After cost-cutting blitz, Trump administration rehires hundreds of laid-off employees
MIAMI (AP) Hundreds of federal employees who lost their jobs in Elon Musk's cost-cutting blitz are being asked to return to work.
The General Services Administration has given the employees who managed government workspaces until the end of the week to accept or decline reinstatement, according to an internal memo obtained by The Associated Press. Those who accept must report for duty on Oct. 6 after what amounts to a seven-month paid vacation, during which time the GSA in some cases racked up high costs passed along to taxpayers to stay in dozens of properties whose leases it had slated for termination or were allowed to expire.
Ultimately, the outcome was the agency was left broken and understaffed, said Chad Becker, a former GSA real estate official. They didnt have the people they needed to carry out basic functions.
GSA was established in the 1940s to centralize the acquisition and management of thousands of federal workplaces. Its return to work request mirrors rehiring efforts at in several agencies targeted by DOGE. Last month, the IRS said it would allow some employees who took a resignation offer to remain on the job. The Labor Department has also brought back some employees who took buyouts, while the National Park Service earlier reinstated a number of purged employees.
Critical to the work of such agencies is the GSA, which manages many of the buildings. Starting in March, thousands of GSA employees left the agency as part of programs that encouraged them to resign or take early retirement. Hundreds of others those subject to the recall notice were dismissed as part of an aggressive push to reduce the size of the federal workforce. Though those employees did not show up for work, some continue to get paid.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/cost-cutting-blitz-trump-administration-214922403.html