Deep staff cuts at a little-known federal agency pose trouble for droves of local health programs [View all]
Source: CBS News
Updated on: July 31, 2025 / 3:43 PM EDT
A little-known federal agency that sends more than $12 billion annually to support community health centers, addiction treatment services, and workforce initiatives for America's neediest people has been hobbled by the Trump administration's staffing purges.
The cuts are "just a little astonishing," said Carole Johnson, who previously led the Health Resources and Services Administration. She left the agency in January with the administration change and has described the sweeping staff cuts as a "big threat" to the agency's ability to distribute billions of dollars in grants to hospitals, clinics, nonprofits, and other organizations nationwide.
Since February, about a quarter of workers at HRSA including analysts, auditors, scientists, grant managers, and nursing consultants have left, according to a KFF Health News analysis.
The agency, headquartered in a nondescript gray-and-glass office building tucked into side streets in Rockville, Maryland, employed about 2,700 staffers in early 2025. Employees worked behind the scenes to manage and monitor thousands of projects nationwide that fund primary health providers, HIV/AIDS treatment and prevention, maternal and child care programs, rural hospitals, and workforce training.
Read more: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/staff-cuts-federal-agency-health-programs/