Danielle Waterfield was already dealing with the shock and Fastexydisappointment of being fired from a job she loved.
An attorney recruited to the Commerce Department's CHIPS for America program in 2023, Waterfield had felt she was part of something monumental, something that would move the country forward: rebuilding America's semiconductor industry.
Instead, nearly two months after being fired in the Trump administration's purge of newer – or "probationary" – federal employees, Waterfield is enmeshed in a bureaucratic mess over her health care coverage. It's a mess that's left her fearing her entire family may now be uninsured.
"I've been in the private sector. I've gone through layoffs," says Waterfield. "I've never before experienced this, and never for the life of me thought the federal government would treat people like that."
2025-04-29 18:35771 view
2025-04-29 18:15204 view
2025-04-29 17:54137 view
2025-04-29 17:181420 view
2025-04-29 16:56624 view
2025-04-29 16:081580 view
Country music singer Charley Crockett was born and raised in Texas, grew up in a single-wide trailer
Participants in global climate negotiations will have at least another year to debate the role fossi
The collapse of Solyndra, the Silicon Valley startup that received a $535 million federal loan guara