Danielle Waterfield was fired, rehired and fired once more from her job at CHIPS for America, a part of the Division of Commerce. Now, she fears her medical health insurance was reduce off weeks in the past, despite the fact that she was advised in any other case.
Andrea Hsu/NPR
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Andrea Hsu/NPR
Danielle Waterfield was already coping with the shock and disappointment of being fired from a job she liked.
An legal professional recruited to the Commerce Division’s CHIPS for America program in 2023, Waterfield had felt she was a part of one thing monumental, one thing that may transfer the nation ahead: rebuilding America’s semiconductor trade.
As an alternative, almost two months after being fired within the Trump administration’s purge of newer — or “probationary” — federal staff, Waterfield is enmeshed in a bureaucratic mess over her well being care protection. It is a mess that is left her fearing her complete household could now be uninsured.
“I have been within the personal sector. I’ve gone by means of layoffs,” says Waterfield. “I’ve by no means earlier than skilled this, and by no means for the lifetime of me thought the federal authorities would deal with folks like that.”
Good well being advantages a perk of federal jobs
Stable advantages have lengthy been seen as a perk of federal jobs, a tradeoff for decrease pay. Consequently, many federal staff carry their households on their medical health insurance plans.
However now, the administration’s “break first, ask questions later” strategy to remaking the federal forms has introduced a degree of chaos to the federal government that employees like Waterfield have by no means seen wherever, even within the personal sector.
President Trump delivers remarks on reciprocal tariffs as Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick holds a chart throughout an occasion within the Rose Backyard entitled “Make America Rich Once more” on the White Home in Washington, D.C., on April 2, 2025.
Brendan Smialowski/AFP by way of Getty Photos
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Brendan Smialowski/AFP by way of Getty Photos
Firings have been carried out with such haste that human useful resource departments have struggled to reply a primary query from these affected: Do we’ve got medical health insurance?
Fired staff determined for info have as an alternative been given responses which are complicated, conflicting and at instances, flat out unsuitable. Furthermore, a lot of that info has come too late. Some worry they’ve racked up medical payments that won’t be reimbursed, whereas others are avoiding medical care till they will get new insurance coverage.
The Commerce Division didn’t reply to NPR’s a number of requests for remark in regards to the fired staff’ well being care protection. The U.S. Workplace of Personnel Administration, which handles many human useful resource features for the federal authorities, solely supplied common details about federal advantages however didn’t deal with particular questions.
How Waterfield and probably tons of of others just lately fired from the Commerce Division ended up on this state of affairs takes some explaining. The data vacuum that staff have encountered amid a authorized battle over their firings has definitely compounded the chaos.
March 3: The unique termination
In courtroom filings, the Commerce Division confirmed it fired near 800 probationary staff between President Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20 and March 3.
Waterfield’s termination letter got here March 3. Instantly, she realized she wanted to determine medical health insurance for her household. Her husband and two kids have been on her well being plan.
The Commerce Division despatched her a memo explaining the federal authorities’s advantages coverage for separated staff: The federal government would offer a 31-day extension of her medical health insurance following her final pay interval. She would owe no extra premiums. After that, she would have 60 days to decide into federal staff’ equal of COBRA to proceed her well being advantages.
As an alternative, Waterfield began wanting into the way to swap the household to the plan her husband’s employer supplied, an possibility she was grateful to have. However she could not do this till she may show a “qualifying life occasion” — in her case, a lack of medical health insurance resulting from being fired.
After which, 10 days later got here a brand new twist.
March 17: Reinstatement
Ten days after Waterfield was terminated, a federal decide in Maryland discovered that her firing and that of greater than 24,000 different probationary staff focused by the Trump administration have been in all probability unlawful. He ordered them briefly reinstated, restoring the established order.
To adjust to the decide’s order, the Commerce Division reinstated almost all the fired staff on March 17, placing them on paid administrative depart.
Waterfield assumed a return to the established order would imply her advantages can be restored. She was nonetheless paying her insurance coverage premium by means of her paycheck, however she needed affirmation. She requested human assets however heard nothing again. She despatched her reinstatement letter to Blue Cross Blue Protect and felt reassured when she bought a response informing her she’d don’t have any break in protection.
“Inside every week, I had new insurance coverage playing cards despatched to my complete household,” she says.
Figuring out that the Trump administration was interesting the decide’s order and that she could possibly be fired once more at any second, she took swift motion to make sure her household’s wellbeing. She moved up a bunch of medical appointments, together with a routine checkup for her teenager, a diabetes appointment for her husband, and her personal bodily remedy to deal with a spinal difficulty.
“Medical doctors have been very, very supportive,” she says. “They rescheduled issues and bought us in.”
April 10: Terminated once more
Then on April 10 got here the notification Waterfield had dreaded. A day earlier, a panel of judges on the 4th Circuit Courtroom of Appeals had discovered fault with the decrease courtroom’s reinstatement order, and voided it.
Now, the Commerce Division was firing her as soon as once more, retroactive to her unique termination date. This time, there was no accompanying memo about advantages. Once more, inquiries to human assets went unanswered.
Waterfield logged on to her insurance coverage portal and noticed no change in standing. Her paystubs nonetheless confirmed that her well being care premium was being taken out of her paycheck. She saved the household’s docs appointments till this week, when her group chats lit up with frantic textual content messages.
A few her colleagues had simply heard from their insurers that their protection did certainly finish on April 8, in keeping with what the Commerce Division had advised them earlier than the entire authorized saga started. Consequently, claims for bills incurred after that may not be paid.
Protesters collect on the Nationwide Mall for the “Fingers-Off” protest in opposition to the Trump administration on Saturday, April 5, 2025.
Dominic Gwinn/AFP by way of Getty
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Dominic Gwinn/AFP by way of Getty
“I am afraid to name my insurance coverage firm”
NPR has since realized that fired staff at one other company inside the Commerce Division, the Nationwide Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, acquired a memo from the federal government on April 17 confirming the April 8 insurance coverage cutoff — a full week after they have been re-fired. That is even if a few of these staff had acquired verbal and even written assurances from supervisors that their protection would proceed uninterrupted. Now they do not know what to consider.
“I am afraid to name my insurance coverage firm,” says Waterfield.
Her colleague Keri Murphy, an administrative officer at CHIPS for America, is much more terrified. She had surgical procedure on her foot on April 17. That morning, she referred to as Blue Cross Blue Protect to verify she had protection and was advised she did.
“Blue Cross was exhibiting me as lively,” she says. “I paid my specialist co-pay of $50.”
That affirmation, together with the truth that her newest paystub confirmed she had paid her well being care premium, led Murphy to imagine she’d have well being protection for an additional 31 days previous her April 10 re-termination date.
Now, she’s attempting to determine what she’ll do if she’s saddled with the complete value of her foot surgical procedure. Her solely selection could also be to decide into persevering with protection for one month. However with members of the family on her plan, she estimates that might value her round $2800, cash she would not have given she simply misplaced her job.
She’s now anxious she could should cancel her follow-up appointment subsequent week, when her physician is meant to take away the bandages and take a look.
“This has been such a life-changing, devastating sequence of occasions that I do not understand how way more dangerous information I can take,” she says.
Tammy Flanagan, who previously labored in human assets on the FBI and now runs her personal consultancy, says these federal employees have achieved precisely what she would have suggested them to do on this state of affairs – name their insurers.
Past that, she’s undecided what to inform them.
“The place have authorities staff ever been fired after which rehired and fired once more? It is unknown territory,” she says.
Hoping for no emergencies
Jennifer Raulin (left) and a colleague work within the subject on a government-supported mission associated to marsh restoration. Raulin had simply began a federal job in coastal administration with the Nationwide Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in January earlier than being fired in February.
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Jennifer Raulin, who had simply began a job at NOAA in January earlier than being fired in February, rehired in March and fired once more in April, had not needed to complain publicly in regards to the ordeal she’s been by means of — till now.
“We’ve been type of dwelling in purgatory for the previous couple of months, however this complete well being care factor has actually taken a darker flip,” she says. “This to me crossed a line … as a result of my children are actually concerned.”
Certainly one of her kids simply turned 11, however she is not taking him in for his annual checkup and the pictures that he is resulting from get, together with the HPV, Tdap and meningitis vaccines, till she has well being care protection once more.
Within the meantime, she’s additionally hoping for no emergencies.
“Each of my kids play baseball, and so now each time they’ve a recreation, I maintain my breath and hope that they do not get harm,” she says.
She, too, feels lucky her husband’s employer gives a household insurance coverage plan. However they have not been in a position to make the swap as a result of the federal government hasn’t despatched Raulin her termination paperwork proving a qualifying life occasion.
Till then, if somebody within the household results in the emergency room, she’ll should decide into persevering with protection, regardless of it being cost-prohibitive, she says. NOAA staff have been advised they’ve till June 7 to take action.
Not optimistic about one other reinstatement
Though a number of authorized challenges to the probationary staff’ firings are nonetheless enjoying out in courtroom, Raulin and others will not be optimistic this well being care state of affairs shall be sorted out by one other ruling — or that they will get their jobs again.
“Attempting to comply with all these circumstances and the enchantment course of is nearly like a full-time job, on prime of looking for one other full-time job,” says Raulin.
Whereas Waterfield seems to be for brand new employment, she is doing what she will be able to to assist different federal employees navigate the murky state of affairs, together with signing up together with her native bar affiliation to supply pro-bono authorized counsel — and assist.
“Even when it is only a sense of giving an open ear, letting them know they are not alone, that their feeling that this is not truthful is shared by others,” says Waterfield. “Letting folks know that I really feel it with them.”