Trump administration cuts reach FDA employees in food safety, medical
devices and tobacco products
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[February 17, 2025]
By MATTHEW PERRONE
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration’s effort to slash the size of
the federal workforce reached the Food and Drug Administration this
weekend, as recently hired employees who review the safety of food
ingredients, medical devices and other products were fired.
Probationary employees across the FDA received notices Saturday evening
that their jobs were being eliminated, according to three FDA staffers
who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they
were not authorized to speak publicly.
The total number of positions eliminated was not clear Sunday, but the
firings appeared to focus on employees in the agency’s centers for food,
medical devices and tobacco products — which includes oversight of
electronic cigarettes. It was not clear whether FDA employees who review
drugs were exempted.
On Friday, some officials expected the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services to fire 5,200 probationary employees across its agencies,
according to an audio recording of a National Institutes of Health
department meeting. HHS oversees NIH, FDA and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, among other things.
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People who spoke with the AP on condition of anonymity on Friday said
the number of probationary employees to be laid off at the CDC would
total nearly 1,300. But as of early Sunday afternoon, about 700 people
had received notices, according to three people who spoke on condition
on anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. They
said none of the CDC layoffs affected the young doctors and researchers
who track diseases in what’s known as the Epidemic Intelligence Service.
The FDA is headquartered in the Maryland suburbs outside Washington and
employs nearly 20,000 people. It's long been a target of newly sworn-in
health secretary Robert Kennedy Jr., who last year accused the agency of
waging a “war on public health” for not approving unproven treatments
such as psychedelics, stem cells and chelation therapy.
Kennedy also has called for eliminating thousands of chemicals and
colorings from U.S. foods. But the cuts at FDA include staffers
responsible for reviewing the safety of new food additives and
ingredients, according to an FDA staffer familiar with the firings.
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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration campus in Silver Spring, Md.,
is photographed on Oct. 14, 2015. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)
 An HHS spokesperson did not
immediately respond to a request for comment Sunday afternoon.
Nearly half of the FDA’s $6.9 billion budget comes from fees paid by
companies the agency regulates, including drug and medical device
makers, which allows the agency to hire extra scientists to swiftly
review products. Eliminating those positions will not reduce
government spending.
A former FDA official said cutting recent hires could backfire,
eliminating staffers who tend to be younger and have more up-to-date
technical skills. The FDA’s workforce skews toward older workers who
have spent one or two decades at the agency, and the Government
Accountability Office noted in 2022 that the FDA “has historically
faced challenges in recruiting and retaining” staff due to better
money in the private sector.
“You want to bring in new blood,” said Peter Pitts, a former FDA
associate commissioner under President George W. Bush. “You want
people with new ideas, greater enthusiasm and the latest thinking in
terms of technology.”
Mitch Zeller, former FDA director for tobacco, said the firings are
a way to “demoralize and undermine the spirit of the federal
workforce.”
“The combined effect of what they're trying to do is going to
destroy the ability to recruit and retain talent," Zeller said.
The FDA’s inspection force has been particularly strained in recent
years after a wave of departures during the COVID-19 pandemic, and
many of the agency’s current inspectors are recent hires. It was not
immediately clear whether those employees were exempted.
FDA inspectors are responsible for overseeing thousands of food,
drug, tobacco and medical device facilities worldwide, though the AP
reported last year that the agency faced a backlog of roughly 2,000
uninspected drug facilities that hadn’t been visited since before
the pandemic.
The agency's inspection force have also been criticized for not
moving faster to catch recent problems involving infant formula,
baby food and eyedrops.
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AP Medical Writer Mike Stobbe contributed to this report.
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