Factbox: Impact on U.S. government widens
on 21st day of shutdown
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[January 11, 2019]
(Reuters) - A shutdown of about a
quarter of the U.S. government reached its 21st day on Friday, tying it
with the longest shutdown to date, and many of the 800,000 employees who
have been furloughed or who are working without pay missed their first
paychecks.
The White House and congressional Democrats remain divided over
Republican President Donald Trump's demand for money for a border wall,
even as the president warned in Texas on Thursday that he may use
emergency powers to bypass Congress and get billions of dollars to build
it.
The shutdown, which began on Dec. 22, is the 19th since the mid-1970s,
although most have been brief. A 1995-1996 shutdown over a funding
battle between Democratic President Bill Clinton and Republican House of
Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich also lasted 21 days. The current
one has not affected three-quarters of the government, including the
Department of Defense and the Postal Service, which have secure funding.
Some 800,000 employees from the departments of Homeland Security and
Transportation, among others, have been furloughed or are working
without pay. Private contractors working for many government agencies
are also without pay and private companies that rely on business from
federal workers or other consumers - such as national park visitors -
are affected across the country.
The following is what is happening around the federal government:
INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE
Nearly 70,000 IRS employees, or about 88 percent of the workforce, have
been furloughed, raising concerns about American taxpayer filings and
refunds and the ability of the agency to manage government revenues
ahead of the April 15 income tax filing deadline. [L1N1Z41SL]
The acting director of the White House's Office of Management and
Budget, Russ Vought, has said tax refunds would be distributed despite
the shutdown.
HOMELAND SECURITY
The department that oversees Customs and Border Protection, Immigration
and Customs Enforcement, the Transportation Security Administration, the
Coast Guard and the Secret Service is affected.
Of 245,000 agency employees, nearly 213,000 have been deemed
"essential," according to the department's contingency plan, so they are
working without pay until a funding bill is passed.
More than 50,000 TSA officers are working without pay, but Democratic
lawmakers have expressed concern about some transportation employees
failing to show up for work or calling in sick. The TSA said on Tuesday
the absences were having "minimal impact."
HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD)
Most of this department's 7,500 employees are "non-essential" and only
about 340 are working. Nearly 1,000 others may be called in for specific
tasks, without pay.
The shutdown has left administration officials scrambling to prevent the
eviction of thousands of people covered by a HUD program that expired on
Jan. 1 and now cannot be renewed, according to the Washington Post.
Public housing authorities and Native American tribal housing entities
are not part of the federal government and so are not required to shut
down. But the federal government provides some of their funding, so some
have reduced services or changed operating hours.
HUD, which oversees some housing loan and low-income housing payment
programs, warned in its contingency plan that "a protracted shutdown
could see a decline in home sales, reversing the trend toward a
strengthening market."
INTERIOR
The National Park Service, under the umbrella of the Interior
Department, is operating with a skeleton staff. Under its contingency
plan, some parks may be accessible, with others closed completely. The
park service is providing no visitor services such as restrooms,
facility and road maintenance and trash collection. Some volunteers have
worked to clean up sites, according to media reports, and some states
and other localities have also pitched in funding to keep parks
operating. Campgrounds have begun closing because of sanitation issues.
The parks are losing about $400,000 a day in fees because no rangers are
staffing the entrances, according to Senate appropriators. The park
service has authorized using previously collected entrance fees to bring
in additional staff to clean up trash and other tasks in a move some
critics have said is illegal, the Washington Post reported.
The Smithsonian museums and the National Zoo in Washington, which
receive U.S. government funding, are also closed.
COMMERCE DEPARTMENT
The Department of Commerce's Bureau of Economic Analysis and Census
Bureau is not publishing economic data, including figures on gross
domestic product, inflation, personal income, spending, trade and new
home sales, during the shutdown.
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
The agency that oversees the federal workforce has given advice to
workers on dealing with landlords, mortgage lenders and other creditors,
including sample letters explaining severe income loss because of the
lack of federal funding. Some federal workers are applying for
unemployment benefits, according to media reports.
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A National Park entrance fee collection service is temporarily
suspended at Badwater Basin in Death Valley National Park, the
lowest point in North America, during the partial U.S. government
shutdown, in Death Valley, California, U.S., January 10, 2019.
REUTERS/Jane Ross
JUDICIARY
The U.S. court system said on Monday it could operate until Jan. 18
and that most proceedings would continue as scheduled. Cases
involving furloughed lawyers from the executive branch of government
may be delayed. After funds are exhausted, courts may operate as
necessary, but it would be up to each court to set staffing, the
system said in a statement.
The shutdown over the border wall is also straining the country's
immigration system and has been blamed for worsening backlogs in
courts. Immigration judges are among those furloughed, leading to
thousands of long-delayed deportation cases being rescheduled.
HEALTH
The Food and Drug Administration and other agencies under the
Department of Health and Human Services are partially affected by
the shutdown. Some food and drug inspections are on hold, but the
FDA says it is still able to respond to emergencies, such as
foodborne illness outbreaks. The Indian Health Service is not able
to provide most of its funds to tribes and Urban Indian Health
programs. Some scientific research projects also cannot continue in
full.
AGRICULTURE
The Department of Agriculture said on Tuesday that U.S. farmers
could have more time to apply for aid aimed at mitigating any harm
during ongoing trade disputes with China, among others, adding that
farmers who had already applied would continue to receive payments.
USDA has also delayed several key reports on major domestic and
world crops that were due to be released on Friday, Jan. 11.
{nL1N1Z40VT]
Funding for food aid for low-income Americans, known as the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP, will continue in
February, Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said on Tuesday, but he
warned the outlook for March was uncertain if there was no end to
the shutdown.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
The FCC, which regulates radio and television broadcast and cable
systems, has suspended most operations. Work for "the protection of
life and property" will continue as will operations at the agency's
Office of Inspector General, the FCC's internal watchdog.
TRANSPORTATION DEPARTMENT
Of its 55,000 employees, 20,400 have been put on leave. That
excludes most of the Federal Aviation Administration, where 24,200
are working and the Federal Highway Administration, where all 2,700
employees are funded through other sources.
Air traffic control, hazardous material safety inspections and
accident investigations continue, but some rule-making, inspections
and audits have been paused.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has
furloughed nearly 60 percent of its staff, halting auto safety
investigations and new vehicle recall notices. The agency said it
would recall furloughed employees if it "becomes aware of an
imminent threat to the safety of human life."
Air traffic controllers and other aviation industry workers
protested on the Capitol grounds on Thursday. National Air Traffic
Controllers Association President Paul Rinaldi warned that the
funding impasse would hurt the development of procedures to
accommodate "over 1,000 aircraft wanting to go to Atlanta" at the
beginning of February for the Super Bowl.
EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
An estimated 1,100 of the office's 1,800 employees are on leave.
That includes most of the Office of Management and Budget, which
helps implement budget and policy goals.
NASA
Most employees at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
are on furlough. The small percentage who remain are working without
pay. Work on any satellite mission that has not yet launched will be
suspended until the agency receives funding, according to its
contingency plan.
ENVIRONMENT
The Environmental Protection Agency has furloughed most of its
14,000 workers, with fewer than 800 deemed "necessary to protect
life and property" reporting to work without pay. Workers who
monitor pollution and clean up superfund sites are among those
furloughed.
(Reporting by Makini Brice, David Morgan, Amanda Becker, Yasmeen
Abutaleb, Lawrence Hurley, David Shepardson and Susan Heavey in
Washington; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh, Richard Cowan and Peter
Cooney)
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