Michael Seaside, former deputy director of the Division of Foodborne, Waterborne and Environmental Illnesses at CDC, attends a weekly protest outdoors the company’s most important campus in Atlanta.
Pien Huang/NPR
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Pien Huang/NPR
Employees on the Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention in Atlanta are reeling, after dropping 1000’s of their colleagues since January, on account of firings, reductions in power and buyouts.
It is a part of a plan by the Trump Administration to “dramatically scale back the scale of the Federal Authorities” with their acknowledged purpose of minimizing waste and abuse, in response to a February executive order. Trump celebrated the widespread firings of presidency employees on April 29, at a rally marking his first hundred days in workplace. “We’re stopping their gravy prepare, ending their energy journey, and telling 1000’s of corrupt, incompetent and pointless deep state bureaucrats, you are fired. Get the hell out of right here,” he stated.
Public well being employees really feel demoralized, and say the sweeping cuts, made with seemingly little consideration for the way the CDC operates, have decreased the nation’s capability to trace and reply to well being threats. It leaves Individuals extra susceptible to a number of risks from lead poisoning to bronchial asthma, some cancers, toxic chemicals and lethal infectious illnesses amongst different issues, present and former CDC staff advised NPR.
The administration has restricted communications with home and international companions, and put strict limits on buying supplies and hiring people. Packages and divisions together with these devoted to injury prevention, sexual, reproductive and oral health and workplace hazard discount have been decimated or eradicated by current funds and staffing cuts.
“It is a 5 alarm hearth,” says Dr. Anne Schuchat, a former appearing director at CDC who retired in 2021 after working on the company for 33 years. “The sorts of modifications which might be occurring are going to take a long time to get better from, and many individuals will die due to these interruptions.”
HHS spokesperson Emily Hilliard defended the modifications: “Throughout the Division’s transformation, the CDC stays dedicated to sustaining continuity of operations and fulfilling its core mission to guard the American public from well being threats. The company’s restructuring is a needed, strategic effort to align with evolving public well being wants — reflecting accountability and ahead planning, not instability,” she wrote to NPR. “All through this course of, management continues to assist the workforce with transparency and energetic engagement.”

Dr. Anne Schuchat, former appearing director at CDC, provides a lecture at a convention celebrating the work of the company’s illness detectives in April, 2025.
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Newly educated well being leaders face a “dismantling” of the general public well being infrastructure
Towards this backdrop, the CDC held an annual convention on the finish of April celebrating the work of their Epidemic Intelligence Service, a extremely selective coaching program for “illness detectives” who reply to outbreaks all through the U.S. and the world.
The convention nearly did not occur. This system gave the impression to be on the chopping block in February, in response to staffers who noticed an inventory of anticipated cuts, however was spared.
“We acquired late approval to have the convention, given the change in administration,” says Eric Pevzner, chief of the CDC’s Epidemic Intelligence Service. “One thing that will usually have been deliberate over six months, [the CDC staff] did in about six weeks”
The company’s illness detectives prepare for 2 years earlier than happening to function leaders in public well being across the nation. Greater than 4,000 alumni have acquired this high-level coaching, and lots of return 12 months after 12 months.
The convention shows are a ceremony of passage for officers finishing the fellowship, and the four-day occasion schedule was packed. “It is nice to see that the science continues, the work continues, the dedication of the folks continues. However what’s looming forward just isn’t very promising,” says Dr. Kenneth Castro, former assistant surgeon normal and EIS alum, class of 1983.
Many in public well being really feel anxious in regards to the deep cuts to funds and staffing which have resulted within the “dismantling of the general public well being infrastructure,” Castro says: “What’s their future going to be? It is unsure. What are the individuals who we simply completed coaching going to be doing? It is unsure. So that’s the problem that we’re all dealing with.”
As somebody who’s come to this convention many occasions, Castro can see what’s lacking. “Many individuals who would have been right here have been RIF’ed,” he says, that means pushed out in current CDC reductions in force. He says those that stay really feel like they’re being watched — which is why the satirical revue, a convention spotlight, was canceled this 12 months: “[The officers] really feel too susceptible to be making enjoyable of any determine of authority. That to me is a part of the reign of terror that we’re residing beneath,” Castro says.
He says it usually looks like a household reunion – however not this time.
Cuts scale back scientific employees “to the bone”
Just a few miles up the road, by the primary gates of the CDC campus, former staff have staged a weekly protest towards the cuts to the company.
“It has been so deeply undermining of individuals’s lives, of the company, of the mission,” says Dr. Daniel Pollock, EIS alum, class of 1984. He retired as a department chief in CDC’s Division of Healthcare High quality Promotion in 2021, and protested each week since they began in February.
Pollock is one in all about 60 folks lining the sidewalk outdoors the CDC on a late Tuesday afternoon holding indicators, beating drums and getting honks from employees leaving on the finish of the day.
“I do know a whole lot of associates and colleagues who nonetheless work there, a whole lot of associates and colleagues who’ve been fired and a whole lot of associates and colleagues who’ve retired throughout these previous couple of months,” says Dr. Chris Van Beneden, an epidemiologist who retired in 2020 from CDC, and an EIS alum, class of 1995. “They’re decimating CDC. They’re decimating public well being within the states. That is not environment friendly — that is taking pictures your self within the foot.”
Throughout the road, Michael Seaside stands in a solar hat and mountaineering boots, with an indication that claims “Save the CDC.” As former deputy director of the Division of Foodborne, Waterborne and Environmental Illnesses, he wore a button-down shirt and slacks to work behind these gates for years. “It was probably the most gratifying work imaginable, and also you made a distinction each single day,” he says.
Seaside, who retired in 2021, is alarmed by what he hears from his colleagues on the company. “To chop the scientific employees to the bone, to shut laboratories, to chop off all the knowledge coming in about maternal well being, about violence, about environmental well being, about prevention of HIV and STDs and TB — these types of issues are going to have a big impact on the well being of this nation,” he says.
A counter protester helps Robert F. Kennedy, Jr
Whereas the protests towards the cuts to CDC have been happening for months, Mike Arnold, an advocate towards vaccines, has been out right here for years.
On a current Friday, he stands by himself on the identical avenue nook by the CDC entrance, surrounded by over a dozen indicators. A lot of them present his assist for Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the brand new well being secretary, who Arnold calls “a present from God.” Others present his opposition to vaccines, claiming they trigger autism — a view that has been debunked.
Arnold says he feels blended in regards to the layoffs. “I do not prefer to see administrative folks laid off, safety folks, upkeep folks — I really feel sorry for them,” he says, “The scientists and docs — no, I do not really feel a bit sorry for them.”
Due to cuts to CDC packages, resembling these for lead poisoning, bronchial asthma, illness detection and people selling protected childbirth and vaccines, public well being specialists warn that many individuals will get sick or die.