Entire CDC FOIA Office Fired as Health Agency Moves to Centralize Structure

The Epoch Times Header

A health official said all the Freedom of Information Act offices were previously operating in an isolated fashion.

The Centers for Disease Control and Preventionโ€™s entire Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) office was fired as part of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) reorganization, a health official confirmed on April 2.

Some FOIA employees working in other HHS divisions, including the National Institutes of Health, were among those laid off by HHS this week.

The terminations are part of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.โ€™s restructuring plan, aimed at streamlining operations, an HHS official told The Epoch Times.

The various FOIA offices did not communicate with each other, nor did they report to their parent agency, HHS, the official said. Instead, the offices โ€œall operated in their own silo.โ€

The plan is to take the work the offices conducted and centralize it into one FOIA office. The plan is still being finalized.

The official said that all the requests that have been submitted will be handled.

FOIA is a federal law that enables journalists and members of the public to ask for and receive information from government agencies, including internal emails and documents. Responses regularly shed light on important topics. CDC records produced through FOIA in recent years showed that agency officials found evidence COVID-19 vaccines caused deaths, saw millions of cases of post-vaccination COVID-19 early in the pandemic, and why officials changed the definition of vaccine.

A CDC employee told The Epoch Times via the agencyโ€™s FOIA portal that the agencyโ€™s entire FOIA office has been placed on administrative leave.

Emails sent to CDC FOIA employees were returned with automated messages stating that they are on administrative leave and unable to respond.

Meredith Schlaifer, deputy director of the Food and Drug Administration Office of the Commissionerโ€™s Division of Headquarters Freedom of Information, told The Epoch Times in an email that her officeโ€™s nine people are still employed, but that a number of other administration FOIA staffers were fired through a reduction-in-force, or mass termination.

The FDA declined to comment.

National Institutes of Health officials did not respond to inquiries.

Byย Zachary Stieber

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.

Columns

How Legal Immigration Is Keeping Farms Afloat

The H-2A visa program is an example of how legal immigration can supply labor in America, but farmers say reform is needed.

Trumpโ€™s EO to Reduce Drug Prices Explained

Trump signed an Executive Order to bring the prices Americans pay for prescription drugs in line with those paid by other nations around the world.

Parents of Autistic Children Weigh In on RFK Jr.โ€™s Plan to Find the Cause

โ€˜The bottom line is we want the truth. We want safe products for our kids,โ€™ said an Ohio dad with an autistic child.

Fighting the Idiocracy

Despite our country's noble efforts to defend freedom and liberty across the globe we now find ourselves defending democracy against idiocracy.

Recent Sun Activity Could Trigger Major Earthquakes

A number of scientists around the world are sharing concerns about an imminent global seismic event.

News

Supreme Court Wrestles With Nationwide Injunctions in Birthright Citizenship Case

Supreme Court grappled with how far federal judges could go in issuing sweeping blocks on policies such as Trumpโ€™s order restricting birthright citizenship.

Lawsuit Alleges Musk, Election PAC Failed to Pay Swing State Petition Signers

Lawsuit filed against Musk and his PAC accuses them of failing to pay registered voters in swing states for signing petition supporting candidate Trump.

Trump Weighs In on Supreme Court Case Involving Birthright Citizenship

President Trump weighed in on the U.S. Supreme Court hearing arguments in a case involving his order to limit birthright citizenship.

DOJ Charges High-Ranking Sinaloa Cartel Suspects With โ€˜Narco-Terrorismโ€™

Feds charged alleged leaders of Sinaloa cartelโ€™s Beltran Leyva Organization with narco-terrorism, terrorism support, and international drug trafficking.

Judge Orders HHS to Restore Jobs in Health Monitoring Program for West Virginia Coal Miners

West Virginia federal judge ordered HHS to reverse terminations of nearly 200 workers who oversee a health monitoring program for coal miners

Trump Admin Urges Supreme Court to Permit DOGE Access to Social Security Records

The DOJ urged the Supreme Court on May 13 to let the DOGE have access to Social Security data after lower courts blocked that access.

Deported Mother Who Took 2-Year-Old US Citizen Child With Her Drops Lawsuit Against Trump Admin

Lawsuit against Trump admin alleging it deported an illegal immigrant and her 2-year-old U.S. citizen child to Honduras without due process is being dropped.

Federal Judge Says Trumpโ€™s Invocation of Alien Enemies Act Was Legal

Federal judge in PA has ruled that President Trump validly invoked the Alien Enemies Act as part of an effort to deport Venezuelan gang members.
spot_img

Related Articles