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Trump HHS Eliminates Office That Sets Poverty Levels Tied to Benefits for at Least 80 Million People

Trump HHS Eliminates Office That Sets Poverty Levels Tied to Benefits for at Least 80 Million People

(Pavlo Gonchar/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

President Donald Trump鈥檚 firings at the Department of Health and Human Services included the entire office that sets federal poverty guidelines, which determine whether tens of millions of Americans are eligible for health programs such as Medicaid, food assistance, child care, and other services, former staff said.

The small team, with technical data expertise, worked out of HHS鈥 Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, or ASPE. Their dismissal mirrored others across HHS, which came without warning and left officials puzzled as to why they were 鈥淩IF鈥檈d鈥 鈥 as in 鈥渞eduction in force,鈥 the bureaucratic language used to describe the firings.

鈥淚 suspect they RIF鈥檈d offices that had the word 鈥榙ata鈥 or 鈥榮tatistics鈥 in them,鈥 said one of the laid-off employees, a social scientist whom 麻豆女优 Health News agreed not to name because the person feared further recrimination. 鈥淚t was random, as far as we can tell.鈥

Among those fired was Kendall Swenson, who had led development of the poverty guidelines for many years and was considered the repository of knowledge on the issue, according to the social scientist and two academics who have worked with the HHS team.

The sacking of the office could lead to cuts in assistance to low-income families next year unless the Trump administration restores the positions or moves its duties elsewhere, said Robin Ghertner, the fired director of the Division of Data and Technical Analysis, which had overseen the guidelines.

The poverty guidelines are 鈥渘eeded by many people and programs,鈥 said Timothy Smeeding, a professor emeritus of economics at the La Follette School of Public Affairs at the University of Wisconsin. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e thinking of someone you fired who should be rehired, Swenson would be a no-brainer,鈥 he added.

Under a 1981 appropriations bill, HHS is required annually to take Census Bureau poverty-line figures, adjust them for inflation, and create guidelines that agencies and states use to determine who is eligible for various types of help.

There鈥檚 a special sauce for creating the guidelines that includes adjustments and calculations, Ghertner said. Swenson and three other staff members would independently prepare the numbers and quality-check them together before they were issued each January.

Everyone in Ghertner鈥檚 office was told last week, without warning, that they were being put on administrative leave until June 1, when their employment would officially end, he said.

鈥淭here鈥檚 literally no one in the government who knows how to calculate the guidelines,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd because we鈥檙e all locked out of our computers, we can鈥檛 teach anyone how to calculate them.鈥

ASPE had about 140 staff members and now has about 40, according to a former staffer. The HHS shake-up merged the office with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, or AHRQ, whose staff has shrunk from 275 to about 80, according to a former AHRQ official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

HHS has said it laid off about 10,000 employees and that, combined with other moves, including a program to encourage early retirements, its workforce has been reduced by about 20,000. But the agency has not detailed where it made the cuts or identified specific employees it fired.

鈥淭hese workers were told they couldn鈥檛 come into their offices so there鈥檚 no transfer of knowledge,鈥 said Wendell Primus, who worked at ASPE during the Bill Clinton administration. 鈥淭hey had no time to train anyone, transfer data, etc.鈥

HHS defended the firings. The department merged AHRQ and ASPE 鈥渁s part of Secretary Kennedy鈥檚 vision to streamline HHS to better serve Americans,鈥  spokesperson Emily Hilliard said. 鈥淐ritical programs within ASPE will continue in this new office鈥 and 鈥淗HS will continue to comply with statutory requirements,鈥 she said in a written response to 麻豆女优 Health News.

After this article published, HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon called 麻豆女优 Health News to say others at HHS could do the work of the RIF’ed data analysis team, which had nine members. 鈥淭he idea that this will come to a halt is totally incorrect,鈥 he said. 鈥淓ighty million people will not be affected.鈥

Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has so far declined to testify about the staff reductions before congressional committees that oversee much of his agency. On April 9, a delegation of 10 Democratic members of Congress waited fruitlessly for a meeting in the agency鈥檚 lobby.

The group was led by House Energy and Commerce health subcommittee ranking member Diana DeGette (D-Colo.), who told reporters afterward that Kennedy must appear before the committee 鈥渁nd tell us what his plan is for keeping America healthy and for stopping these devastating cuts.鈥

Matt VanHyfte, a spokesperson for the Republican committee leadership, said HHS officials would meet with bipartisan committee staff on April 11 to discuss the firings and other policy issues.

ASPE serves as a think tank for the HHS secretary, said Primus, who later was Rep. Nancy Pelosi鈥檚 senior health policy adviser for 18 years. In addition to the poverty guidelines, the office maps out how much Medicaid money goes to each state and reviews all regulations developed by HHS agencies.

鈥淭hese HHS staffing cuts 鈥 20,000 鈥 obviously they are completely nuts,鈥 Primus said. 鈥淭hese were not decisions made by Kennedy or staff at HHS. They are being made at the White House. There鈥檚 no rhyme or reasons to what they鈥檙e doing.鈥

HHS leaders may be unaware of their legal duty to issue the poverty guidelines, Ghertner said. If each state and federal government agency instead sets guidelines on its own, it could create inequities and lead to lawsuits, he said.

And sticking with the 2025 standard next year could put benefits for hundreds of thousands of Americans at risk, Ghertner said. The is $15,650 for a single person and $32,150 for a family of four.

鈥淚f you make $30,000 and have three kids, say, and next year you make $31,000 but prices have gone up 7%, suddenly your $31,000 doesn鈥檛 buy you the same,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ut if the guidelines haven鈥檛 increased, you might be no longer eligible for Medicaid.鈥

The 2025 poverty level for a family of five is $37,650.

As of October, about 79 million people were enrolled in Medicaid or the related Children’s Health Insurance Program, both of which are means-tested and thus depend on the poverty guidelines to determine eligibility.

Eligibility for premium subsidies for insurance plans sold in Affordable Care Act marketplaces is also tied to the official poverty level.

One in eight Americans rely on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or food stamps, and 40% of newborns and their mothers receive food through the Women, Infants, and Children program, both of which also use the federal poverty level to determine eligibility.

Former employees in the office said they were not disloyal to the president. They knew their jobs required them to follow the administration鈥檚 objectives. 鈥淲e were trying to support the MAHA agenda,鈥 the social scientist said, referring to Kennedy鈥檚 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again鈥 rubric. 鈥淓ven if it didn鈥檛 align with our personal worldviews, we wanted to be useful.鈥

[Update: This article was revised at 11:30 a.m. ET on April 11, 2025, to include statements from Department of Health and Human Services officials submitted after publication.]