LAUSD board approves plan that could see significant job cuts. What happens now?

LAUSD board approves plan that could see significant job cuts. What happens now? The divisive 4-3 vote approves…
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https://www.newsbeep.com/400355/

Federal judge blocks imminent State Dept layoffs, as unions seek to reverse RIFs at other agencies

Update: This story was updated at 7:30 p.m. Eastern on Dec. 4, 2025, after a federal judge granted…
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https://www.newsbeep.com/290326/

A blind woman, a ‘dream job,’ and the toll of the government shutdown – USA Today

Jack Gruber, USA Today

A blind woman, a ‘dream job,’ and the toll of the government shutdown

The historic funding crisis inflicted pain on Americans across the country. Christine Grassman still hasn’t fully recovered.

By Zachary Schermele, USA TODAY

FALLS CHURCH, VA – It all started right before dragon boat practice.

Christine Grassman and her husband, Gary, had an important race coming up. In less than a week, the couple would be off to Florida for the national championships.

Much like the Grassmans, who are blind, dragon boating is often misunderstood. It’s confused with rowing, but they’re not the same. Dragon boaters use paddles and face forward; rowers use oars and face backward.

Read more: I survived breast cancer. Now I race dragon boats for Team USA. | Opinion

The lesser-known sport is also favored among people with disabilities – “paradragons,” as Christine and Gary call themselves. The two were “bit by the dragon” just after the coronavirus pandemic. Roughly four years later, Christine, at 56, is the president of their team, the “Out of Sight Dragons.”

On the morning of Oct. 11, Christine’s phone lit up with a text just as she and Gary were gearing up for one of their last workouts before nationals. Her supervisor at the U.S. Department of Education relayed a message that their team had received “reduction in force” notices. That’s Washington-speak for a layoff. She instructed Christine to check her own email.

She did. She let a “few choice phrases” slip. Her last day would be Dec. 9.

Video source: USA Today

Christine was distraught. She also wasn’t alone. President Donald Trump’s administration fired more than 4,000 federal workers that weekend, just 10 days into what eventually became the longest government shutdown in U.S. history.

Read more: Education Department lays off roughly 20% of its workforce amid shutdown

In the past, such ordeals caused furloughs that, while harmful, were only temporary and ended with federal workers eventually getting paid for their forced time away from the office. That’s what happened during Trump’s first term, when the government shuttered for 35 days, setting a record at the time.

In Trump’s second term, the administration’s decision to fire its employees during another historic shutdown became one of the funding crisis’ defining challenges.

The upheaval that people like Christine endured underscored just how harmful Washington gridlock can become for many Americans, including civil servants. That tumult has in turn affected some people with disabilities, who are employed at slightly higher rates in the federal government versus the private sector. Federal law has historically required agencies to plan to meet specific hiring goals for people with disabilities.Read more: Their time at the Education Department may be over. The grieving isn’t.

Claire Stanley, director of advocacy and governmental affairs for the American Council of the Blind, said Christine wasn’t the only blind or low-vision federal employee she knew who was initially laid off during the shutdown. Many others, though not fired, spent weeks without pay.

“All of us were kind of holding our breath,” she said.

Christine spoke to USA TODAY for this story in her personal capacity as an advocate for other blind people – she is the president of the Fairfax chapter of the National Federation of the Blind of Virginia – and as a member of AFGE Local 252, the union for Education Department employees. She said her views are not representative of the agency.

From a ‘dream job’ to nightmares

Christine and Pixie, Jack Gruber, USA Today.

On Oct. 29, four weeks into the government shutdown, Christine sat in her apartment, resting both palms flat on her dining room table. Pixie, her Norwegian forest cat, lounged on a couch nearby, his sandy brown fur complementing the dark maroon upholstery.

For a multitude of reasons, she was on a higher dose of anxiety medication. Worries about caring for her aging parents usually live more toward the back of her mind. Since she was fired, those fears had shoved their way to the front.

Her mother has Alzheimer’s; her father, a longtime firefighter, has chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. They both still live in Long Island, New York, Christine’s hometown.

Nightmares were making it harder to sleep. Her stomach hurt frequently.

Despite all those concerns, the previous 24 hours had brought some hope. On Oct. 28, a federal judge in California temporarily paused her firing, along with thousands of others. With most federal agencies still largely closed, though, she wasn’t back on the job yet.

The news offered only limited comfort. It did little to soothe her concerns about the long-term future of the federal law she has helped implement since 2019. Though housed in the Education Department, it’s not really about education at all.

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: A blind woman, a ‘dream job,’ and the toll of the government shutdown

#2025 #america #blindWoman #civilServants #departmentOfEducation #donaldTrump #dragonBoating #dreamJob #education #federalGovernmentShutdown #fired #furloughed #health #history #laidOff #libraries #library #libraryOfCongress #nationalFederationOfTheBlind #opinion #pixie #politics #reductionInForce #resistance #science #tollOfShutdown #trump #trumpAdministration #unitedStates #usaToday #virginia

More than 3,600 feds get notice their shutdown RIFs are rescinded

More than 3,600 feds get notice their shutdown RIFs are rescinded In total, 3,605 federal workers got notice…
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https://www.newsbeep.com/265990/

Court extends restraining order to shield more feds from shutdown RIFs

A federal judge on Friday moved to protect more federal employees from being fired during the ongoing government…
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https://www.newsbeep.com/192794/

White House budget chief Russell Vought signals the start of federal layoffs with a brief social media post, raising pressure amid shutdown risks.
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https://en.infomaxai.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=85058
White House Budget Chief Hints at Start of Federal Layoffs with One-Line Post

White House budget chief Russell Vought signals the start of federal layoffs with a brief social media post, raising pressure amid shutdown risks.

Yonhap Infomax
Reduction in Force "What's Next?" video premiere - #ReductioninForce #WhatsNext
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Reduction in Force "What's Next?" video premiere

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Less than two months after losing millions of dollars in previously allocated federal funding, Houston Public Media is eliminating nine staff positions in an effort to cut costs.

https://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/articles/news/houston/2025/09/02/529910/houston-public-media-eliminates-nine-staff-positions-in-wake-of-federal-funding-cuts/

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Houston Public Media eliminates 9 staff positions after federal funding cuts

The news outlet lost $2.2 million in annual federal funding – or nearly 10% of its annual operating budget – when Congress voted in July to claw back $1.1 billion in funding over the next two years for public broadcasting.

Houston Public Media
Heard from a colleague who is a current member of #IMLS 's advisory board that the entire board has been "released" (fired) and that all IMLS staff have received #reductioninforce notices. Their last day of work will be in early May. I don't know what that means for IMLS-funded positions and projects at the state level, but it doesn't look good. You know you're governed by an #idiocracy when its leaders zero-out #libraries and #museums.
LyondellBasell to lay off 300-plus employees in Houston as refinery closes

The news comes a little more than a month after the Houston-based international chemical company announced that it would be closing the refinery.

Houston Public Media