Make Musk pay
Stephen
Prager for Common Dreams
When Elon Musk’s “Department of Government Efficiency” took its chainsaw to the federal bureaucracy last year, it created bottlenecks that may have hampered the fight against the screwworm infestation currently menacing the southwest while making it much more expensive.
The annual US Department of Agriculture (USDA) spending to combat the
flesh-eating insects only amounted to about $15 million per year. But along with
about $382 million aimed at combating animal-borne illnesses around the globe,
it was terminated in March 2025 as part of DOGE’s effort to root out what it
described as government “waste.”
But now, with the pests bearing down on Texas and New Mexico,
and at least 12 infections already identified in the US as of Tuesday,
the Trump
administration is spending at least $1 billion to fight the outbreak.
Last week, during a Senate hearing, Secretary of Agriculture
Brooke Rollins attempted to
shift blame for the screwworm outbreak onto the Biden
administration, while portraying herself and President Donald Trump as
proactive in response to reports last spring that the insects were rapidly
climbing through Central
America.
Rollins said she asked Trump for “$1 billion to build a significant
facility” in Texas that would breed hundreds of millions of sterilized male
screwworm flies, a method that had been used to keep them contained in South
America for decades. “Without hesitation, a couple questions, he said, ‘go.’”
That facility is expected to release around 300 million
sterile flies per week. But it is not expected to be fully operational until
the end of 2027.
In addition to the $15 million cut to monitoring the spread
of the bugs from Panama, the Houston Chronicle reported that DOGE paused plans for a
facility in Mexico that the Biden administration had authorized in 2024 as part
of a $165 million emergency package to fight screwworm.
Amid mass layoffs at the USDA, it reported that funding for the facility—which was supposed to produce between 60-100 million sterile flies per week—was not announced until May 2025.
While the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
(APHIS) still says fly production at the facility is expected
to begin “as early as summer 2026,” it is still listed as “under construction.”
Kevin Shea, who served as administrator of APHIS under
the Obama
administration and retired from the agency in January 2025, told the
Chronicle that efforts to contain the screwworm were put on hold at the start
of Trump’s second term.
“This administration came in so skeptical of the career
people, they didn’t really want to listen,” he said. “The hold up in the money
going to Mexico for the sterile fly facility was most likely caught up in the
whole DOGE thing.
It probably looked like some sort of foreign aid.”
Journalist Christopher Collins wrote in
the Texas Observer on Tuesday that, additionally, “deep staffing cuts” to
APHIS, which lost nearly 1,900 employees during Trump’s first year back in
office, eliminated “the first line of defense against incoming parasites,” who
are responsible for “inspecting the cattle awaiting import from Mexico to
ensure no screwworms are hitching a ride.”
As the spread of screwworm across cattle country threatens
to further drive up beef prices that have already increased by
over 20% since Trump returned to office, critics of the administration are
seizing on it to highlight the failure of the president’s so-called
“efficiency” initiative, which—despite the grandeur of Musk’s cost-cutting
claims—ended up costing taxpayers an estimated $165 billion,
according to an April 2026 report from the nonpartisan Partnership for Public
Service.
Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) called the
screwworm saga a prime example of DOGE’s “peak incompetence.”
“Trump and Musk’s DOGE ‘saved’ $15 million by cutting a
program dedicated to preventing the spread of screwworm,” she said. “Now,
there’s an outbreak infecting our beef and the administration is spending $1
billion.”
Reacting to the news that the government was spending at
least $1 billion to confront the screwworm crisis, Drop Site News co-founder
Ryan Grim wrote on social media, “Not
joking but Elon Musk should
have to pay for this right?”
“You broke it,” he said, tagging the man who recently became
the world’s first trillionaire. “Why do we all have to pay for
it?”
