- Secretary Linda McMahon says more money will go to the states
- Around 1,315 workers are expected to lose their jobs
The
Affected employees will be notified Tuesday, according to a senior administration official who outlined the plans to reporters on the condition of anonymity.
The announcement follows a directive to employees to vacate office buildings in the Washington area by 6 p.m. local time, and not to return to facilities on Wednesday, citing “security reasons,” according to a copy of the email seen by Bloomberg News. Recipients were asked to bring their laptops home, and perform duties remotely, if permitted.
Workers will have 90 days from today until they are actually terminated. They will receive full pay during that time, as well as severance: one week salary for every year of service up to 10 years, and two weeks salary for each year of service beyond their first decade.
Those workers will be expected to wrap up their work via telework by March 21, and then go on paid administrative leave for the remainder of their time as government employees.
President
Earlier:
Similar actions in partnership with DOGE have taken place at other government agencies since Trump took office, including the
Education Secretary
“He’s taking the bureaucracy out of education, so that more money flows to the states,” McMahon said of Trump during an interview on Fox News Tuesday night.
“We wanted to make sure that we kept all of the right people and the good people, to make sure that the outward-facing programs, the grants, the appropriations that come from Congress, all of that are being met,” she added.
All agencies are slated to submit reports to the
The Education Department currently has about 4,133 total staff, and around 600 people are planning to depart through deferred resignation or voluntary separation programs offered earlier this year. Another 63 probationary employees were terminated in February, meaning approximately 1,315 additional workers are expected to lose their jobs as part of the effort.
As part of the reduction, the agency is also cutting leases with buildings in cities across the country, including San Francisco, New York, Boston, Chicago, Dallas and Cleveland, the official said. The department intends to consolidate its Washington, D.C., operations into one facility, instead of three.
Senator
(Updates with McMahon, Cassidy, starting in ninth paragraph.)
--With assistance from
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To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Justin Sink, John Harney
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