Norton Introduces Resolution Commemorating Historic Escape Attempt by Slaves in D.C. on Ship

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (District of Columbia)

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) today introduced a resolution commemorating the 1848 slave escape that occurred in D.C. on the ship the Pearl.

“When it comes, statehood will free District residents of every race and background from constraints that deny them the freedom and equality enjoyed by other Americans,” Norton said.  “But I see it as no accident that the single largest known slave escape in American history occurred in the District. The courage of the escapees, men and women determined to be free, reminds me of the spirit D.C. residents have always had in the fight for statehood. Remembering the story of the Pearl must inspire us to achieve the freedom that only statehood can give.

“The escapees’ courage against the odds should inspire D.C. residents to continue believing that statehood is within reach and that D.C. is worthy and capable of self-government, even during this time when the people in the nation’s capital are under political attack from Republicans who hold both the majority in Congress and the White House.”

The text of the resolution follows.

Recognizing the historic abolitionist events surrounding the Pearl, and honoring its legacy in American history.

RESOLUTION

Recognizing the historic abolitionist events surrounding the Pearl, and honoring its legacy in American history.

Whereas, on April 16, 1848, 77 enslaved people attempted to flee slavery in the District of Columbia and Alexandria, Virginia, on the Pearl, a schooner waiting for them in the Potomac River;

Whereas, on April 14, 1848, three White men brought the ship to the District of Columbia, and Daniel Drayton, the captain and owner of the Pearl, chartered the schooner for $100 and arranged for the enslaved peoples’ travel;

Whereas the escape was initiated by free Blacks Paul Jennings, who had been enslaved by President James Madison, and Paul Edmonson;

Whereas William Chaplin, a White abolitionist, assisted in connecting the enslaved people with Drayton;

Whereas abolitionist Gerrit Smith of New York financed the escape;

Whereas 77 enslaved people, including men, women, and children, sailed on the Pearl down the Potomac River and then into the Chesapeake Bay in pursuit of freedom;

Whereas, on April 17, 1848, numerous enslavers in the District of Columbia, realizing the people they enslaved had fled, sent a posse of 35 men to seek the Pearl;

Whereas the posse met the Pearl near Point Lookout, Maryland, and took the enslaved people and the ship back to the District of Columbia;

Whereas slavery supporters formed a mob and lashed out at both the White abolitionists involved in the escape as well as free Blacks in the District of Columbia in the Washington Riot of 1848;

Whereas the enslavers sold the enslaved people who had escaped to traders who took them to New Orleans, Louisiana;

Whereas two of the enslaved people who had escaped were purchased and freed in an effort led by Henry Ward Beecher’s Plymouth Congregational Church of Brooklyn, New York;

Whereas Drayton and two of the other ship workers were arrested for helping in the escape and were represented in court by Congressman Horace Mann;

Whereas two of the men, including Drayton, after serving four years in prison, were released after being granted a pardon from President Millard Fillmore, based on a recommendation from Senator Charles Sumner; and

Whereas the escape is said to be the single largest known escape by enslaved persons in American history and to have inspired Harriet Beecher Stowe in her writing the novel “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”: Now, therefore, be it

Resolved, That the House of Representatives honors the legacy of all those who furthered freedom from slavery and all of those who were involved in the historic abolitionist events surrounding the Pearl, and recognizes their importance to the history of the District of Columbia and to American history itself.

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Norton Introduces Resolution Commemorating Emancipation Day

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (District of Columbia)

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) introduced her resolution commemorating Emancipation Day. Emancipation Day, which is an official holiday in D.C., honors the date in 1862 when President Abraham Lincoln freed 3,100 enslaved individuals in the District, nine months ahead of the Emancipation Proclamation. This year it falls the day after the deadline for filing federal taxes.

“Emancipation Day is all the more powerful for its timing, coincidentally coming the day after the annual deadline for filing federal taxes,” Norton said. “District residents were the first to be freed from slavery but are the last to enjoy full rights and freedoms as American citizens, paying more in overall federal taxes than 19 states while still being denied voting representation in Congress and fiscal autonomy, as we’re experiencing right now after the CR restricted D.C.’s current spending to 2024 levels. The House left town last week without bringing a Senate-passed bill to correct the issue to the floor; if the House doesn’t pass the bill, D.C. will be forced to cut a projected $1 billion in spending through the end of the fiscal year.

“Fiscal autonomy is central to liberty and self-determination, and true freedom requires the ability to make choices about how D.C. spends its own local funds.”

The text of the resolution follows.

Recognizing the enduring cultural and historical significance of emancipation in the Nation’s capital on the anniversary of President Abraham Lincoln’s signing of the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act, which established the “first freed” on April 16, 1862, and celebrating passage of the District of Columbia statehood bill in the House of Representatives.

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Ms. Norton submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform

RESOLUTION

Recognizing the enduring cultural and historical significance of emancipation in the Nation’s capital on the anniversary of President Abraham Lincoln’s signing of the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act, which established the “first freed” on April 16, 1862, and celebrating passage of the District of Columbia statehood bill in the House of Representatives.

Whereas the District of Columbia has been a focal point of the Nation’s complex racial history, which has included slavery, the Civil War, killings, segregation, and disenfranchisement, among other violations of civil and human rights;

Whereas, on April 16, 1862, in the midst of the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln signed the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act, which freed the approximately 3,100 enslaved individuals in the District of Columbia and authorized compensation to their former enslavers;

Whereas, on January 1, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which established a “new birth of freedom” by legally emancipating millions of enslaved individuals in the 10 States of the Confederacy not under Union control, freeing the majority of the Nation’s enslaved individuals;

Whereas the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which reads “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation”, was adopted on December 6, 1865, and effectively outlawed slavery in the United States;

Whereas the enslavement of persons of African descent endured for more than two centuries in what is now the United States, including the District of Columbia;

Whereas, in 2005, District of Columbia Emancipation Day, commemorating April 16, the date of the signing of the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act, was made a legal public holiday in the District of Columbia to be celebrated annually on April 16;

Whereas the residents of the District of Columbia pay more per capita in Federal taxes than the residents of any State;

Whereas the residents of the District of Columbia, who pay the full freight of Federal taxes, serve in the United States Armed Forces, are subject to all of the requirements of citizenship, and otherwise have long made contributions to the life, culture, and leadership of the United States, still are denied voting representation in the Congress and independence from congressional interference in local matters in violation of the Nation’s founding principles of no taxation without representation and consent of the governed;

Whereas, on June 26, 2020, and April 22, 2021, the House of Representatives passed the Washington, D.C. Admission Act, the first and the second times in history, respectively, the D.C. statehood bill had been passed by either chamber of Congress;

Whereas H.R. 51, the Washington, D.C. Admission Act, has 189 cosponsors; and

Whereas S. 51, the Washington, D.C. Admission Act, has 42 cosponsors: Now, therefore, be it

Resolved, That the House of Representatives— 

(1) recognizes District of Columbia Emancipation Day, marking the anniversary of the end of slavery in the District of Columbia and symbolizing the aspirations of the residents of the District of Columbia for the same rights and freedoms afforded to residents of States; and

(2) calls on Congress to pass the Washington, D.C. Admission Act.

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Congressman Crow Introduces Bipartisan Bill to Strengthen VA Health Benefits for Veteran Firefighters

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jason Crow (CO-06)

WASHINGTON — Congressman Jason Crow (D-CO-06), a former Army Ranger who served three combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, has introduced new bipartisan legislation to strengthen health care benefits for veteran firefighters. 

Studies have shown that firefighters, as a result of their career, are more likely to suffer from certain illnesses, including higher rates of cancer. However, the VA currently does not recognize the direct connection between military firefighting and higher rates of illness incidence beyond one year following active duty, resulting in denials of VA health care claims.

Congressman Crow’s Michael Lecik Military Firefighters Protection Act would create the presumption that military veteran firefighters who become disabled by serious disease – including heart disease, lung disease, and certain types of cancer – contracted the illness due to their service in the military, allowing them to be approved for VA health care. 

The legislation was also introduced by Congressman Don Bacon (R-NE-02).

“I know from my days as an Army Ranger that military firefighters protect the safety of everybody in our ranks,” said Congressman Crow. “Too many of our military firefighters have been denied VA health care for conditions connected to their service, and that’s unacceptable. That’s why I’m introducing bipartisan legislation that expands their access to the care they deserve.”

“After nearly 30 years in the Air Force, I’ve witnessed hundreds of heroic military firefighters who put their own lives on the line by carrying us out of burning buildings or jets and exposing themselves to toxic substances and deadly fumes,” said Congressman Bacon. “Creating the presumption that those who become disabled from serious disease contracted the illness while serving in the military allows the VA to treat thousands of military firefighters that would normally not be covered. This bill changes that. I fully support this mission, and I will continue to work with Rep. Crow to not only get this over the finish line, but to honor the life of former USAF firefighter, Michael Lecik, to which this bill is named after.”

The legislation is named in honor of Michael Lecik, a U.S. Air Force firefighter who was diagnosed with multiple myeloma in 2019. Lecik filed a claim with the VA, which was ultimately rejected. He passed away in 2021 at the age of 39. 

As an Iraq and Afghanistan veteran, ensuring America’s military servicemembers and their families get the appropriate care and resources is a top priority for Congressman Crow. In the 117th Congress, he introduced the Justice Involved Veterans Support Act and supported the PACT Act, which expands health care to millions of servicemembers exposed to toxic chemicals. Congressman Crow also supported the Federal Firefighters Fairness Act, which expands health care to federal firefighters who become disabled by serious disease. 

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Congressman Crow, Colorado Democratic Delegation Issue Joint Statement on DoD Report on U.S. Space Command

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jason Crow (CO-06)

COLORADO — Today, Congressman Jason Crow and the Colorado Democratic congressional delegation, including Senators Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper and Reps. Diana DeGette, Brittany Pettersen, Joe Neguse, issued the following joint statement following the U.S. Department of Defense Inspector General’s report evaluating the decision to keep U.S. Space Command in Colorado.

In a statement, Colorado’s Democratic congressional delegation said:

“Today’s report from the Department of Defense Inspector General confirms what we have long known: keeping U.S. Space Command in Colorado is the best decision to protect America’s national security. 

“U.S. Space Command’s HQ in Colorado Springs has been at Full Operational Capability since December 2023. Any relocation of U.S. Space Command’s headquarters would threaten our military readiness, cost years of valuable time and resources, and result in an irreversible loss of personnel and expertise. 

“As our nation’s adversaries are rapidly developing their own space capabilities, we don’t have time to waste. The decision to keep Space Command in Colorado was the right one and will ensure continued operations to safeguard America’s national security.

“We’ll continue to fight to protect America’s national security interests by keeping the U.S. Space Command in Colorado.”

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Rep. Kelly: ‘The American People are Engaged, Demanding Answers from Trump Administration’

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Robin Kelly IL

In week of action against President Trump’s actions, Rep. Kelly heard concerns about public education, Social Security, healthcare

WASHINGTON – U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly (IL-02) travelled throughout the Second District this week to hear from constituents concerning President Donald Trump’s agenda.

“Whether I was in Chicago, the south suburbs, or in rural Pontiac, I heard one clear message from my constituents: President Trump is taking our country down a dangerous, frightening path,” said Rep. Kelly. “Trump has engaged in an unending trade war as our farmers, small business owners and everyday consumers pay the price. As he’s playing a world-stage bully, Elon Musk is on a mission to privatize Social Security, eliminate public education, and terminate federal employees. Meanwhile, Trump’s followers in Republican leadership attack Medicaid and food assistance, making it harder to access healthcare and put food on the table.

“The American people are engaged and demanding answers from the Trump administration. I will continue to hear their concerns, answer their questions and bring their demands back to Washington, DC. My Republican colleagues need to hear that Trump’s agenda does not align with The People.”

On Public Education

Rep. Kelly held a roundtable discussion in Richton Park with public educators and superintendents who are concerned about President Trump’s executive order to dismantle the Department of Education. His plan to eliminate Title 1 grants would effectively fire 6,243 teachers in the Second District and stop $412 million in grants to the district.

On Social Security

Over 13,000 concerned constituents called into Rep. Kelly’s telephone town hall on Social Security. There are 151,140 Social Security recipients in the Second District, including widows, children, workers with disabilities and retired senior citizens. Elon Musk has called Social Security a “Ponzi scheme” and fired 7,000 workers at the Social Security Administration, causing chaos and instability.

On Food Assistance

On Wednesday, Rep. Kelly toured Free-N-Deed, a food pantry in Dolton, to hear how the facility and the community would be affected by cuts to food assistance. The House Republican budget slashes $230 billion from Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), which would leave almost 190,000 people in the Second District without a reliable meal. For every meal that a food pantry provides, SNAP provides nine meals. Food pantries like Free-N-Deed would not be able to fill in the gaps if SNAP was cut.

On the Trump Administration

Rep. Kelly hosted her second in-person town hall of the year in Pontiac, Illinois, the most western part of the District. She also had a special guest, Ed Yohnka, Director of Communications and Public Policy at ACLU of Illinois, to help give updates on lawsuits against the Trump administration’s unconstitutional actions. About 150 people attended the town hall.

On Black Maternal Health

In recognition of Black Maternal Health Week, Rep. Kelly went live on Instagram with reproductive justice organization In Our Own Voice and U.S. Rep. Bonnie Watson-Coleman. They discussed the recent attacks by the Trump administration against healthcare and maternal health, including DOGE-led layoffs at the Department of Health and Human Services.

On Emergency Operators’ Mental Health

Rep. Kelly toured the SouthCom Combined Dispatch Center in Matteson, Illinois, to hear how she can best support 911 operators and dispatchers. In recognition of National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week, she also introduced bipartisan legislation to support the mental health and wellbeing of emergency operators.

Rep. Kelly Tours South Suburb Emergency Dispatch Center

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Robin Kelly IL

Kelly discusses mental health, emergency response with SouthCom Combined Dispatch Center in midst of Trump administration healthcare cuts

MATTESON, ILL. – During a week of action against the Trump administration’s harmful agenda, U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly (IL-02) toured the SouthCom Combined Dispatch Center to discuss its employees’ mental health.

“The dispatchers and operators at the SouthCom Dispatch Center save lives every single day, and I was proud to see their work firsthand,” said Rep. Kelly. “My stepdaughter, who was a 911 operator, told me about how the calls expose them to traumatic situations and can really impact their mental health. We need to take care of our 911 dispatchers and operators, especially as the White House and House Republicans continue to slash people’s healthcare and mental health programs.”

Rep. Kelly also recognized the National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week, a time dedicated to honoring the essential work of 911 operators and dispatchers.

“We are honored to welcome Rep. Kelly for a firsthand look at the vital role dispatchers play in public safety. As the heartbeat of emergency response, dispatchers connect those in crisis with the help they need, often under intense pressure,” said Athena Barnes, Director of SouthCom Combined Dispatch Center. “During National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week, SouthCom Combined Dispatch Center is proud to showcase its dedicated team and innovative operations, who ensure the safety and well-being of the community. The Congresswoman’s visit is a testament to the critical work of dispatchers and the need for continued investment in their mental health and professional development.”

Kelly, Torres, Fitzpatrick Introduce Legislation to Support Mental Health of 911 Dispatchers, Operators

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Robin Kelly IL

WASHINGTON – U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly (IL-02) introduced the bipartisan Providing Resources and Occupational Training for Emotional Crisis and Trauma (PROTECT) 911 Act, alongside U.S. Reps. Norma Torres (CA-35) and Brian Fitzpatrick (PA-01). This critical legislation will improve the mental health and well-being of the nation’s 911 operators and dispatchers, a group often exposed to high-stress and traumatic situations.

The PROTECT 911 Act is being introduced during National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week, a time dedicated to honoring the essential contributions of public safety telecommunicators across the country. Rep. Kelly will also tour the SouthCom Combined Dispatch Center later this afternoon. 

“Emergency operators help callers in violent and disturbing situations – but after the call is over, operators themselves don’t receive the mental health support and resources they need,” said Rep. Kelly. “The PROTECT 911 Act aims to fix that and provide our country’s 911 operators and dispatchers with the treatment they deserve. They are the first responders to the first responders. I introduced this bill because my stepdaughter was a 911 operator, and she’s told me about the harrowing calls she received every day. As our dispatchers and operators save people’s lives, we need to take care of them in return.”

“I am proud to co-lead the PROTECT 911 Act and to stand with my colleagues in supporting our nation’s 911 professionals who face unimaginable stress every day,” said Rep. Torres. “As a former 911 dispatcher for more than 17 years I know first hand the personal toll this job can take on you. This bill is about giving our emergency responders the tools and support they need to manage their mental health, as well as creating a safer and more sustainable working environment for those who work tirelessly to protect us.”

“Public safety starts with the voice on the other end of a 9-1-1 call,” said Rep. Fitzpatrick. “The PROTECT 911 Act delivers long-overdue federal support for our emergency dispatchers through evidence-based standards, targeted wellness grants, and specialized training resources. This bipartisan legislation strengthens the foundation of our emergency response system and ensures these unseen first responders are finally recognized—not overlooked—for the critical role they play.”

PROTECT 911 Act is endorsed by APCO International and NENA: The 911 Association.

“Public safety telecommunicators are essential to emergency response, handling intense and high-stakes situations that can take a toll on their physical and mental health,” said Mel Maier, CEO and Executive Director of APCO International. “The PROTECT 9-1-1 Act includes important measures to support their health and wellness and ensure these professionals have the resources needed to continue their lifesaving work. APCO appreciates the leadership of Representatives Kelly, Fitzpatrick, and Torres in addressing these challenges and looks forward to working with Congress to secure passage of this critical legislation.”

“The PROTECT 911 Act is a crucial step toward addressing the reality that those who work in 911, unfortunately, know all too well: that life under the headset can take a great emotional and psychological toll,” said Brian Fontes, CEO of NENA: The 911 Association. “We thank Representatives Kelly, Fitzpatrick, and Torres for introducing this legislation; just as 911 professionals across the country work every day to keep Americans healthy and safe, these members of Congress are working to do the same for our nation’s first responders.”

PROTECT 911 Act ensures that these first responders have access to the support they need to continue providing critical services to the public, without sacrificing their own mental health in the process. The bill includes:

  • Developing best practices to identify, prevent, and treat post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in public safety telecommunicators.
  • Creating resources for mental health professionals to better assist these personnel in managing emotional trauma.
  • Establishing grants to fund health and wellness programs within emergency communications centers.

Read the full text of the PROTECT 911 Act here.

Rep. Kelly Attacks Trump Administration Agenda in Week of Action

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Robin Kelly IL

Rep. Kelly to hear constituents’ concerns about public education, Social Security, healthcare at townhalls, roundtables

MATTESON, ILL. – This week, U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly (IL-02) will host a series of events attacking President Donald Trump’s agenda and hearing directly from constituents.

“I refuse to stand by silently as President Trump wrecks our democracy and attacks the American people. He’s going after senior citizens’ Social Security paychecks, families’ healthcare, children’s education, federal workers’ jobs and hiking up the cost of living,” said Rep. Kelly. “I’m working to ensure my constituents’ concerns are heard and that their voices are represented in Washington. House Republicans are complicit in aiding Trump’s harmful agenda, and they need to know that the American people do not back them.”

Rep. Kelly kickstarted the week yesterday with a roundtable discussion on protecting public education against President Trump’s plan to eliminate Title 1 grants. Title 1 grants provide the Second District with $412 million — the most out of all the Congressional Districts in Illinois. Rep. Kelly heard from superintendents and public educators who are alarmed about the elimination of these grants, which would effectively fire 6,243 teachers in the Second District, explode class sizes, close schools and hurt students in low-income communities.

Rep. Kelly will host a telephone town hall Tuesday evening to hear concerns about President Trump’s and Elon Musk’s attacks against Social Security, which affects 151,140 recipients in the Second District. Over 11,000 constituents called into her last telephone town hall in February.

On Thursday, Rep. Kelly will defend healthcare in the midst of program cuts at the Department of Health and Human Services and House Republicans’ plans to cut Medicaid. She will go live on Instagram to discuss Black maternal health with U.S. Rep. Bonnie Watson-Coleman (NJ-12) and reproductive justice organization In Our Own Voice. The discussion marks the end of Black Maternal Health Week and their continued leadership to save Black mothers from pregnancy-related deaths. Rep. Kelly will also tour the SouthCom Dispatch Center in recognition of National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week. Her bill, Providing Resources and Occupational Training for Emotional Crisis and Trauma (PROTECT) 911 Act, will also be introduced on the same day.

Hoyer Statement on President Trump’s Proposed Pay Freeze for Civilian Employees

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Steny H Hoyer (MD-05)

WASHINGTON, DC – Congressman Steny H. Hoyer (MD-05) released the following statement today on reporting that President Trump will propose a federal civilian pay freeze:

“Donald Trump’s proposed pay freeze for federal workers in 2026 is the latest salvo in his administration’s mission to inflict ‘trauma’ upon the patriots who make our government function For The People. In doing so, Trump, Elon Musk, OMB Director Russell Vought, and their DOGE henchmen attack not only our federal workers but also the vital services they provide to Americans every day.

“For government to function effectively and efficiently, it needs to recruit and retain top talent. It can’t do that if federal employees live in fear that they will be purged, underpaid, or forced to relocate at a moment’s notice. Sadly, that is exactly what the Trump Administration has done the past few months: terrorize and degrade Americans who want only to serve their nation.

“During his first term, Trump proposed pay freezes three times. Congress overruled him three times. I will fight to ensure federal workers receive fair pay in 2026, just as I have done every year. Congress makes the law, not Trump.”

Hoyer Joins Alsobrooks, Maryland Democratic Delegation in Pushing Sec. Kennedy for Answers on Disastrous Mass Layoffs

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Steny H Hoyer (MD-05)

WASHINGTON, DC – Congressman Steny H. Hoyer (MD-05) joined a letter led by U.S. Senator Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD) with the Maryland Democratic Delegation – U.S. Senator Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) and Representatives Kweisi Mfume (MD-07), Jamie Raskin (MD-08), Glenn Ivey (MD-04), Sarah Elfreth (MD-03), April McClain Delaney (MD-06), and Johnny Olszewski (MD-02) to express outrage and demand answers regarding the mass terminations of civil servants at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). In a letter to Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Congressman Hoyer and his colleagues questioned the extent of the devastation and consequential impacts these mass layoffs will have on the state and country. 

“This reckless reduction in force and Department reorganization comes at a time when measles is spreading in communities across the country, avian flu is proliferating throughout our livestock populations, families are experiencing a childcare availability and affordability crisis, and cities across the country are still reeling from opioid and fentanyl overdoses. Instead of showing leadership on these concurrent emergencies and fulfilling the Department’s mission, this Administration has crippled the very teams and entire divisions that combat public health challenges, prevent disparities, and ensure that our families and children are safe,” the lawmakers wrote.

“Maryland has already been hard hit by attacks to NIH research…This medical research funds new life-saving cures for Maryland patients – from our newborns to our seniors, from children battling rare cancers to our servicemembers injured in battle. It funds thousands of Maryland jobs, and to arbitrarily cut it threatens Maryland’s health, safety, and economy. Slashing research funding will ultimately harm patients and even cost lives,” continued the lawmakers

The lawmakers are requesting Secretary Kennedy meet with them to answer these questions by May 1, 2025.

You can read the full letter to Secretary Kennedy here or below:

Dear Secretary Kennedy: 

We write with shared concerns regarding the plan you announced on March 27, 2025, to begin yet another extensive round of mass terminations of civil servants at the Department of Health and Human Services (Department or HHS), along with an irrational and dangerous reorganization of the staff and operating divisions of the Department. In the weeks since that announcement, thousands of HHS employees have been summarily fired, wreaking havoc and chaos on our public health system. These actions are having a devastating and disproportionate impact on our state of Maryland. We demand a full and comprehensive analysis on what these cuts will mean for access to care, critical services, and lifesaving research in the state. We also demand an in-person meeting with you to discuss these concerns and the impact of the Department’s actions on our constituents. According to the announcement, cuts would include at least 3,500 full-time employees at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), 2,400 employees at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 1,200 employees at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and 300 employees at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). 

According to the Maryland Department of Labor, preliminary data shows at least 2,755 jobs were cut in 11 federal offices located across the state, with an impact rippling across multiple counties.

This reckless reduction in force and Department reorganization comes at a time when measles is spreading in communities across the country, avian flu is proliferating throughout our livestock populations, families are experiencing a childcare availability and affordability crisis, and cities across the country are still reeling from opioid and fentanyl overdoses. Instead of showing leadership on these concurrent emergencies and fulfilling the Department’s mission, this Administration has crippled the very teams and entire divisions that combat public health challenges, prevent disparities, and ensure that our families and children are safe. 

The latest reductions are part of a multipronged attack on our state, as the Department has abruptly terminated billions in critical public health grants, including $200 million to Maryland that would go towards vaccination programs, disease surveillance, and alleviating health disparities. The critical services the Department is responsible for were already threatened from the Administration’s initial haphazard firings of probationary employees by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and Elon Musk’s Fork in the Road policy, which forced thousands of Department staff to resign or retire early. Now, the Administration is further decimating the teams of civil servants that work to make Americans healthy and safe every day.

As you well know, the FDA, NIH, CMS, and multiple other HHS agencies are headquartered in Maryland, and these cuts pose a direct threat to our constituents, Maryland’s economy, and all Americans.

At the FDA, headquartered in White Oak, the Administration has annihilated the Center for Devices and Radiological Health and the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research – which the Maryland medical device and pharmaceutical industries rely on for the safe and timely approval of their products or therapeutics for patients. The Administration has also attacked the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products – which plays a critical role in prevention and harm reduction for Maryland youth. The FDA communications team that writes alerts about contaminated drugs and warnings to emergency room doctors about emerging threats was also terminated — which will have dire consequences for patient care. Across the FDA, thousands of Maryland based staffers that help to keep our food and health systems safe have been summarily dismissed, by an Administration only purporting to want to “Make America Healthy Again.” 

At the NIH, based in Bethesda, this Administration has compounded its efforts to undermine the excellence of our crown jewel of scientific and medical research, with yet another round of terminations. This Administration has decimated NIH Institutes by firing leadership and critical staff to the point of non-functionality, including the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the National Institute on Aging, and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. 

Maryland has already been hard hit by attacks to NIH research. In February, the NIH unveiled a new indirect cost rate guidance that would cap indirect cost rates that Maryland researchers rely on to sustain their groundbreaking, life-saving research, studies, and patient clinical trials. It also arbitrarily froze or terminated research grants in the state and has delayed the review of NIH grant applications. This medical research funds new life-saving cures for Maryland patients – from our newborns to our seniors, from children battling rare cancers to our servicemembers injured in battle. It funds thousands of Maryland jobs, and to arbitrarily cut it threatens Maryland’s health, safety, and economy. Slashing research funding will ultimately harm patients and even cost lives. 

Attacks to the NIH are only the beginning of cuts to our health research infrastructure. The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), based in Rockville, is critical for tracking data on healthcare outcomes and conducting research to improve the safety of patient care has been taken apart by DOGE. The Administration plans to merge AHRQ with another operating division at the Department and gut its budget, all while firing half of its employees. 

The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), based in Rockville, has already faced hundreds of layoffs. The Department dismissed 10 percent of SAMHSA’s workforce during the first rounds of firings, and the Administration plans to further reduce the agency by up to 50 percent. While Maryland has made significant progress in preventing and reducing opioid overdose-related deaths, Baltimore City still has a death rate nearly double that of any other large city in the country. Now, the Administration is pulling the rug from underneath our state and the dozens of community-based organizations on the ground that rely on SAMHSA for training, resources, and technical assistance that helps with opioid use disorder prevention and treatment services.

CMS, based in Woodlawn, faced hundreds of cuts to staff, including the elimination of the Office for Minority Health and the Office of Equal Opportunity and Civil Rights, which respectively helps address health disparities across the country and resolves discrimination complaints. Employees at CMS’ Innovation Center (CMMI) were fired and a third of the Medicare-Medicaid Coordination office, which helps serve the over 160,000 Marylanders that are dually enrolled in Medicare and Medicaid were let go. CMS is responsible for overseeing coverage for over 160 million Americans through Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Plan (CHIP) and the Affordable Care Act (ACA) Marketplace. This includes 1.6 million Marylanders who rely on Medicaid and CHIP for lifesaving health coverage. Any attack on CMS represents a threat to Marylanders’ and the nation’s access to care.

At the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), headquartered in Rockville, 500- 600 civil servants were fired, compromising HRSA’s mission to improve care for vulnerable and low-income communities. The Maternal and Child Health Bureau was wiped out by staffing cuts, crippling efforts to combat the maternal mortality crisis. Maryland women’s health disparities, including maternal morbidity, remain higher than national averages, and will only be exacerbated by this action. DOGE has also reportedly fired 40 percent of the Bureau of Primary Health Care, which oversees the Health Center Program that provides high quality, accessible primary and preventive medical, behavioral and dental services to all people, regardless of income or insurance status. Maryland’s sixteen Federally Qualified Health Centers deliver comprehensive primary healthcare to more than 360,000 patients across Maryland. That access to care in our state are at risk without civil servants to effectively run the program. 

The Indian Health Service (IHS), which is also headquartered in Rockville, was not mentioned in initial reporting regarding the HHS reorganization or reduction in force. In fact, longtime civil servants in the Senior Executive Service (SES) have reported that their duty stations have been reassigned to remote IHS locations ranging from Alaska to South Dakota. While these locations suffer from high vacancy rates, the Department is pushing staff that do not have the qualifications or background for available IHS roles into an ultimatum: relocate your family across the country for a job that does not actually exist, or leave the Department. 

Additionally, the Department fired approximately 500 staffers at the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) in the April 1 wave of terminations, paralyzing the Department’s ability to effectively operate its human services programs. As you know, most program and support staff were eliminated in five regional offices around the country. While ACF’s Region 3 Office – which serves Maryland – remains open for now, staff in Region 3 will likely have to absorb the work and caseload of now shuttered Regions 1, 2,5, 9 and 10. This will put an untenable strain on their ability to support states like Maryland in operating child support, family assistance and child welfare programs, and providers operating Head Start and child care programs.

This is in addition to the nearly two hundred probationary ACF employees who have been on administrative leave since mid-February, and because of this Administration, are still unable to 3 provide states like Maryland with the technical assistance needed to operate critical programs, increasing the financial burden on already-struggling households. Head Start serves seven thousand children in Maryland. Thousands more families rely on the availability of affordable, quality childcare in the state – availability which is endangered when the civil servants that help providers adapt to workforce challenges or monitor for abuse and neglect in our state’s facilities are shamefully fired or prevented from doing their jobs.

Also at ACF, the Department terminated the entire Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) staff, threatening the timely disbursement of millions of dollars to states like Maryland, to help thousands of our constituents stay safe in the coming summer months. More than 18% of Maryland households are energy burdened; the Maryland Office of Home Energy Programs received a record number of energy assistance applications last year. Likewise, the Department eliminated the Office of Family Assistance – undermining the ability for the nearly 28,000 Maryland families receiving Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) to receive critical support without interruption.

Both the dismantling of the Administration for Community Living and the slashing of reportedly half of the staff that work on federal aging and disability programs at the Department will cause real harm to programs in Maryland that support some of our state’s most vulnerable communities – seniors and individuals with disabilities. This includes programs that prevent elder abuse, connect seniors with nutritious meals, and provide supports to caregivers – like the Maryland Caregiver Navigation Grant.

Perhaps most galling, is that you have admitted that many of these firings at the Department are in error, telling reporters “We’re going to do 80% cuts, but 20% of those are going to have to be reinstated, because we’ll make mistakes.” Further reporting found that HHS has no intention of actually reinstating a significant number of the staffers that have been fired or rectifying the mistakes it has made – calling into question your control of the situation and understanding of the Department’s reorganization. As the Secretary, you are ultimately responsible for answering for both these “mistakes” and any harm that comes from your destruction of our public health workforce and infrastructure. 

As such, we request an in-person meeting with you no later than May 1, 2025, to discuss these concerns. We also request comprehensive answers to the following questions, including details on the reductions at the Department to date, and your plans for additional workforce reductions and reorganization. 

1. For each of the below agencies, please specify since January 20, how many Maryland residents: received a RIF notice or were terminated on the basis of their probationary status? Please also specify how many more Maryland residents the agency intends to respectively terminate:

  • SAMHSA 
  • FDA  
  • NIH 
  • CDC 
  • CMS 
  • IHS
  • HRSA  ‘
  • ACF 
  • ACL
  • AHRQ

2. For each of the below agencies, please specify since January 20, how many Maryland residents are currently on administrative leave pending termination:
 

  • SAMHSA 
  • FDA
  • NIH 
  • CDC 
  • CMS 
  • IHS
  • HRSA 
  • ACF 
  • ACL 
  • AHRQ 

3. For each of the below agencies, please specify the number of Maryland residents who participated in the Deferred Resignation Program:

  • SAMHSA 
  • FDA 
  • NIH
  • CDC 
  • CMS 
  • IHS 
  • HRSA 
  • ACF 
  • ACL 
  • AHRQ

4. Please describe the reduction in force plans at the IHS headquarters and at IHS locations across the country.

5. Please provide a detailed description of impact analysis performed to determine the impact on cancer research as a result of NIH Reductions in Force. 

6. Please provide a detailed description of impact analysis performed to determine the impact on vaccine development and research as a result of FDA Reductions in Force. 

7. Please provide a detailed description of the impact analysis performed regarding reductions in staffing to ACF services and programs, including technical assistance to states and childcare providers, childcare costs and child safety, supports for survivors of violence, and the effectiveness of the TANF and LIHEAP programs. 

          a. Please provide a detailed description of the analysis performed by the Department describing how LIHEAP staffing reductions will not lead to higher energy costs for Marylanders.

          b. Please provide a detailed plan for how the Department plans to ensure that there is no delay due to case backlogs experienced by the state of Maryland or Maryland human services providers due to staff reductions at ACF? 

8. Please provide a detailed description of the analysis performed by the Department describing how the staffing reductions to HRSA will not impact Maryland FQHCs, or access to affordable care in Maryland communities.

9. Please provide a detailed description of the analysis performed by the Department describing how the staffing reductions to CMS will not impede Marylander’s access to Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP and the ACA Marketplace.