At least 61 USDA offices have been removed from the Department of Government Efficiency’s (DOGE) list of closures. DOGE listed at least 110 USDA offices across nine agencies for lease terminations in March. This would have saved an estimated $59.3 million.

The DODGE website now reflects 49 USDA offices slated for closure. This would amount to a savings of just under $19.5 million. Proposed overall federal government lease cancelations have been reduced to 485 from 793 in mid-March.

The Farm Service Agency (FSA) is now considering six office closures, down from the original 22 listed by the DOGE. Four of the offices listed to be closed on the DOGE site are in Puerto Rico, one in Madera, California and one in Greenville, North Carolina. A USDA spokesman stated that there are no plans to close Farm Production and Conservation (FPAC) county offices. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins stated that the FPAC county offices are frontline USDA offices that serve farmers nationwide.

The DOGE has also scaled back on canceled leases at the U.S. Forest Service from 12 offices down to two. Ten Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) offices are still on the closure list. This includes the Boise, Idaho, office lease that is worth $5.6 million.

Read more about future office plans for the USDA here.