Washington D.C. food trucks feel the bite
from government shutdown
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[January 05, 2019]
By Katharine Jackson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Looking out from her
food truck over a sidewalk left empty in downtown Washington on Friday
by the U.S. government's partial shutdown, Farida Abou Draa said she
felt like crying.
"My business is to make people happy, to give them something to eat, to
see their smiles," said Abou Draa, 38. "There is no people to make happy
today."
Food truck operators are among the many non-government workers suffering
as a result of the shutdown.
On a typical day, the block in view of the U.S. Capitol where she parks
her truck, the Corn Factory, bustles with federal workers. She had not
made a single sale of her Venezuelan and Mexican fare by noon on Friday.
Since the shutdown began two weeks ago, some of the more than 400 food
trucks that operate in the city and depend upon a steady stream of
hungry federal workers have struggled to keep their windows open. Many
of the approximately 800,000 government workers who are either
furloughed or working without pay are based in the nation's capital.
"If the government shutdown keeps on moving forward, next week and the
following week, I've got to close," Abou Draa said. "I can't pay my
rent. I can't pay (for) my food. I can't pay my employees."
The ongoing shutdown stems from an impasse between congressional
Democrats, who control the House of Representatives as of Thursday, and
President Donald Trump, who is demanding funding for a wall on the U.S.
border with Mexico that he says is needed to stem the flow of illegal
immigrants and drugs into the United States.
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Moustafa Salem, owner of the Habebe food truck, waits to serve food
as business from federal workers has dwindled during the partial
government shutdown in Washington, U.S., January 4, 2019.
REUTERS/Katharine Jackson
On Friday, Trump told Democratic leaders he was willing to keep the
government closed for "months or even years."
"Terrible. Terrible. I don't make any money," said Moustafa Salem,
the owner of the Habebe food truck.
He stood ready with his employees on Friday to serve meals at what
normally would be peak lunchtime, but there was no line waiting for
his Greek and Middle Eastern food.
"We need money for my son in college," Salem said. "I need money for
myself, for rent, for gas, for employees."
Nearby, Abou Draa said she had lost about $5,000 during what are
already lean times in winter months, a difficult situation for the
food truck owner with a 3-year-old daughter and a mortgage to pay.
"We'll find a way to survive, and once it's all back to normal we
will be smiling again," she said.
(Reporting by Katharine Jackson; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Bill
Berkrot)
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