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Norms Impact

Kristi Noem Gives the Entire DHS Asbestos Poisoning

A cabinet secretary’s demolition push left federal employees breathing asbestos without basic notice or protections, eroding the core norm that government must obey workplace safety rules it enforces on others.

Executive

Feb 18, 2026

Sources

Summary

DHS staff at the St. Elizabeths campus in Washington, D.C., reported being required to work alongside asbestos removal occurring in full hazmat gear, without masks, air-quality testing, or clear hazard signage. A cabinet-level agency decision to push urgent demolition while leaving employees uninformed shifts the federal workplace from regulated protection to discretionary exposure. The practical consequence is preventable carcinogen risk for public servants and a chilling signal that safety rules can be bypassed under the cover of “security.”

Reality Check

Forcing federal workers to remain on site during asbestos abatement without meaningful warning, protective equipment, or testing normalizes a government standard where “security” becomes a blanket excuse to endanger our own public servants and strip workers of informed consent. If true, this conduct is plausibly unlawful under the federal Clean Air Act’s asbestos NESHAP requirements (42 U.S.C. § 7412) and could trigger criminal exposure where knowing violations endanger others, alongside OSHA duties for federal workplaces and D.C. workplace safety obligations. Even if prosecutors never file charges, the governance breach is unmistakable: concealment-by-omission and managerial deflection convert health protections into optional courtesies, and that precedent will be used against workers across government when it becomes inconvenient to follow the rules.

Media

Detail

<p>Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem directed urgent demolition activity at the 171-year-old DHS campus at St. Elizabeths in Washington, D.C., citing unsafe conditions. DHS employees told Migrant Insider that asbestos abatement and demolition work proceeded while agency staff continued working on site.</p><p>Employees described contractors wearing full hazmat suits performing asbestos removal in proximity to DHS personnel in normal office attire. Staff reported they were not offered masks, air-quality testing, or remote-work options, and that the campus lacked prominent signage warning of carcinogen exposure; one former aide said only a small sign at a side entrance indicated a health hazard.</p><p>Several employees said they received limited or after-the-fact notices about construction that did not specify health risks, and others said they learned of the work only after seeing sealed doorways and protective equipment. When concerns about air quality were raised to supervisors, employees said they were referred to building management and received minimal information. Preservation organizations criticized the unilateral demolition declaration as “problematic.”</p>