Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 USDA agencies now set to move

Kansas City area is the destinatio­n

- BEN GUARINO

WASHINGTON — Two scientific agencies in the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e will move from Washington to the greater Kansas City region, the department announced Thursday, despite strong resistance to the plan.

Nearly 550 positions at the Economic Research Service, a statistica­l agency, and the National Institute of Food and Agricultur­e, which funds cutting-edge agricultur­al science, are expected to be moved before year’s end. The USDA estimated the savings at $300 million over 15 years from employment and rent.

“The Kansas City Region has proven itself to be hub for all things agricultur­e and is a booming city in America’s heartland,” Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue said in a statement.

The news release did not identify the location of the offices. But Tim Cowden, president and chief executive of the Kansas City Area Developmen­t Council, said the agency is evaluating office property on both sides of the Kansas-Missouri border.

Perdue had unveiled a plan in August to relocate the two agencies, without specifying a site. He

called the decision a costsaving measure and said it would bring them closer to their “stakeholde­rs” in farming regions. Initially, he also proposed placing the research service under the office of the chief economist but that was not part of the final plan, according to a letter the secretary sent employees on Thursday.

Scientists across the country rely on Food and Agricultur­e Institute grants to study topics ranging from climate change and crop genetics to farmland drones. The research service produces statistica­l reports that influence decisions in corporate boardrooms and in state and federal capitals.

Republican senators representi­ng Missouri and Kansas welcomed Thursday’s announceme­nt. “We’re home to some of the hardest-working farmers in the country, so this is a fantastic decision by the USDA,” Sen. Josh Hawley, RMo., said in a statement.

Institute and research service workers will join nearly 5,000 other USDA employees in Kansas City, said Cowden, whose group proposed the region to the USDA last year.

“We’re within 300 miles of 13 land grant universiti­es,” said Kimberly Young, president of the Kansas City Animal Health Corridor, a developmen­t council initiative. The area is an “epicenter” of the animal health industry, Young said, with more than 300 such companies nearby.

But current employees of the two agencies, mostly Democratic lawmakers and a bipartisan coalition of former USDA leaders warned that the move, more than 900 miles from Washington, would devastate the two agencies.

“This is not just a change of address,” said Jack Payne, the University of Florida’s senior vice president for agricultur­e. “It cuts [the National Institute of Food and Agricultur­e division] off from the collaborat­ion with other federal funding agencies in D.C. that are its major partners.”

The institute unionized earlier this week, and the research service unionized in May in the face of the decision. Union officials have promised to fight the move.

“The announceme­nt today should be met with great skepticism that Secretary Perdue has the best interests of either federal employees or American agricultur­e in mind,” said Kevin Hunt, acting vice president of American Federation of Government Employees Local 3403, which represents research service employees.

Gale Buchanan, USDA chief scientist under President George W. Bush, and Catherine Woteki, chief scientist in the President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, predicted the relocation would set the research service back “five to 10 years” because of a loss of specialize­d employees, as they wrote in a 2018 letter to Congress signed by dozens of agricultur­al leaders.

“There isn’t a plan in place for how to manage this,” Woteki told The Washington Post. The offices, which together employ about 700 people when fully staffed, are roughly two-thirds the size they were during the Obama administra­tion.

Workloads have ballooned as research service employees have quit at double the normal rate since October, the Post reported. Acting officials have filled several vacant research service leadership positions.

The USDA lacks a chief scientist, who oversees the research service, the institute and other USDA research offices. Trump’s first nominee, radio host Sam Clovis, withdrew from considerat­ion over his ties to the investigat­ion of Russia’s influence on the 2016 election. Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., placed a hold on Trump’s second nominee, former Dow pesticide executive Scott Hutchins, because the senator opposes the relocation, said Bridgett Frey, a spokesman for Van Hollen.

“Our overarchin­g concern is what happens to the important scientific work that these two agencies perform at USDA on behalf of the public, on behalf of farmers and rural communitie­s and everyone who eats,” said Karen Perry Stillerman, an analyst who specialize­s in food and the environmen­t at the Union of Concerned Scientists, a nonprofit group that advocates for researcher­s.

The institute currently rents costly offices on the D.C. waterfront, and the research service leases space in the nearby Patriots Plaza. In April, Perdue announced a plan he dubbed “One Neighborho­od,” which seeks to consolidat­e workers into two USDA-owned buildings in the capital region. But research service and institute employees scheduled for the move, according to an April 19 memo obtained by the Post, were excluded from One Neighborho­od.

Peter Winch, an organizer for American Federation of Government Employees, said the two agencies held all-hands meetings on May 22 to discuss buyouts and severance payments. Once employees receive relocation letters, they will have 30 days to decide whether to move. The USDA will offer 30 or fewer buyouts per agency, he said employees were told.

Using an internal document from the research service known as the “stay-go” list, analysts at the Union of Concerned Scientists identified nearly 80 jobs scheduled to remain in Washington. The bulk belong to administra­tive staff members, analysts who perform market outlook estimates and those who collect data. Economists and other research service researcher­s who make conclusion­s from that data are likely to be reassigned to Kansas City, according to this analysis.

But the USDA disputed that. “Of the 76 [Economic Research Service] positions staying in the National Capitol Region, over half of these positions perform core research functions,” USDA spokesman Meghan Rodgers said in an email.

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