Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

Scott Pruitt resigns: It took 3 hours for the EPA to tell staff they had a new boss

Staff say they found out from Twitter like the rest of us.

Scott Pruitt
Scott Pruitt
“The unrelenting attacks on me personally, my family, are unprecedented and have taken a sizable toll on all of us,” Scott Pruitt wrote in his resignation letter.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Scott Pruitt, administrator of the US Environmental Protection Agency, resigned Thursday after the festering pile of alleged ethical and legal breaches — including the $43,000 phone booth, his use of his staffers’ credit cards to make hotel bookings, the deletion of meetings from his calendar and subsequent firing of staff who questioned it — finally became too much for him to manage.

But for three hours, staff at the EPA received no formal announcement, no agency-wide email, about their boss’s resignation. According to three EPA employees I contacted who asked not to be named because they were not authorized to speak on the record, they learned of it from a Trump tweet:

And then from Fox News’s Fin Gomez, who posted Pruitt’s resignation letter on Twitter:

We are now accustomed to such breaches of protocol in the Trump administration. We’ve long known there’s been an absence of high-level leadership at the EPA and that Pruitt had little respect for the agency he led.

But it’s still remarkable that neither Pruitt nor the internal communications team felt obligated to inform the 14,100 employees of the EPA until three hours after the Trump tweet that as of Monday, Andrew Wheeler, Pruitt’s deputy and a former coal lobbyist, will take the helm.

“I will be the Acting Administrator,” the memo, sent at 6:46 pm from Wheeler, reads. “I am both humbled and honored to take on this new responsibility at the same agency where I started my career over 25 years ago.” (The memo makes no explicit mention of Pruitt’s resignation.)

The EPA employees I spoke to said they were not that surprised to have learned the news from Trump’s Twitter and the media. One noted that bad news rarely gets acknowledged internally anymore.

The EPA “is so dysfunctional these days that all the ‘normal’ protocol seems to have disappeared,” another told me.

See More:

More in Climate

Climate
Why the American Southeast is becoming a new hot spot for wildfiresWhy the American Southeast is becoming a new hot spot for wildfires
Climate

“Weather whiplash” is fueling blazes across Florida and the region.

By Kiley Price
Climate
The climate crisis is coming for your groceriesThe climate crisis is coming for your groceries
Climate

Extreme heat is already wiping out soy, coffee, berries, and Christmas trees. Farm animals and humans are suffering too.

By Ayurella Horn-Muller
Future Perfect
“I’m disgusted to be a human”: What to do when you hate your own species“I’m disgusted to be a human”: What to do when you hate your own species
Future Perfect

Yes, it hurts to be human right now. That’s actually the assignment.

By Sigal Samuel
Climate
Levees can no longer save New OrleansLevees can no longer save New Orleans
Climate

The city is part of “the most physically vulnerable coastline in the world.”

By Oliver Milman
Future Perfect
The old tech that could help stop the next airborne pandemicThe old tech that could help stop the next airborne pandemic
Future Perfect

Glycol vapors, explained.

By Shayna Korol
Climate
The exploding costs of fighting US wildfiresThe exploding costs of fighting US wildfires
Climate

From taxes on nicotine to hotel rooms, states are looking for ways to pay the skyrocketing bill.

By Kylie Mohr