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Hundreds of German offices that can empty this summer due to Doge's cuts: AP

This summer, the federal authorities will vacate hundreds of offices across the country under a frenetic and faulty push by Elon Musk's budget tailor consultant to cancel rental contracts they say.

The Ministry of Government Efficiency of the White House, which is headed by Musk, maintains a list of canceled real estate rental contracts on its website. However, the internal documents obtained from the Associated Press contain a crucial detail: if these cancellations come into force. In the documents of the General Services Administration, the US real estate administrator, dozens of the German citizenship are listed and the construction contracts, which are expected to end until June 30, are planned with hundreds more in the coming months.

The quick pace of the cancellations has triggered alarms, with some agencies and legislators address dog to take out certain buildings. In total, several agencies with 20 or more leasing cancellations are exposed to everyone, including the IRS, the social security authority, the US Agriculture Ministry and the US Geological Survey.

Many of the dismissals would affect agencies that are not so well known, but would monitor services that are of crucial importance for many Americans.

They extend from an office of Boise, Idaho, the office for recovery, which monitors the water supply and deals with disputes in the entire American west to a Joliet, Illinois, the outpost of the Railroad Retirement board, which offers advantages for railway workers and its surviving benefits.

The rental contracts do not mean that all locations are concluded. In some cases, agencies can negotiate new rental contracts to stay on the spot, to reduce their existing space or to change somewhere else.

“Some agencies say:” I don't go. We can't go, “said Chad Becker, a former GSA real estate officer, who now represents owners with state rental contracts at Arco Real Estate Solutions.” I think there will be a time of unbelief. And then you can work on the actual execution of a train if necessary. “

According to Doge, the GSA has informed the landlords in the past few weeks that it should terminate 793 rental contracts, and mainly focuses on those who can be ended without punishment within months. The group estimates that these removals will save around 500 million US dollars compared to the provisions of the rental contracts, which in some cases are to be continued in the 2030s. For example, the Bureau of Reclamation cancellation in Boise would come into force on August 31 and is expected to save a total of $ 18.7 million by 2035.

But the savings of Doge -a fraction of the 1 -Billion -Dollar -cost sensation from Musk -were not verified and do not take into account the costs of movements and closures. The group has not published any information about what they would mean for agencies.

“My first reaction is that this will only cause chaos,” said Jim Simpson, an accountant in Arizona, who helps with a low income with the submission of taxes with low income and serves an IRS committee for taxpayers. “There is a lot of space for the efficiency of the government, but it should be surgical and not with a chainsaw.”

Simpson said that he was surprised to find out that dozens of IRS offices, including the local taxpayers, were exposed to upcoming leasing stations. He refers the customers there to obtain paper stuff to submit returns and to answer IRS inquiries, and he said that the loss of services would “cause a lot of fear” and delay reimbursements.

Doge scrap some rental contracts due to errors

The plans to cancel the rental contracts at several IRS centers and other locations were erroneously and have been canceled, according to a person with direct knowledge of the changes that have spoken to the AP about the condition of the anonymity in order to avoid retaliation. These changes are not yet reflected in Doge's List, which only added more dozens in its latest update published on Thursday.

The GSA declined the cancellation of a Geological Survey Office in Anchorage, Alaska. After learning, according to the person familiar with the matter, it had no right of termination after learning.

MP Tom Cole, R-Okla. But all three rental contracts remained in Doge's list of cancellations from Thursday.

The GSA press office did not respond to inquiries.

Dogy Push surprised many

While there was already a cross -party urge to reduce the government's real estate footprint, the mass cancellations blended an industry that was known for its stability.

Landlords who had expected that government agencies will remain tenants – for several years in some cases in their existing rental contracts – were stunned. Some agencies learned from construction managers, not from their federal partners that their rental contracts were canceled, according to real estate managers.

Some cancellations could stimulate additional costs

Becker, whose company is pursuing the Doge Leasing cancellations, and other observers said they expect some agencies to not be able to move their staff and property from their rooms in such narrow schedules. This could force some agencies to pay additional rent during a so -called Holdover period, which undermines Doge's declared goal of saving tax money.

The building owners' and manager association of the builders who represent the commercial real estate industry divided the landlords in a recently made advocacy alarm willingness to be ready to pay from the federal government tenants who go beyond their lease.

When asked about plans for buildings with rental contracts that will soon be canceled, the IRS did not answer. A spokesman for the social security management played down the effects of his offices and said that many were “small hearing spaces”, did not serve the public, were already consolidated elsewhere or planned for closure.

Several other agencies provided little clarity – they worked with GSA to check their options in statements that were almost identical in some cases.

However, a spokesman for the Railroad Retirement Board expressed concern about the upcoming rent stations of his offices in Joliet, Illinois and eight other states and said it was working on “maintaining a public office presence for the local railway community”.

The federal government's trimming was already underway

David Marroni, official of the state accountability, said last week in a hearing of the congress that the advance of unloading unnecessary federal properties was “long overdue” and the agencies hold on for too long into the unnecessary space. But he warned that downsizing must be intentionally and carefully planned in order to “achieve significant savings and reduce the risk of errors and unexpected mission effects”.

This process had already started before Musk's team arrived, and the Federal Government's real estate portfolio has decreased steadily in the past ten years. In fact, critics of Doge say that if it is really interested in reducing costs, it could learn from the GSA, whose mission provided the American public “effective and efficient” services.

A law signed by the former President Joe Biden before leaving the office in January instructed the agencies to measure the true occupancy rates of rented rooms to this summer. Those who did not achieve a target of 60% of the usage rate over time would be instructed to dispose of their excess space.

“There is a logical and orderly way to do this,” said Rep. Greg Stanton, a Democrat from Arizona, at the hearing of last week. Instead, Doge follows a ruthless approach that threatens to provide public services.

Industry observers warned that every situation is different and it will take months or years to understand the full effects of the rent stations.

“It really depends on the terms. But it is a shock, it is not a question that the boom suddenly happened in six weeks all of these things,” said J. Reid Cummings, professor of finance and real estate at the University of South Alabama. “It's like a lightning war.”