A federal judge is refusing to block the destruction of classified documents as part of the building cleanout at the U.S.
Workers who served in the U.S. Agency for International Development were allowed a final and brief visit back to their offices to clear out their belongings on Thursday.
With the drastic reduction in staffing and the loss of its longtime headquarters, questions remain about the future of USAID and its mission. Earlier this month, the State Department announced ...
The order, and ensuing stop work orders, threw USAID into turmoil. US Agency for International Development workers were allowed to briefly reenter the headquarters in Washington on Thursday to ...
U.S. Agency for International Development workers were allowed to briefly reenter the headquarters in Washington on Thursday to collect their personal belongings and clear out their desks, a day after ...
Former USAID employees will have just 15 minutes to collect their belongings as they are escorted to their desks before leaving the gutted Washington HQ later this week. A note circled by USAID ...
USAID employees clutching backpacks and wheeling suitcases full of their belongings trickled out of the now-shuttered agency's headquarters on Thursday morning after the Trump administration gave ...
A street sign with names of U.S. government agencies housed at the Ronald Reagan Building, including the United States Agency for International Development, or USAID headquarters in Washington ...
The headquarters have been closed for weeks, but on Thursday, some workers got back to their desks to clean them out. Applause broke out in the lobby in the Ronald Reagan Building each time USAID ...