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The department will relocate about 2,600 employees to five other locations and shutter several key facilities in the capital region, including its historic main research center.
The changes are part of the Trump administration's ongoing efforts to cut down and streamline the federal workforce.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture says shifting thousands of D.C.-based staff to regional offices will save money without ...
USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins said the agency is not carrying out large-scale layoffs, but may pursue "focused and limited" reductions in force.
The agency, which oversees federally funded nutrition programs and supports food safety, says moving more than 2,000 ...
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said the plan to relocate workers was intended to bring the agency’s staff closer to its ...
USDA plans massive relocation moving 2,600 workers from Washington to 5 hub cities while closing historic Beltsville ...
The agency will begin a months-long shift to move its workforce away from Washington, D.C., and into five regional hubs, ...
The U.S. Department of Agriculture will relocate much of its Washington, D.C., workforce to five regional hubs and vacate ...
The Agriculture Department is slashing regional offices and centralizing staff into five new hubs across the country.
US Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins announced plans for reorganization of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) ...
Indianapolis will soon serve as one of five U.S. Department of Agriculture hubs as the federal agency reduces and reorganizes ...