HHS layoffs may be illegal, legal experts say

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HHS layoffs may be illegal, legal experts say

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The sweeping HHS layoffs have been chaotic and stressful for employees of the massive health department. They may also be illegal, according to lawyers and federal employment experts.

Healthcare Dive spoke to more than one dozen current and former HHS employees, all of whom shared elements of the reduction-in-force, or RIF, that don’t align with how the process — an undertaking so complex, onerous and rare that one former government official likened it to a lost art — is normally done. The sources were granted anonymity for fear of retribution.

Potential issues include the closure of entire offices, including some mandated by law; discrepancies in how the HHS determined which employees would be let go; incorrect information on termination letters; and a lack of transparency with department heads and HHS unions.

Several legal experts agree that some of those reasons could be grounds for a suit. And unions and employment law firms are taking notice, reaching out to impacted employees to collect information.

Last Tuesday, a virtual town hall for HHS staff run by Gilbert Employment Law quickly became so crowded that Zoom started bouncing attendees due to capacity constraints. Another firm, Federal Practice Group, told Healthcare Dive it plans to appeal the layoffs with a board that protects government employees from illegal terminations.

Meanwhile, the National Treasury Employees Union, which represents HHS workers in several agencies, has filed an institutional grievance — setting off an internal complaint process that could wind up in front of an arbiter, according to an email to members shared with Healthcare Dive.

Two weeks after the HHS started sending out RIF notices to employees on April 1, it’s still not exactly clear how the HHS RIF was conducted, who’s fully in charge of it and how they identified which of the HHS’ more than 80,000 employees would be targeted.

The layoff process, which is slashing the HHS’ staff by some 10,000 individuals, has been characterized by confusion from the highest ranks of leadership to the lowest-level employee at the HHS. Even HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. acknowledged he was unaware of the full scale of the cuts, saying recently in an interview with CBS News that as many as 20% of affected employees could be reinstated — a plan that other HHS officials shot down.

“This has been done so sloppily and so carelessly,” said one longtime employee at the National Institutes of Health, who was not affected by the RIF. “It’s just staggering to me, the incompetence of this.”

Legal questions dog the layoffs

Generally in a government RIF, agency officials identify an area they want to trim, whether a specific geography or office. Those defined parameters are called a competitive area. The agency can also specify which types of jobs will be affected by the RIF before determining how many people, or what percentage of a competitive area, they want to let go.

Then, the agency assigns all employees within that competitive area a score based on the date they started at the agency, their veteran status, performance scores and whether they’re a tenured or a probationary employee.

Employees are dismissed or retained based on their position in that ranking, which is called a “retention register.” Agencies also can offer reassignments to a lower level post to keep valuable employees onboard while still cutting their position, in a process called “bump and retreat.”

Government reductions are essentially “a game of musical chairs” where “the RIF decides who gets the chair,” said Ron Sanders, a longtime government official who oversaw RIFs for the Department of Defense in the 1990s.

The entire process can take months and is highly manual if followed to the letter. Not so at the HHS, where instead of carefully trimming employees, officials have elected to shut down entire offices — a strategy that allows them to move faster and get around the ranking requirements altogether, according to experts.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., U.S. President Donald Trump’s nominee for Secretary of Health and Human Services departs after testifying in a confirmation hearing before the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions at the Dirksen Senate Office Building on January 30, 2025 in Washington, D.C.

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. after testifying in front of the Senate HELP committee on Jan. 30, 2025 prior to being confirmed.

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images via Getty Images

 

That’s highly irregular but may not be illegal. That depends on how the HHS defined competitive areas, Sanders said. If the HHS defined the competitive area as a single office and closed the entire thing, they’re not required to do the ranking.

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