Trump administration reinstating nearly 25,000 fired federal workers
- The Trump administration's appeal to block the reinstatement of nearly 25,000 federal workers was rejected by Judge Allison Rushing on March 21.
- U.S. District Judge James Bredar ruled that the mass firings did not follow required procedures, which require 60 days’ notice of layoffs.
- The mass layoffs affected 24,805 probationary workers across 18 federal agencies.
- The mass firings included 7,605 from the Treasury Department and 5,714 from the Department of Agriculture.
116 Articles
116 Articles
Appeals Court Upholds Order Reinstating Thousands of Federal Workers
The Trump administration’s attempt to appeal a district judge’s order to reinstate nearly 25,000 probationary workers to their jobs across 18 federal agencies was struck down on March 21. Judge Allison Rushing of the Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Virginia, chose not to pause the order because the ruling judge, U.S. District Judge James Bredar, was expected to decide next whether to extend his ruling further in a lawsuit broug…
Dismissed VA workers get jobs back, are placed on leave
Court rulings require U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to reinstate workers, including at least a dozen at the Minneapolis VA Medical Center, disrupting budget-cutting plans by President Donald Trump's administration.
US court won't pause ruling requiring Trump administration to reinstate 25,000 workers
A US appeals court on Friday (Mar 20) refused to pause a judge's ruling requiring the Trump administration to reinstate 25 000 workers at 18 federal agencies who lost their jobs as part of the Republican president's
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