News

The department abandoned its previous plan to cut 80,000 workers, saying it expected a reduction of around 30,000 jobs by the ...
The good news: the projected 76,000 Veterans Affairs layoffs won’t happen. The bad news: the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs confirms it’s cutting nearly 30,000 jobs.
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs will make two-thirds fewer employee cuts this fiscal year than it first targeted, ...
In a surprising move, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has announced a significant reduction in its workforce, planning to cut nearly 30,000 jobs by the end of fiscal year 2025. This ...
Despite an apparent reversal on mass layoffs, the Department of Veterans Affairs is quietly advancing a large-scale workforce ...
VA Secretary Doug Collins said in March that VA’s goal was to cut 15% of its workforce, which would mean eliminating about 72 ...
The Department of Veterans Affairs announced Monday it is walking back plans for mass layoffs at the agency but says it will ...
Already, about 17,000 VA jobs have been vacated since Jan. 1 through a combination of deferred resignations, retirements, ...
Veterans Affairs said a “large-scale reduction-in-force” to slash manpower was no longer needed. Close to 30,000 employees ...
Back in January, the VA said it was considering up to a 15% reduction in its workforce, amounting to more than 72,000 jobs ...
The Department of Veterans Affairs claimed credit for canceling contracts that had not been canceled, and tallied savings ...
Veterans Affairs abandons plan to fire 76,000 workers after massive backlash. Department scales back DOGE-led layoffs as ...