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Trump administration fires hundreds of nuclear-security employees, sources say

Probationary employees working within the Department of Energy’s agency responsible for managing the country’s nuclear stockpile were among those terminated following the Trump administration’s mandate for federal entities to fire scores of recent government hires

Probational staff at the National Nuclear Security Administration were terminated Thursday evening, according to agency employees who were not authorized to speak on the record. The agency appeared to pause that decision Friday afternoon, however, according to multiple press reports. It is unclear how many NNSA probational staff are currently employed by the agency. 

Letters emailed to affected employees obtained by Nextgov/FCW noted that terminations of probationary positions were not protected by applicable grievance procedures, offering limited appeal processes. The letter was signed by Deputy Assistant General Counsel Jenny Knopinski within Energy’s Office of the General Counsel. 

“Per OPM instructions, DOE finds that your further employment would not be in the public interest,” the letter read. “For this reason, you are being removed from your position with DOE and the federal civil service effective today.”

Those who received the notices included employees in pipeline programs — including the NNSA Graduate Fellowship program, an initiative designed to give job offers following a year of working with the agency. 

Sources familiar with the proceedings told Nextgov/FCW that roughly 300 employees will be impacted or affected by the termination notices. They continue to say that there is significant confusion surrounding procedures following the terminations, with employees questioning how to get employment forms and documentation, turn in government equipment and retrieve personal belongings.

These terminations are part of the Department of Government Efficiency’s ongoing restructuring efforts across federal agencies. DOGE’s presence within the NNSA has been under particular scrutiny, with some lawmakers asking for additional information about the security clearances of DOGE staffers handling sensitive information stored within Energy’s networks, particularly nuclear stockpile information.

“The nation and the world need to know that U.S. nuclear secrets are robustly safeguarded,” a letter sent to Energy Secretary Chris Wright from Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., and Rep. Don Beyer, D-Va., said. “There is no justification for relaxing basic security procedures when it

comes to our nuclear stockpile, but recent actions reflect a brazen disregard for DOE security policies. DOE must ensure that all personnel with access to classified information and systems surrounding our nation’s nuclear arsenal follow the highest security standards.”

Editor’s note: This story was updated to reflect new information. 

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