USDA is recruiting for key jobs after paying 15,000 to leave


In testimony on Capitol Hill on Tuesday and Wednesday, Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins confirmed that the U.S. Department of Agriculture is now looking to fill critical positions, after agreeing to pay more than 15,000 employees’ salaries and benefits through September in exchange for their resignations.

“We are actively looking and recruiting to fill those positions that are integral to the efforts and the key frontlines,” Rollins told members of the Senate Appropriations Committee on Tuesday.

USDA is among the agencies that twice invited employees to quit their jobs through the deferred resignation program — once in late January when the deal was presented to nearly the entire federal workforce, and again for a short window in April. The Trump administration has leaned heavily on the deferred resignation program as it seeks to dramatically downsize the federal workforce.

But the need to fill positions so soon after letting people go has raised questions, including from Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, the top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee.

“So you let people go and you’re looking for new people to fill the positions that they had experience in?” Murray asked.

“We’re having those discussions right now,” Rollins responded, while noting that 15,000 employees represents less than 15% of USDA’s workforce and that the department loses 8,000 to 10,000 employees every year through attrition.

Still, Rollins invited some of those who took the deferred resignation offer to return.

“If they want to come back, and if they were in a key position, then we would love to have that conversation,” she told lawmakers.

One employee who had taken the deferred resignation deal was furious to learn their job was on that list. They had not wanted to resign from their job but felt forced to do so after repeated warnings of mass layoffs ahead. The employee asked to remain anonymous out of fear of reprisal for speaking with the media while still on paid administrative leave.

At Tuesday’s hearing, Rollins acknowledged some mistakes may have been made along the way but insisted that people in key positions were not accepted in the second round of the deferred resignation program.

“We are very intentionally approaching this. Have we done it perfectly? No. Any type of wholescale change and big effort to basically realign an entire government agency is difficult,” she said. “We’re working every day to solve for a lot of this, and I think we’re making a lot of really good progress.”

On Wednesday, Rollins went further, denying that anyone at APHIS had been allowed to accept deferred resignation, or DRP, in April.

“In the last round, we did not accept any DRPs from anyone in [Farm Service Agency] offices or APHIS offices or state veterinarians,” Rollins said at a budget hearing of the House Appropriations Committee.

He described seeing stressed IT staff dealing with piles of laptops and cell phones turned in by those departing the government last Wednesday. He added his to the pile.

Armando Rosario-Lebron, a vice president with the National Association of Agriculture Employees, which represents employees in APHIS’ Plant Protection and Quarantine program, believes several hundred of its bargaining unit members could have accepted the deferred resignation offer in April.



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