
Federal Scientists Resign En Masse, Impacting Public Safety
Anchorage News Today | 2 Min News | The Daily News Now! · The Daily News Now!
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Show Notes
Two former U.S. Geological Survey biologists resigned in April 2025, amid growing tensions under the new administration. They had over 50 years of combined experience studying shorebirds, waterfowl, and environmental health. Theyre part of an estimated 352,000 federal workers who have quit or been fired since February 2025, with science programs taking the biggest hits. The new administration pushed a pro-extraction agenda, targeting climate, wildlife, and health research budgets, leaving key projects in limbo. Many colleagues felt trapped, unable to leave due to family needs or lack of options, while others faced sudden terminations. Their work protected public safety through earthquake forecasts, toxin monitoring in foods, and salmon stock assessments vital to native communities and fishing industries. Cuts hit weather services hard too, with grounded weather balloons and slashed forecasting budgets likely worsening predictions. Now contributing through public platforms like eBird, these scientists keep eyes on wildlife despite the gaps. With federal expertise fading, citizen efforts and natures own toughness remind us to adapt and push forward.
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