom.' 'Before she got here, she had written in one of her letters, 'I don't like to be touched, if you want to hug me, please ask first,' and I wrote back, 'This might be trouble because you're coming to the south, the land of huggers,' and now months later, she hugs everybody,' Mendoza said. 'In Japan nobody hugs, I don't even hug with my own father, mother or siblings. People are so friendly here, even in the grocery stores. In Japan you don't talk to strangers in the grocery store, but I like this style,' Sugisawa said. Sugisawa said in Japan people show love and care in other forms. 'People show affection more privately and will take care of you, cook for you, it's more of an act of service,' she said. Sugisawa said she has experienced a lot while in the States — including seeing an alligator and learning to make a roux. Crawfish etouffee is her favorite Louisiana cuisine, and she said she will be taking Mendoza's crawfish etouffee recipe back to Japan with her. Bread pudding is her favorite dessert, Mendoza said. 'Everywhere we went she'd try the bread pudding if it was on the menu.' Sugisawa's experience in an American school is very different from that in Japan. She said the biggest difference is how here students switch classrooms each hour, whereas in Japan the teacher switches classes and the students stay in the same classroom, with the same students all day. 'It's not just switching classrooms, either, the relationships are also different because I'd spend all day with the same classmates in Japan,' she said. Field days and pep rallies are also not held in Japan. 'I think students at Comeaux High School have more freedom than at my school at home because my school in Japan has a very strict uniform, you are not allowed to dye your hair, wear any kind of jewelry or wear makeup in school,' she explained. Mendoza and Sugisawa traveled a lot while she was in the states. Both said a trip to Colorado was their favorite. 'Even though where she lives, in Sappara, they get the snow, they don't go skiing or play in it, it's all about education,' Mendoza said. Sugisawa will be taking a two-week East Coast trip with other foreign exchange students before flying home to Japan this summer. She will get to experience Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., South Carolina and Disney World in Florida. Sugisawa is most excited to see the Statue of Liberty. Sugisawa said she looks forward to returning home and seeing her parents and three siblings again. Mendoza plans to visit Sugisawa next year in Japan.


The Onion
a day ago
- The Onion
Pros And Cons Of Banning Fireworks
Millions of Americans will celebrate Independence Day with fireworks this year, though the legality of the explosives varies throughout the country. The Onion examines the pros and cons of banning fireworks. Kites can take their rightful place as sovereigns of the sky Lose most effective way to quickly raze 4,000 acres of forestland Medical fireworks still available through firework dispensaries No reason to visit Indiana anymore Mom's new boyfriend will instead have to prove himself by eating really spicy pepper No way to find out which dogs would abandon you in a shootout Far fewer loose fingers for birds to incorporate into nest Billy's Fireworks & Stuff can only sell so many vapes No other reason to look up at the sky in wonder Yet another American tradition discarded for nothing more than safety, environmental hazards, animal welfare, and good taste