The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s data site went offline Friday night as a deadline for compliance with a Trump order hit.
Data from an expansive federal survey on youth behavioral habits, including their sexual orientation and gender identity, have been removed from the website of the CDC.
Large sets of data are being scrubbed of references to transgender and LGBTQ people, among others, which could compromise their use in research
Executive branch employees have been ordered to cut gender pronouns out of their email signatures, memos obtained by ABC News and other outlets show, apparently pursuant to anti-DEI executive orders President Trump signed soon after being sworn in as the 47th president.
An employee at the CDC spoke with Gizmodo about the changes, which they described as “creepy” and “unprecedented,” even compared to Trump’s first term from 2017-2021. The employee, who wished to remain anonymous because they were not authorized to speak with the media, said there was now an “aggressive tone behind everything.”
The removal of the content comes after the US Office of Personnel Management directed federal agencies earlier this week to “take down all outward facing media (websites, social media accounts,
Several US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention websites and datasets related to HIV, LGBTQ people, youth health behaviors and more have been removed after the agency was directed to comply with executive orders from President Donald Trump.
Federal employees at multiple agencies were ordered to remove pronouns from their email signatures by close of business Friday, according
Federal employees have been asked to remove pronouns from their email signatures. Agency leaders must “send an email to all agency employees announcing that the agency will be complying with” the
The Office of Personnel Management distributed a memo, obtained by NBC News, ordering that all federal government references to “gender ideology” be removed by 5 p.m. Friday.
On Tuesday night, January 28 — eight nights into Donald Trump's second presidency — around 2 million federal workers received a controversial e-mail from the U.S Office of Personnel Management (OPM).
Agencies should aim for a 30-day deadline to implement Trump’s return-to-office executive order, according to a memo from the Office of Personnel Management.