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US Auto Safety Agency to shed more than 25% of its employees

According to data seen by Congress, the Trump administration is offering financial incentives to leave the government to more than 25 percent of the U.S. Auto Safety Agency's employees.

Under the program, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (part of the Transportation Department) is down from 772 to 555 employees by May 31. Federal Highway Administration (FHA) and Federal Transit Administration (FTA) are both losing over 25% of their employees.

Rick Larsen expressed concern about the cuts. He questioned how USDOT could "accelerate project delivery and improve safety" with a "decimated workforce."

USDOT loses just under 4,100 employees, dropping from 57,000 to 52.862. The Federal Aviation Administration sheds 2,137, falling from 46.250 to 44.208.

Sean Duffy, Transportation Secretary, said on Wednesday that the Department has not reduced any safety-critical staff and is actively looking to hire air traffic controllers.

USDOT and NHTSA didn't immediately comment. The Transportation Department has not yet confirmed if it will still conduct a layoff programme in addition to the early retirements.

NHTSA is currently conducting investigations into self-driving cars and advanced driver assistance systems involving Tesla, Alphabet Waymo, and other companies.

Consumer advocacy groups urged lawmakers on Thursday to abandon proposed budget cuts to NHTSA, including cutting the operations and research account of over $10 million, "harming agency's capability to conduct rulemaking and enforcement actions, as well as research and analysis".

The law would also reduce nearly $78 millions of supplemental funding from the $1 billion infrastructure law for 2021. The groups said that they were "especially concerned" about the possibility of further forced retirements or firings. These have decimated NHTSA. Reporting by David Shepardson, Editing by Chizu nomiyama and Aurora Ellis

(source: Reuters)