USDA Plan to Close Flagship Research Site Threatens Critical Research, Critics Warn

Critics of the plan to close the USDA’s Beltsville Agricultural Research Center say it could backfire by interrupting the facility’s ongoing research and by pushing the scientists conducting it to resign.

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People review a map in front of the USDA building before the start of Secretary Brooke Rollins’ press conference to discuss the USDA’s “National Farm Security Action Plan,” in Washington, D.C.
(Photo: REUTERS/Umit Bektas/File Photo)

USDA’s plan to close its flagship laboratory near Washington, D.C., could undermine research on pests, blight and crop genetics crucial to American farms, according to lawmakers, a farm group and staff of the facility.

The USDA has already lost thousands of research staff to President Donald Trump’s effort to shrink the federal government, even as U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins has said farm research is a pillar of national security.

Rollins said in July the USDA will close the Beltsville Agricultural Research Center, which occupies nearly 7,000 acres in the Maryland suburbs outside Washington, as part of an agency reorganization effort that will also move roughly half its Washington-area staff to hubs in North Carolina, Utah and elsewhere.

The agency says it is closing BARC and several other USDA buildings because of costly necessary renovations and underutilized space. Workers at BARC in 2023 filed whistleblower complaints about unsafe working conditions there.

But critics of the plan to close BARC say it could backfire by interrupting the facility’s ongoing research, and by pushing the scientists conducting it to resign.

“It is unlikely that senior scientists of this caliber with mature research partnerships and rich professional lives will simply move somewhere else,” says Donnell Brown, president of the National Grape Research Alliance, which depends on BARC research into vine stress and water usage.

U.S. Senator Chris Van Hollen, a Maryland Democrat, also slams the plan.

“You have a lot of people who have invested their time and effort in research for farmers across the country, and this plan would destroy that ongoing research,” he says.

Three staff at the facility, who requested anonymity out of fear of retribution, say the co-location of many labs at BARC allows for economies of scale and cost savings, and that the proximity to Washington enables researchers to easily brief lawmakers or other parts of USDA.

A USDA spokesperson says the $500 million required to modernize the BARC facility, plus another $40 million in annual maintenance, was not a wise use of taxpayer funds and that the agency’s other laboratories could house BARC research.

Rollins said in a July memo outlining the relocation effort that the BARC facility would be closed over several years to avoid disruptions to critical research.

USDA on July 25 told the House of Representatives and Senate agriculture and appropriations committees that it did not have data or analysis underpinning its reorganization plan to share with members of Congress or their staff, according to a letter sent from Democrats on the House Agriculture Committee to Rollins on Aug.14.

“Ostensibly they’re saying it would save money, but I haven’t seen any study that suggests that’s the case,” says U.S. Representative Glenn Ivey, whose Maryland district contains the BARC site.

(Reporting by Leah Douglas in Washington; Editing by Matthew Lewis and Leslie Adler)

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