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Tag: fbi headquarters

  • Maryland sues Trump administration after ditching plans to move FBI HQ to Greenbelt – WTOP News

    State officials are planning to sue the Trump administration after it scrapped plans to move the FBI’s headquarters to Greenbelt, Maryland, and opted instead to keep the bureau in downtown D.C.

    

    Maryland is preparing for a courtroom fight against President Donald Trump’s administration over the FBI’s future home.

    The state’s Attorney General Anthony Brown announced the suit Thursday against the Trump administration after it scrapped plans to move the bureau’s headquarters to Greenbelt, Maryland, and opted instead to keep it in Downtown D.C.

    Maryland leaders have been crying foul since the Trump administration formally announced its plan in July to move the FBI across the street to the Ronald Reagan Building, ignoring the site selection process of Congress and the General Services Administration, and the fact that Congress had already appropriated funds toward the Greenbelt relocation.

    “The Trump administration is attempting to unlawfully reprogram and transfer over $1 billion in funds that Congress designated specifically for the Greenbelt project,” Brown said during a news conference Thursday.

    In 2022, Congress directed the GSA to choose between Greenbelt and Landover in Maryland, and Springfield, Virginia. The GSA selected Greenbelt in November 2023. In addition to the money Congress set aside, the state of Maryland and Prince George’s County both pledged a combined $350 million to support the project, Brown said.

    “They violated explicit congressional directives that limited site selection to the three authorized locations. They ignored federal requirements to consult with state and local government, and they acted arbitrarily and capriciously by abandoning years of careful planning without explanation or justification.”

    In his lawsuit, Brown is asking the court to stop what he called the unlawful selection of the Reagan Building, and to prevent Congress from diverting appropriated funds.

    “Maryland, we played by the rules. We won the project fairly. And we will not let this administration steal jobs and opportunities from Prince George’s County and Maryland.”

    Just last week, the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works approved the plan to move the FBI to the Reagan Building. The committee’s plans have not gotten full congressional approval yet.

    The Trump administration said in July moving the FBI to the Reagan Building, instead of constructing a new facility in Greenbelt, would save taxpayers money.

    In response to a WTOP request for comment on the lawsuit, the GSA said it does not comment on ongoing litigation.

    Maryland and Prince George’s County leaders said the federal government is ignoring security concerns and needs of the nation’s primary federal law enforcement agency — needs the Reagan Building doesn’t meet that the new Greenbelt site would.

    “The problem with the current FBI building is that it’s too old, too small, and too exposed. So what does the President do? He moves the FBI to another building that is too old, too small, and too exposed,” Maryland Gov. Wes Moore said in a statement. “Trump’s actions aren’t just illegal, they lack common sense. And his foolishness will put law enforcement in jeopardy.”

    In a statement last week, Sen. Chris Van Hollen, of Maryland, also expressed concerns about moving ahead with the proposal with “no completed security plan, and an incomplete cost assessment.”

    Brown’s lawsuit also alleges the Trump administration did not consult Maryland at all in its decision, which Brown’s suit says harms Maryland by denying it and Prince George’s County significant economic benefits, jobs and development opportunities.

    The Baltimore Sun first reported state officials’ plan to sue the Trump administration.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Thomas Robertson

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  • Expanding the economy is Prince George’s Co.’s No. 1 priority. What’s hindering it? – WTOP News

    Expanding the economy is Prince George’s Co.’s No. 1 priority. What’s hindering it? – WTOP News

    Leaders in Prince George’s County have been warning that the upcoming budget process is going to involve hard choices that will leave lots of people unhappy. To provide more, the county needs to increase tax revenues.

    Leaders in Prince George’s County, Maryland, have been warning that the upcoming budget process is going to involve hard choices that will leave lots of people unhappy. To provide more, the county needs to increase tax revenues.

    But unlike most jurisdictions which see commercial tax sources generate a large portion of revenue, the county is overly reliant on its residents.

    Fixing that has been a priority for years, and the urgency to accomplish that is only growing.

    “If we continue with no changes, we’re headed for a $407 million deficit over the next five years,” warned County Council vice chair Sydney Harrison at an economic development briefing Thursday afternoon.

    For nearly two hours on Thursday, the Government Operations and Fiscal Policy
    Committee heard from the county’s top economic development leaders about the current challenges that exist and where opportunities lie in the future.

    “Sixty percent of our residents who are employed, who tend to be the highest educated and highest paid employees, pre-COVID numbers, have to leave the county for their employment,” said David Iannucci, the president and CEO of the county’s economic development corporation.

    “Their place of work is outside Prince George’s County. That is a higher percentage than our neighbors,” he added.

    One big challenge when it comes to expanding the economy is also a sign of an otherwise stable economy — Maryland’s low unemployment rate, which fell under 2% at one point in late 2023.

    “A lot of people would see this as an outstanding symbol of economic growth,” Iannucci noted. “Business views those numbers and it’s telling them there’s no workers here for me. ‘If I move to your jurisdiction or I expand, I’m not going to find the workers I need.’”

    He also cited housing and child care as other impediments for the county.

    “People are leaving because we’re identified as a high cost state. The lack of housing is a factor, middle class housing in particular, and child care is a new issue,” Iannucci said. “Many women have left the work force because of the expense of child care.

    “These are factors that we have to understand as part of our economic climate,” he added.

    But the county’s economic team also said there was reason to be optimistic about the opportunities that exist now and will be coming to the county in the future.

    Iannucci noted that while the county still has twice as many federal workers as federal jobs, the imbalance has been tilting in the county’s direction, ticking off the several thousand federal jobs that have either relocated or are in the process of relocating to the Suitland and Beltsville areas.

    But he said the relocation of the FBI headquarters to Greenbelt — bringing about 7,500 FBI employees to that new facility — will be a game changer. And he urged the council to begin preparing, and trying to capitalize on their arrival, right now.

    “The lucrative part for Prince George’s County … will be the private contractors who want to be associated with the FBI,” Iannucci said.

    “Just as Virginia has captured thousands, and tens of thousands, of jobs with federal contractors associated with the military complex there, that is our opportunity in Prince George’s County to capture the cybersecurity companies, the artificial intelligence companies, those in public safety, all those services that will support the 7,500 jobs. That is going to be our growth opportunity,” he added.

    And unlike many other federal jobs, he noted, the FBI can’t do telework.

    Iannucci also touted growth opportunity just a three-minute trip down the Metro’s Green Line from the FBI’s new home in College Park.

    “Quantum is one of the great opportunities for Prince George’s County. IonQ is the world’s best capitalized quantum computing company,” Iannucci said, referring to a company that’s based in the University of Maryland’s Discovery District on Campus Drive, within walking distance of the College Park MARC and Metro stations.

    “We have the opportunity to be, really, the Silicon Valley of quantum computing.”

    With startup companies constantly spinning out of the university’s computing programs, he said the county needs to make the Discovery District as appealing as possible.

    “We are in a world competition for leadership in quantum,” he warned, and said it shouldn’t be just a county priority, but a state one too. “It is that powerful an opportunity but it is not going to be given to us.”

    Other efforts include research and development of microchips, which is also a big federal priority.

    These days, about 32% of the county’s tax base comes from commercial revenues, up 4% from what it used to be. But other parts of the region have the opposite ratio.

    “We’re one of the wealthiest counties in the United States — top 4%,” Iannucci said. “Our challenge though, we’re in a region where there are 20 counties in the top 2%.”

    But when asked what the county was doing to think “outside the box” on other ways to lure business, Angie Rodgers, the county’s deputy chief administrative officer for economic development, pinned blame on the county council for making that too great a challenge right now.

    “I will be honest, I am trying to figure out how we stop hurting ourselves on the things that we are trying to push forward,” Rodgers said. “It is difficult to think about innovating when really compared to a lot of our neighbors, when we think about land use and zoning and how we’re planning for space, when we think about the tools that we’re putting on the table. We are still treading water.”

    For me, thinking outside the box these days is about pushing past that first,” she said.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.



    John Domen

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