Federal Agencies Maintain Offices That Sit Mostly Empty
A new Government Accountability Office report notes that of 24 federal agencies, none of their headquarters are more than half-staffed on an average day.

The federal government is sitting on millions of square feet of unused office space.
That's the upshot of a new report by the Government Accountability Office (GAO), which found that even before the COVID-19 pandemic cleared out offices and introduced much of the country to remote work, "federal agencies have long struggled to determine how much office space they need to fulfill their missions."
"The federal government owns over 460 million square feet of office space that costs billions annually to operate and maintain," the report notes.
The GAO surveyed the 24 federal agencies that use most of the federal government's buildings; these included the Departments of State, Commerce, Justice, Transportation, Homeland Security, and Education, as well as agencies like the Social Security Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency. Then, the GAO calculated the square footage of each agency's headquarters compared to its average in-person attendance during one week each in January, February, and March 2023.
The report found that, on average, 17 of the 24 agencies surveyed used 25 percent or less of the available space in their headquarters buildings. Even agencies on the higher end only averaged between 40 percent and 49 percent.
This problem is not unique to the federal government. Washington, D.C.'s WTOP News reported in July that 18.9 percent of office buildings in the nation's capital are empty, a record high. In the first quarter of 2023, the vacancy rate in New York City rose to 16.1 percent, signifying 76 million square feet of empty office space.
But the situation is obviously very different when the taxpayers are the ones footing the bill. The GAO report notes that the 24 agencies it surveyed "spend about $2 billion a year to operate and maintain owned federal office buildings." Owing to the sheer size and scope of the cost, some agencies put off maintenance and repairs. The GAO recommends "disposing of underutilized buildings in need of repair" as a cost-saving measure.
To make matters worse, even as agency headquarters are mostly empty, "federal agencies spend about $5 billion annually to lease office space from the private sector and from the federal government," accounting for over 83 million square feet of office space.
The GAO recommends that agencies reassess their respective needs, using "benchmarks…that account for greater levels of telework." It also notes that there is a "unique opportunity to reconsider the federal government's real property portfolio."
Getting rid of unused real estate could also have positive effects outside of federal balance sheets. "In the local economy, unneeded properties and land could be put to productive use," the report notes. "Selling a federal building to the private sector also can increase the local tax base, as federal buildings are generally exempt from local taxes."
Reason previously reported on an earlier version of the final report, related to data compiled by government watchdog organization OpenTheBooks.com, showing that government agencies spent more than $3.3 billion on office furniture since the beginning of the pandemic even as their buildings sat largely vacant.
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Workers at the SF Federal Building are instructed to work remotely; the neighborhood is too dangerous. This is, oh, 4 blocks from City Hall.
City hall is in the tenderloin, right where they set up homeless encampments and that open air drug market in what used to be a public square.
The area is absolutely gross.
It feels very "third-world slum" at this point.
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Prior to Covid, L.A. City Hall had to close for fumigation because of an outbreak of typhus among some of the workers. The disease was carried into the building by rats living off the garbage dumps connected to some of the "tent cities" set up around DTLA by our "unhoused neighbors" (I don't think they'd upgraded the euphemism to "people experiencing homelessness" yet).
Carlin had a chunk of material 40 years ago about how the language around things just keeps getting more and more syllables so that those in charge of addressing the problems can avoid putting in any real work at it.
Seattle had the same problem. They had a problem with jurors not showing up because the neighborhood was too dangerous. There's a great video of a defense attorney being attacked by a meth addict outside the courthouse which always gives me a smile.
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Relocate the offices to trailers in the deserts of Nevada, Texas, oklahoma...
Sorry, accidentally flagged you
I said good day sir.
If you don't get occasionally flagged, you're not playing hard enough.
Or unheated barns in Montana and North Dakota.
Or un-air-conditioned shacks in Louisiana, Florida, Mississippi...
They need to do their part to reduce carbon.
And they can ride un-air-conditioned trains to work every day, since they love public transportation.
The Prudhoe Bay Federal Metroplex.
Inspector: "I'm shocked, SHOCKED..."
Croupier: "Your winnings, sir."
Inspector: "Thank you."
Empty offices, empty minds.
Fire 65% of federal employees, and use 20% of the survivors to create a plan for getting rid of 50% of the others.
Or just host a hunger games.
Pull the dale gribble
"what would you do with infinate vacation and no pay
Protest all day?
Offices are half-staffed?
Can we un-staff the other half?
You say "fire" them, but I kinda like what the word "survivors" implies. Especially when speaking about agencies like the DEA and DoE. The waste of money is one thing, but the human damage they've perpetrated on the populace makes a division of their employees into "survivors" and "non-survivors" seem appropriate.
Just sayin'...
Just stop sending them checks. It will work itself out eventually.
We fixed the glitch.
Don't deaf people have closed captions TV sets? Who's paying for those seemingly superfluous signers at press conferences?
You are.
Hasn't Hillary already alluded to a use for all those empty floors? Re-education camps don't have to be even Motel 6 quality in order to be useful to her purposes.
Pretty sure she intends her "re-education" facilities to have a more Gulag-level survival rate.
The federal government is sitting on millions of square feet of unused office space.
House immigrants there.
Sell them all to the highest bidder. Cut off the government supplied Internet to the remote workers and change their passwords. Eventually they'll get the hint.
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There'd be a certain bit of irony in all those government offices being converted into meth labs and prostitution dens.
But all their customers will be gone!
The most important line in the whole article was "Twenty-four Federal agencies ..." The Constitution allows for at most four federal agencies and the other twenty were created to do mostly unconstitutional things. Leaving those headquarters half-staffed is a blessing in disguise and a bargain at half the price. If the staff aren't there at the headquarters they can't do as much harm to America. Imagine the destruction that more officials doing more things would cause!
4? Off the top of my head the only federal "agencies" I can see in the constitution are the post office and DOT.