Trump, mass layoffs and food and drug administration
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Health job cuts: The Trump administration has begun cutting 10,000 Health and Human Services Department employees whose jobs include regulating food and drugs, protecting Americans from disease and r...
From The New York Times
Cantor Fitzgerald analysts renewed their criticism of U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Thursday, saying the layoffs at the Food and Drug Administration pose a risk to public safety and ...
From U.S. News & World Report
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President Donald Trump-headed Government staffing cuts have gutted a small US health agency that aims to protect workers - drawing rebukes from firefighters, coal miners, medical equipment manufacturers and a range of others.
Job and program cuts at the Department of Health and Human Services have teed up court challenges and prompted bipartisan criticism in Congress.
By Ahmed Aboulenein, Julie Steenhuysen and Maggie FickWASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Trump administration's mass firings at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration have removed employees critical to reviewing new medicines,
Agency heads responded to the executive order, and, in conjunction with efforts by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), more than 50,000 federal workers have been laid
Combined with earlier buyouts and retirements, the Health and Human Services Department will be left with 62,000 employees, down from around 82,000. Agencies face an April 14 deadline to present details of which employees will be cut in order to comply with Mr. Trump’s government-shrinking objective.
The Trump administration has begun firing staff at major U.S. health agencies including the CDC and FDA as part of its plan to cut 10,000 government health jobs, sources familiar with the situation and a health official said on Tuesday.
Ind. (WNDU) - Layoffs for autoworkers are on the way as a major manufacturer braces for the impact of the Trump Administration’s tariffs to take effect. ‘Stellantis’ announced this week that temporary layoffs will take place at its Kokomo plant. The automaker announced that production would stop at plants in Canada and Mexico.
Mass firings took place today at federal health agencies amid the Trump administration's slashing of federal jobs.
Auto giants have responded to U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs by announcing plans to raise prices, impose import fees, pause production and even layoff staff. As part of plans designed to shift production to U.