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Northern Virginia braces for more job losses amid Trump administration uncertainty

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Private-sector job postings have plunged. Contracts are being canceled. And across Northern Virginia, laid-off federal contractors are showing up at job centers in growing numbers 鈥 a trend officials fear will worsen this summer if deeper federal cuts take effect.

鈥淚鈥檓 preparing for the worst,鈥 said David Hunn, executive director of Virginia Career Works Northern Region, which runs job centers in Alexandria, Fairfax, Loudoun and Prince William counties. 鈥淲e could be looking at thousands of people needing help in the next few months.鈥

Local economists and workforce officials say this may be only the beginning. A combination of hiring freezes, canceled contracts and agency consolidations 鈥 part of President Donald Trump鈥檚聽聽鈥 is already straining the region鈥檚 job market.

Hunn said many seeking help are federal contractors laid off after agencies聽, froze or scaled back grant-funded programs.

鈥淲e probably had several hundred either displaced federal workers or contractors,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd I think probably it鈥檚 more contractors right now given the layoffs at USAID, because they had to terminate their employees immediately.鈥

The early wave of job losses is starting to appear in state labor data. For the week ending March 23, Virginia recorded聽聽鈥 up nearly 28% from the same week last year 鈥 with most filings coming from the professional and technical services sector, which includes many federal contractors.

Since Jan. 12, Northern Virginia has accounted for nearly half of all reported layoffs in the state. According to state Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, or WARN, notices, at least聽聽have occurred in Fairfax, Arlington, and Prince William counties and the city of Alexandria 鈥 out of 2,314 statewide. The notices, published by Virginia鈥檚 Department of Workforce Development and Advancement, include major employers like MITRE Corporation and Leidos, which hold large federal contracts.

Still, these figures likely understate the true impact. Many Northern Virginia residents work in D.C. and may file unemployment claims there. Federal employees and contractors also use different systems to file, which are often tracked separately.

鈥淲e’re working with our neighbors to try to get a way to look at this regional data in terms of unemployment claims, because I think that’s a better indicator for all of us because of those unique nuances,鈥 Kate Ange, deputy director of Arlington Economic Development, said.

Further complicating matters are unsettled job statuses among federal workers affected by recent agency shakeups. In February, thousands of probationary employees聽聽under the Trump administration鈥檚 plan to consolidate federal agencies under the newly created Department of Government Efficiency, led by Elon Musk.

Because the firings bypassed standard reduction-in-force procedures, they faced聽. Federal judges聽later ruled the terminations improper and ordered many of the employees reinstated. But on Tuesday the聽Supreme Court聽blocked the order for the Trump administration to reinstate the thousands of federal employees. The effect of the court鈥檚 order will keep employees in six federal agencies on paid administrative leave for now, the聽

If federal agencies proceed with formal reductions in force, which require a 60-day notice, Hunn said a second wave of layoffs could arrive by summer.

鈥淲e鈥檙e probably looking, if all of that happens, somewhere between the May and June timeframe,鈥 he said.

A region shaped by federal jobs

Virginia ranks second nationally in full-time federal civilian jobs, with 321,516 positions,聽. Including part-time roles and 130,751 active-duty military personnel, the total nears 476,000.

Much of that workforce is based in Northern Virginia, home to major federal agencies like the Pentagon and firms that rely on government contracts. The Northern Virginia Regional Commission estimates聽聽are located in the region, representing 2.7% of the national federal workforce and 6.3% of the state鈥檚. Another 175,000 federal employees live in Northern Virginia but work in D.C. or nearby jurisdictions.

One caveat, however, is that those figures only cover Prince William, Loudoun, Fairfax and Arlington counties and the city of Alexandria. They leave out surrounding areas like Stafford and Spotsylvania counties, where many federal workers and contractors live.

鈥淚 have a whole lot of neighbors who are contractors that work either at Fort Belvoir or Quantico,鈥 said Terry Clower, director of the Center for Regional Analysis at George Mason University and a Stafford County resident. 鈥淪o yeah, those numbers鈥 look a lot different depending on who exactly you include.鈥

Tracking the full impact is further complicated by the employment status of affected workers.

Jill Kaneff, senior regional demographer at the Northern Virginia Regional Commission, said many are on administrative leave or have accepted severance packages, making them ineligible for unemployment benefits.

鈥淪o, knowing that they are just going back and forth on being employed and on leave, that’s, I think, one of the main reasons why it’s not showing up in the claims data yet,鈥 Kaneff said.

Kaneff said upcoming labor reports from the Virginia Employment Commission may provide more clarity given those figures often lag behind real-time trends.

Local industries and governments brace for ripple effects

The growing uncertainty is already shaping how local governments and employers prepare for a potential fallout. Fairfax and Prince William counties are among several jurisdictions tracking early signs of economic stress, including contract activity, tax revenue and office vacancies.

In a聽聽to the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors, Victor Hoskins, president and CEO of the Fairfax County Economic Development Authority, flagged a steep drop in job postings 鈥 from 92,000 in February to just 44,000 in March.

鈥淭hat’s contractors pulling back, saying, I’m not going to take the chance on hiring somebody because the business might not be there,鈥 Hopkins said. 鈥淥ther contractors are saying I don’t have a contract anymore.鈥

He warned the slowdown could spill into other sectors tied to federal spending, deepening the strain on the local economy.

Reduced foot traffic from federal offices is聽, putting pressure on meal and lodging tax revenues that support local budgets.

鈥淪taff at the Virginia tourism office are very worried about lower [hotel] occupancy rates and the reduced business conferences and revenue impacts of that on the state budgets,鈥 Kaneff told the Prince William Finance and Budget Committee聽.

Workforce mismatch deepens uncertainty

The long-term economic picture is also troubling. In a worst-case scenario, the Urban Institute projects cutting 75% of the federal workforce in the D.C. region would drive unemployment聽, over three times the聽.

Even a 10% cut, according to the Weldon Cooper Center, would eliminate about 40,000 jobs in Virginia 鈥 enough to cancel out all of the state鈥檚 expected job growth for 2025.

To help displaced workers, Gov. Glenn Youngkin聽聽with listings for more than 250,000 private-sector openings, along with job fairs and retraining resources.

But many of those jobs may not align with the experience or salary expectations of laid-off federal employees and contractors. 鈥淎t best, you got about maybe a 30% overlap,鈥 Clower said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not particularly favorable.鈥

That mismatch is already evident at job centers, where Hunn said some are retraining or considering leaving the region.

鈥淪ome of these federal employees are going to be specialists in particular areas 鈥 whether it鈥檚 small business, foreign affairs or soil science,鈥 Hunn said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e really trying to prepare individuals for possible career shifts, whether they want to stay in public service or move into another occupation.鈥

His team is working to place people in jobs starting at $22 an hour or more, but for many, it鈥檚 still a difficult shift in a region with a high cost of living. To reach more affected workers, they鈥檙e launching a Metro ad campaign targeting commuters who may not know these resources exist.

鈥淲e鈥檙e a free public service, and we鈥檙e here to help them,鈥 Hunn said. 鈥淪hould they need to make a career change, we want them to know we鈥檙e here.鈥

How many will ultimately need that support remains unclear. But after decades working in workforce development, Hunn said this moment feels different.

鈥淚鈥檝e been in this business for 37 years,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e not seen anything like this before.鈥

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