FDA Food Safety Collapse: 3,500+ Staff Cut and Outbreak Investigation Capacity Gutted

Mass layoffs at the FDA driven by the Department of Government Efficiency eliminated over 3,500 staff in 2025, causing foreign food safety inspections to drop by nearly half, outbreak investigations to go unsolved at record rates, and critical programs like avian influenza testing to be halted.

DOGE-driven layoffs eliminated over 3,500 FDA employees in 2025, gutting food safety oversight. Foreign facility inspections fell by nearly half, outbreak investigation resolution rates plummeted, and the agency suspended its quality control program for food testing labs — leaving the American food supply with the weakest federal oversight in modern history.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • The FDA lost 3,859 employees in 2025 and 473 more in early 2026, driven by DOGE-mandated layoffs that included 70 outbreak investigators and the entire Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) editorial team.
  • Foreign food safety inspections fell by nearly half in March 2025 and remained approximately 30% lower through July compared to previous years.
  • The percentage of outbreak investigations that closed without identifying a food source nearly doubled — from 21% in 2024 to 41% in 2025.
  • FDA suspended its quality control program for food testing laboratories and halted efforts to improve avian influenza testing in dairy and pet foods.
  • Emergency purchase requests required a multi-step approval process taking up to two weeks, creating delays that jeopardized active outbreak investigations.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. DOGE begins identifying FDA positions for elimination

    The Department of Government Efficiency begins reviewing FDA staffing levels. A coalition of consumer, industry, and public health groups sends a letter to the FDA warning that cuts could jeopardize the safety of the food supply.

  2. First wave of layoffs hits investigative support staff

    Although the administration vowed that food safety inspectors would be spared, it begins cutting critical investigative support staff in March. Investigators are quickly overwhelmed as support responsibilities shift to them.

  3. Foreign food inspections drop by nearly half

    Foreign food facility inspections fall by nearly half in March 2025 compared to previous years, hitting what ProPublica describes as a historic low. The cuts to support staff effectively incapacitate the foreign inspection program.

  4. Marketplace reports on DOGE's impact on food safety

    Marketplace publishes an investigation documenting the specific operational impacts of DOGE cuts on food safety, including the multi-step approval process for emergency purchases that delays outbreak investigations by up to two weeks.

  5. Foreign inspections remain 30% below normal

    Through July 2025, foreign food safety inspections remain approximately 30% lower than in previous years. The shortfall particularly affects oversight of imported produce, seafood, and processed foods.

  6. STAT News investigation: How safe is American food?

    STAT News publishes a major investigation into the state of American food safety after the funding cuts, examining the dismantlement of the FoodNet surveillance network and the broader collapse of federal food safety oversight.

  7. Food Navigator reports on cumulative FDA and USDA staff cuts

    Food Navigator-USA reports that the FDA has lost 3,859 employees in 2025 and 473 so far in 2026, with the USDA experiencing parallel losses. The cumulative impact on food safety oversight is described as unprecedented.

  8. Outbreak resolution rate decline documented

    Analysis of FDA's CORE investigation data reveals that 41% of 2025 outbreak investigations closed without identifying a food source, nearly double the 21% rate in 2024. Thirteen of 22 investigations went unsolved.

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

The Department of Government Efficiency, under Elon Musk's direction, drove mass layoffs at the Food and Drug Administration that have gutted the agency's ability to protect the American food supply. The FDA lost 3,859 employees in 2025 and another 473 in early 2026, according to Office of Personnel Management data. The cuts struck at the core of food safety operations: 70 outbreak investigators were laid off, the entire Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report editorial team was threatened, and critical investigative support staff were eliminated across the agency.

Foreign Inspections Collapse

Foreign food safety inspections — which protect Americans from contaminated imports — fell by nearly half in March 2025, hitting what ProPublica documented as a historic low. Through July 2025, inspections remained approximately 30% below levels from previous years. While the administration initially vowed that food safety inspectors would be spared from cuts, it began eliminating the support staff that inspectors depend on to function. As investigators absorbed the responsibilities of lost support staff, they were quickly overwhelmed, and the foreign inspection program was effectively incapacitated.

Outbreak Investigations Go Unsolved

The impact on outbreak investigations has been measurable and stark. In 2025, 41% of the FDA's foodborne illness outbreak investigations closed without identifying the food source responsible — nearly double the 21% rate in 2024. Thirteen of 22 investigations went unsolved. When outbreaks occur and the FDA cannot identify the contaminated food, the contamination continues, and more people get sick.

Emergency purchase requests — the mechanism for quickly obtaining testing supplies during active outbreaks — now require a confusing, multi-step approval process that can take up to two weeks. During a fast-moving foodborne illness outbreak, a two-week delay in testing can mean the difference between containing the outbreak and allowing it to spread across the country.

Programs Suspended

The FDA has suspended its quality control program for food testing laboratories, undermining confidence in test results. It has also halted efforts to improve avian influenza testing in dairy and pet foods — even as avian influenza continues to spread through animal populations and sporadically infects humans.

The Scope of Risk

The CDC estimates that 48 million Americans experience foodborne illness each year, resulting in 128,000 hospitalizations and 3,000 deaths. These numbers reflect a baseline level of illness in a system with functional federal oversight. The cuts to the FDA represent the removal of the primary federal mechanism for detecting, investigating, and halting foodborne disease outbreaks.

Particularly at risk are the approximately 340,000 food facilities located in foreign countries that export products to the United States. With foreign inspections at historic lows, contaminated food is more likely to enter the American food supply undetected.

Industry and Public Health Warnings

In February 2025, a coalition of consumer groups, industry associations, and public health organizations sent a joint letter to the FDA warning that the cuts could jeopardize the safety of the food supply. The letter was notable for uniting groups that rarely agree — food industry lobbying organizations and consumer safety advocates both recognized that a functional FDA is essential to food safety.

Why This Is Classified Severe

This incident receives a severe classification because:

  • Universal impact: Every American who eats food is affected by the FDA's ability to ensure food safety. The 48 million annual foodborne illnesses and 3,000 annual deaths represent the baseline — not the ceiling.
  • Measurable degradation: The doubling of unsolved outbreak investigations from 21% to 41% is a direct, quantifiable decline in food safety capacity.
  • Historic nature: Foreign food inspections hit a historic low. The FDA has never been this understaffed relative to its mandate in modern history.
  • Compounding risk: Avian influenza testing halted, food lab quality control suspended, and outbreak response delayed by weeks — each of these alone is dangerous. Together, they create cascading vulnerabilities in the food safety system.
  • Irreversibility: Experienced food safety investigators and scientists take years to train. Once lost, this institutional knowledge cannot be quickly replaced.

Linked reporting

Reporting and secondary sources

  1. FDA and USDA Staff Cuts Under Trump Raise Food Safety Risks Food Navigator-USA
  2. Foreign Food Safety Inspections Hit Historic Low After Trump Cuts ProPublica
  3. How Safe Is Food in the U.S. After FoodNet, Funding Cuts? STAT News
  4. How Have DOGE Cuts Impacted Food Safety? Marketplace
  5. Analysis Shows FDA Foreign Facility Inspections Hit Historic Low After Trump Admin Cuts Food Safety Magazine
  6. FDA, USDA, CDC Continue to Lose Staffers in Fiscal Year 2026 Food Safety Magazine
  7. Food Safety Leaders Express Concerns About Recent Cuts in FDA Workforce Food Safety News
  8. USDA Staffing Crisis: Food Safety Agencies Struggle as Federal Workforce Shrinks National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition

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