The dispute comes after a substantial downsizing of the foreign aid agency and the suspension of many of its contracts.
A federal judge on March 6 ruled that President Donald Trump’s administration can fire contractors working for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).
U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols said the contractors had not proved that the terminations amounted to irreparable harm, and that the court likely lacked jurisdiction to hear the case, characterizing it as a contract dispute.
The association said the loss of infrastructure has resulted in “havoc,” as some overseas contractors have lost utilities, health care, and are facing eviction because the U.S. government is no longer paying those bills.
Carolyn Shapiro, attorney for PSC, argued at a March 5 hearing that the damage could not be remedied later by reimbursements, or by reassembling USAID in the future. She repeatedly compared it to putting “Humpty-Dumpty” back together again.
“It is not possible to take 1,000 agencies, scatter them to the wind, then say ‘oops,’” she said.
The government responded in its court brief that Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who was appointed acting administrator of USAID on Jan. 30, is within his authority to examine USAID’s funding priorities, which he said showed signs of “severe inefficiency.”
The government also said the contractors’ dispute does not belong in federal court but in the Civilian Board of Contract Appeals.
Congressional Democrats have expressed concern that USAID may cease to act as an independent agency if Trump attaches it to the State Department. They have said that USAID is vital to national security and that Trump lacks the legal authority to eliminate a congressionally funded independent agency.
On Feb. 23, the administration placed all USAID staff on administrative leave, except for “personnel responsible for mission-critical functions, core leadership, and/or specially designated programs.”
Overseas employees of USAID have been asked to return to America, and the government has laid off around 1,600 of its U.S.-based employees.
PSC’s action is one of four lawsuits currently challenging the Trump administration over its actions to reform USAID.
Jacob Burg contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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