Categories: Top Stories

Trump administration reinstating 24,500 fired workers after court order

WASHINGTON (Reuters): The Trump administration in court filings has for the first time acknowledged that it fired nearly 25,000 recently hired workers, and said agencies were working to bring all of them back after a judge ruled that their terminations were likely illegal.

The filings made in Baltimore, Maryland, federal court late Monday include statements from officials at 18 agencies, all of whom said the reinstated probationary workers were being placed on administrative leave at least temporarily.

The mass firings, part of President Donald Trump’s broader purge of the federal workforce, were widely reported, but the court filings are the first full accounting of the terminations by the administration.

Most of the agencies said they had fired a few hundred workers. The Treasury Department terminated about 7,600 people, the Department of Agriculture about 5,700 and the Department of Health and Human Services more than 3,200, according to the filings.

US District Judge James Bredar on March 13 said the mass firings of probationary workers that began last month violated regulations governing the mass layoffs of federal employees, and ordered them to be reinstated pending further litigation.

Probationary workers typically have less than one year of service in their current roles, though some are longtime federal employees.

Bredar’s ruling came in a lawsuit by 19 Democrat-led states and Washington, D.C., who said the mass firings would trigger a spike in unemployment claims and greater demand for social services provided by states.

The office of Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown, which is spearheading the lawsuit, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday.

The Trump administration has appealed Bredar’s decision and on Monday asked a Richmond, Virginia-based appeals court to pause the ruling pending the outcome of the case.

Hours before Bredar issued his ruling, a federal judge in San Francisco had ordered that probationary workers be reinstated at six agencies, including five also covered by Bredar’s order and the US Department of Defense. The administration has also appealed that decision.

In the filings late Monday, agency officials said they had either reinstated all of the fired employees or were working to do so, but warned that bringing back large numbers of workers had imposed significant burdens and caused confusion and turmoil.

The officials also noted that an appeals court ruling reversing Bredar’s order would allow agencies to again fire the workers, subjecting them to multiple changes in their employment status in a matter of weeks.

“The tremendous uncertainty associated with this confusion and these administrative burdens impede supervisors from appropriately managing their workforce,” Mark Green, deputy assistant secretary at the US Department of the Interior, wrote in one of the filings. “Work schedules and assignments are effectively being tied to hearing and briefing schedules set by the courts.”

Bredar has scheduled a hearing for March 26 on whether to keep his ruling in place pending the outcome of the lawsuit, which could take months or longer to resolve.

The Frontier Post

Recent Posts

Trump to send National Guard to Memphis to address crime concerns

NEW YORK (AP): President Donald Trump said Friday he’ll send the National Guard to Memphis…

3 seconds ago

Trump says suspect in Charlie Kirk killing taken into custody

WASHINGTON (Reuters): A suspect in the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk at a…

5 minutes ago

Taliban clampdown on women forces UN to close aid centres for Afghan returnees

GENEVA (Reuters): The U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) has closed eight centres providing support to Afghan…

9 minutes ago

Long-range ‘kamikaze’ drones seen near RSF base could worsen conflict in Sudan

DARFUR (Reuters): More than a dozen long-range kamikaze drones seen near an airport controlled by…

17 minutes ago

Israeli soldiers, and their mothers, increasingly reject calls to return to Gaza

TEL AVIV (AP): As Israel calls up tens of thousands of reservists for its invasion…

18 minutes ago

Israel PM accuses Spain of ‘genocidal threat’, Madrid fires back

JERUSALEM (AP): Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused his Spanish counterpart Pedro Sanchez of levelling…

20 minutes ago

This website uses cookies.