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US FAA to close satellite offices Washington

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) plans to cancel the leases of its satellite offices located in the Washington, D.C. area. It will consolidate operations and move headquarters staff into the building housing the U.S. Transportation Department.

FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford stated in an email previously unseen by staff that this move would improve the collaboration.

Bedford wrote, "We'll work more efficiently together than if we were spread out over six different offices." This will reduce operating costs significantly and improve collaboration.

Bedford announced that the dates of the office moves will be finalized soon.

USDOT announced on Tuesday that it would relocate thousands of FAA workers from its headquarters in Washington to the main office of the department. It also plans to consolidate other agency systems and IT.

USDOT is a group of agencies that includes the FAA. The Department plans to relocate several thousand employees who work in the Orville and Wilbur Wright Headquarters buildings to its department headquarters located southeast Washington.

The question remains as to how many FAA departments -- possibly purchasing, IT and human resources -- will be merged into USDOT, and whether the consolidation will lead to workforce reductions.

Nearly 53,000 employees work for USDOT. The FAA is the largest department.

This week, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy informed employees that the department would begin retiring legacy systems in order to embrace advanced technologies and "streamline processes, consolidate administration functions, and modernize infrastructure" as part of its efforts to "modernize our infrastructure, streamline our processes, and consolidate our administrative functions."

Duffy stated that the FAA building was in a serious state of disrepair. Employees were unable to drink the water. Duffy told reporters that it was important to have all the employees working together under one roof.

He suggested that some FAA employees may not want to move and "become an entity unto themselves, not responsive to anyone in government."

The Trump administration is consolidating office space and reducing the federal workforce. (Reporting and editing by David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)