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DOGE keeps gaining access to sensitive data. Now, it can cut off billions to farmers

DOGE recently gained high-level access to a database that controls government payments and loans to farmers and ranchers across the U.S., including Kentucky.

Photo by Jed Owen / Unsplash

A staffer from the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, recently got high-level access to view and change the contents of a payments system that controls tens of billions of dollars in government payments and loans to farmers and ranchers across the United States, according to internal access logs reviewed by NPR.

“When we talk about farm loan application records, there is no more personal information anywhere than in that database,” Scott Marlow, a former senior official in the U.S. Department of Agriculture, told NPR. “The farmer’s entire financial life and the life of their kids and their family, every time they’ve missed a payment, every time they’ve had a hard time, every time they’ve gotten in financial trouble … it’s there.”

With DOGE’s initial de facto leader, Elon Musk, engaged in an on-again, off-again feud with the president and no longer a constant presence in the White House, some of DOGE’s work has faded from view. But DOGE very much continues in Musk’s absence. In some cases, including at the USDA, the team’s access appears to have only deepened in recent months. Indeed, sources across government agencies who spoke to NPR say the impacts of DOGE’s plans and cuts have only just begun to play out.

DOGE at USDA

A source working for the USDA provided evidence of DOGE’s high-level access to the payments system called the National Payment Service. The access is a highly privileged level of permissions that the USDA employee says no other individual at the agency has and goes against normal access protocols. With that access, DOGE can view and modify data entries inside the system, giving them a view into sensitive personal information and the power to outright cancel loans.

It’s unclear whether staffers previously employed by DOGE are now full-time employees at USDA. Another USDA employee who requested anonymity fearing retribution said that the group is now internally referred to as the Efficiency Team, or the “E team.”

The move is in line with an early command by Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins to give DOGE “full access and transparency,” though it may run counter to the agency’s long-standing policies around data protection and privacy. DOGE’s near unfettered access to sensitive data at other agencies like the Treasury Department and the Social Security Administration continues to be challenged in court due to privacy, security and legal concerns.

The news of DOGE’s access and scope of potential use of farmers’ personal and economic data comes at a time when the United States’ agricultural producers face multiple financial challenges, including concerns over President Trump’s tariffs, rising production costs and climate-related disasters.

Read the rest at LPM.

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