Bombshell report reveals all Biden federal offices are less than 50% occupied – and HUD is only at 7% – after abuse of telework policies results in BILLIONS of taxpayer dollar waste

President Biden is facing criticism after a bombshell report showed all federal agencies at less than 50 percent capacity — wasting billions in taxpayer dollars — more than a year after he declared the COVID-19 pandemic over.

According to a memo from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to Senator Joni Ernst obtained by DailyMail.com, no federal agency has more than half of its staff in the office.

That's a staggering statistic, considering federal agencies spend about $2 billion annually in taxpayer dollars to operate and maintain federal office buildings — and more than $5 billion annually on leases.

The shocking findings come after Biden formally ended the COVID-19 emergency in May and his chief of staff pushed for the federal bureaucracy's return to in-person work by the fall. He also famously declared the pandemic “over” in September 2022, surprising members of his own team.

The data shows “estimated three-month average space usage” statistics collected for 24 agencies over one-week periods in January, February and March 2023.

The agency with the largest percentage of office workers during the three months was the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at 49 percent. The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) took home the award for the least use of space (7 percent).

“Under Biden inflation, buying and renting is a lot more expensive, and instead of taking the homeless off the streets, HUD doesn't even have anyone home,” Ernst said

The Social Security Administration pegged HUD at a 7 percent occupancy rate, followed by the Small Business Administration at 9 percent. The General Services Administration (GSA) put the Department of Agriculture at a paltry 11 percent.

“The abandoned Department of Housing and Urban Development building is a sad symbol of the Biden administration's failure,” Ernst told DailyMail.com in an exclusive statement.

“Under Biden inflation, buying and renting is a lot more expensive, and instead of taking the homeless off the streets, HUD doesn't even have anyone home,” she continued.

Use of the Federal Agency: January-March 2023

Agency for International Development – 23%

Ministry of Agriculture – 11%

Ministry of Commerce – 36%

Ministry of Defense – 25%

Ministry of Education – 17%

Ministry of Energy – 25%

Department of Health and Human Services – 19%

Department of Homeland Security – 31%

Department of Housing and Urban Development – 7%

Ministry of the Interior – 26%

Ministry of Justice – 31%

Ministry of Labor – 18%

Ministry of Foreign Affairs – 49%

Ministry of Transport – 14%

Ministry of Finance – 40%

Department of Veterans Affairs – 14%

Environmental Protection Agency – 17%

General services administration – 11%

National Aeronautics and Space Administration – 17%

National Science Foundation – 14%

Nuclear Regulatory Commission – 30%

Office of Personnel Management – 12%

Small Business Administration – 9%

Social Security Administration – 7%

The Iowa senator is calling for the 'end' of the Biden administration, allowing federal buildings to remain vacant at taxpayer expense.

She has previously called on the government to sell off unused space and return the money to taxpayers.

Congress has stepped up scrutiny of government agencies and their telework policies as we mark the months since President Biden formally ended the COVID-19 emergency.

Ernst and other lawmakers say billions in taxpayer money have been wasted on unused federal office space.

According to the Government Accountability Office (GAO), more than 75 percent of available office space across 17 different federal agencies remains vacant.

And according to a recent letter from the General Services Administration (GSA), which DailyMail.com obtained last month, the agency says the use of office space is under scrutiny.

The memo showed that GSA had an occupancy rate of 11 percent.

“My office will address GSA's use of space in our future oversight efforts,” Inspector General Robert Erickson wrote in late September.

“For example, we are currently considering an audit to examine whether GSA has appropriately evaluated the needs and use of physical space to account for increased employee telework and remote positions,” Erickson wrote.

The GSA also recognized “challenges” posed by space usage in a new hybrid work model.

Federal employees have benefited from work-from-home policies in several ways.

Damning reports reveal that government employees have attended meetings while taking a hot tub, still got paid on the golf course, and attended happy hours while on the job.

This happened as the passport backlog continued and veterans waited months for appointments with their doctors.

Biden's chief of staff Jeff Zients issued a directive ordering all federal employees to return to the office this fall after years of working remotely.

“We are returning to in-person work because it is critical to the well-being of our teams and will enable us to deliver better results for the American people,” Zients said in a letter to all Cabinet heads, adding that it is a “ priority of the president.”

But it's unclear how many total federal employees will continue to telework — a statistic Republicans have unsuccessfully requested.

Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, and other lawmakers say billions of taxpayer dollars have been wasted based on unused federal office space

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