Editor’s Note: Federal News Network’s deferred resignation survey is a non-scientific survey of respondents who self-reported that they are current federal employees, and who were self-selected.
Each year, Public Service Recognition Week is a time to show civil servants support for the often under-recognized and incredibly difficult task of delivering services to the public — like the Social Security employee who’s processing a mountain of paperwork to distribute benefits, or the HR specialist who’s managing the complicated requirements involved in shuffling federal employees into, out of and between positions.
But the recognition federal employees are receiving this week is cast against a much darker backdrop this year. It comes as the Trump administration attempts to significantly shrink and reconfigure the federal workforce at a pace and scale not seen in recent memory, maybe ever.
As a result, federal employees have been heading for the exits in droves — either by choice or by force. The administration fired tens of thousands of probationary employees, then later reinstated them, then reversed course once again. And agencies are in the process of eliminating a number of federal positions as part of reductions in force (RIFs), all under the directions of the White House.
At the same time, many federal employees are grappling with the nearly impossible decision of whether to leave their jobs on their own terms through the relaunched deferred resignation program (DRP) or stick it out in the hopes that their positions are still standing after RIFs take place across agencies.
Back in February, about 75,000 federal employees governmentwide applied for the first round of the DRP, according to the Trump administration. But the number of second-round DRP applications, as well as those being accepted into the program, have without a doubt gone up — although we don’t yet know the final tallies.
In an online survey conducted in April, Federal News Network heard from more than 4,500 federal employees on either why they decided to apply for a deferred resignation through their agency, or why they chose to “hold the line.” Out of the survey respondents, nearly 40% said they applied for the DRP at their agency, agreeing to quit their jobs now in exchange for several months of pay. Federal News Network’s survey is non-scientific, meaning that the results do not necessarily reflect the actual numbers of federal employees applying for the DRP.

With the Office of Personnel Management’s governmentwide “fork in the road” offer earlier this year, many employees said they didn’t apply for a deferred resignation for a number of reasons. Many didn’t trust OPM to follow through on the offer. Others said it felt like they were giving into the Trump administration’s wishes. And still others wanted to keep their jobs out of dedication to their agency’s mission.
Whatever the reason may have been, our survey results showed that nearly 70% of respondents did not consider taking a deferred resignation and did not apply for it in the first round of the offer.
But now reading the tea leaves more closely, many more employees have chosen to exit their jobs on their own terms, rather than face a possibility of being forced out anyway in a RIF. About 70% of respondents in Federal News Network’s survey said they are seeing more of their colleagues take the DRP in the second round.

“A sinking ship”
The reasons more federal employees now want to apply for the DRP, however, still vary greatly. The survey results show a combination of federal employees who were worried about RIFs, burnt out from the growing pressure coming from the Trump administration or whose initial reservations about the legitimacy of the DRP have been alleviated.
“By now, more employees might have had the time to fully understand the program’s benefits and conditions, making them feel more confident about their decision,” one survey respondent observed. “Any initial skepticism about the program might have faded as employees saw that the promised benefits were delivered to those who participated in the first round.”
In the first round of the deferred resignation program, some saw the risk of leaving as greater than the risk of staying. Now, that feeling has reversed for many.
“People are seeing the reality of the RIF happening in front of them in different parts of the agency and it has become very real,” one employee noted.
Many respondents felt that applying for the second round of the DRP kept their decision in their own hands, rather than leaving it to the agency to determine whether they’d keep their positions. As one survey respondent put it, in comparison to an agency RIF, the DRP is “the lesser of two evil options.”
“I initially thought it was too risky to take the DRP when it was first offered. I believed I’d be able to keep my job,” another respondent wrote. “However, by the time the second DRP was offered, I realized how unstable the government was and that I might lose my position.”
Another respondent wrote, “People were more desperate and afraid of losing their jobs after seeing what happened to the probationary employees. The nature of our work and the makeup of the federal government are changing, and many people were not willing to stay aboard what they perceive as a sinking ship.”
And like many feds these days, one respondent said they made the tough choice to leave public service after spending 20 years in the federal workforce.
“Morale is low and stress is high. Work volumes will increase for those who remain. The daily grind in the current environment is not worth it anymore,” the respondent wrote. “After all, we were just dismissed and made to feel replaceable despite so much dedication to our public service mission for many years.”
Dedication to public service holds strong
Depending on where federal employees are in their career also appears to have an influence on their decision to apply for the second round of the DRP. In the survey, many employees close to retirement, as well as many within the first few years of their careers, saw themselves as ones on the cusp of the finish line, or ones who would be the first to go in a RIF.
“I’m close to retirement anyway and the administration is destroying my agency,” one respondent wrote.
Another said, “I was already terminated as a probationary employee and was confident that I would be terminated during the upcoming RIF.”
Those in the middle of their careers — who are still a ways away from retirement, but tenured enough that they have a better chance of surviving a RIF — may be more likely to choose to stay in their jobs for the time being.
Still, it may be a while before there’s a complete picture of how many federal employees chose to leave their jobs, and for what reason. Many agencies are still sifting through the deferred resignation paperwork to determine who will be accepted into the program, and who will be considered ineligible.
But at least at one agency, the numbers are incredibly telling. The IRS received deferred resignation applications from a whopping 22,000 employees — about one-quarter of the agency’s entire workforce. The IRS later denied about 10% of the employees who applied for the DRP offer. That leaves some 20,000 employees who are expected to walk out the door.
Despite many feds vacating their positions, many others are choosing to stay and weather the storm. That decision also has a wide variety of reasons behind it — some spoke of a need for financial stability or concerns about a tumultuous job market.
But in what feels like an homage to Public Service Recognition Week, federal employees who are staying put said they are choosing to remain hopeful about the future of the civil service and continuing to serve the public as they have for years.
One federal employee who took the survey said they are staying “simply because I don’t want to resign from public service. I refuse to let threats and harassment rule my decision-making about my career.”
Another employee wrote, “I am a public servant and while times are tough, I’m committed to my job and public service.”
And still another respondent said, “It was a tough decision, and I’ve been swinging back and forth for days about what to do. But ultimately what tipped the scale is that I do take pride in my work, and walking away from that was a heartbreaking thought, even with everything I’m being put through.”
During Public Service Recognition Week, you can thank a federal employee for their service by sending an e-card through Federal News Network’s “May We Say Thank You” campaign.
If you would like to contact this reporter about recent changes in the federal government, please email drew.friedman@federalnewsnetwork.com or reach out on Signal at drewfriedman.11
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