Interior Department to lay off 2,050 employees, says plan 'predates' shutdown
The department said the layoff plans “predated” the shutdown of the federal government that started Oct. 1
The Interior Department plans to lay off 2,050 employees, according to a new court filing.
The department made the announcement in a filing Monday to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California in which the agency also detailed plans for the layoffs across 89 units or agencies, according to The Hill news outlet.
The plan calls for laying off roughly 470 employees in the Bureau of Labor Management, 140 in the Fish and Wildlife Service and 270 in the National Park Service – including more than 180 from parks in the country's Southeast, Northeast, and Pacific West regions.
Rachel Borra, the department's chief human resources officer, said in the filing that the layoff plans “predated” the shutdown of the federal government that started Oct. 1 – after Congress could not agree on a spending measure to keep it fully operational.
She also said the layoffs are unrelated to guidance on layoffs issued by the Office of Management and Budget and Office of Personnel Management before the shutdown.
Most national parks have remained open during the shutdown with limited staffing during
The court on Wednesday granted federal employee unions a temporary restraining order to stop layoffs directed by the OMB. In the order, U.S. District Judge Susan Illston, a Clinton appointee, said the Trump administration is attempting “to fire line-level civilian employees during a government shutdown as a way to punish the opposing political party.”
She added that “the harms suffered by federal employees affected by [layoffs] are having drastic and imminent public consequences.”