âNo other state is at risk as much as Marylandâ to Trumpâs reckless job cuts
Donald Trump is taking direct shots at Marylandâs economy by firing tens of thousands of federal workers. A recent Baltimore Banner report echoes analysis by Moodyâs Ratings that found no other state is as vulnerable to Trumpâs cuts than Maryland, where roughly 1 in 10 workers are employed by the federal government.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT.
Baltimore Banner: 1 in 10 Maryland workers is a federal employee. Hereâs where they live, work.
By Greg Morton
March 20, 2025
- The Trump administration’s sweeping cuts to the federal workforce will affect communities around the country. But no state is at risk as much as Maryland, where 1 in every 10 workers are employed by the federal government.
- Almost half of all Maryland federal workers live in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties⌠Federal workers made up the highest share of the workforces in Charles and St. Mary’s counties.
- More workforce reductions are likely. The Trump administration ordered agencies to produce plans to reorganize and cut staff.
- Prince Georgeâs, Montgomery and Charles counties were home to about 160,000 workers in 2023, the most recent year for which U.S. Census data is available. In those three counties, about 1 in every 8 workers was a federal employee.
- But itâs not just counties that border D.C. that have a large number of federal workers. Around 100,000 workers live in Baltimore, Baltimore County, Howard County and Anne Arundel County. The Social Security Administration and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services are based in Woodlawn and employed 14,000 people in Maryland.
- Nearly 40% of [87,000] Maryland jobs were at the Department of Health and Human Services. Most were at the departmentâs National Institutes of Health or the Food and Drug Administration, which are both headquartered in Maryland. Together they accounted for about 1 in every 4 jobs at civilian agencies in Maryland. Both agencies have been targets of Trump and DOGE, as the administration aims to cull thousands from the federal workforce in the name of reducing waste.
- The Trump administration has hinted that it may seek to offload some of its federal portfolio. The General Services Administration, the agency in charge of managing the governmentâs real estate portfolio, briefly published a list of hundreds of properties, including 83 in Maryland, that had leases slated for cancellation. The agency has since taken the list down.