… LOCK HIM UP …


The U.S. government shutdown is impacting the economy as federal workers miss paychecks and services halt.

President Trump and Congress remain deadlocked, with Democrats demanding health insurance subsidies.

The shutdown affects national security, food banks and federal services.

The last shutdown cost $11 billion, and the current one is causing flight delays and financial strain on families.

Read the full article for more on:

  • The ripple effects of missed paychecks on local economies.
  • How federal service disruptions are affecting everyday life.
  • The potential long-term economic impact of the shutdown.

The Capitol on Tuesday as the government remains shut down.

(Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

The ongoing government shutdown will collide with the U.S. economy this week, as missed paychecks and the absence of billions of dollars of government services reverberate beyond federal workers and sting the broader public.

President Donald Trump and lawmakers in Congress remain deadlocked heading into a third week of shuttered federal agencies.

Republicans control both chambers of Congress, but lack the votes in the Senate to defeat a filibuster of legislation to fund ongoing operations.

Democrats insist that Trump and the GOP must cut a deal to preserve health insurance subsidies as part of an agreement to reopen the government.

The shutdown has already caused nationwide flight delays, closed taxpayer help lines at the Internal Revenue Service, snarled permitting approvals at the Environmental Protection Agency and Transportation Department, and shut off access to national parks.

Workers vital to national security and protecting government property remain on the job unpaid, but others — some 750,000, according to congressional bookkeepers — have been furloughed.

The Trump administration laid off some 4,000 workers Friday.

On Sunday, the president ordered the Pentagon to repurpose research and development funding to make payroll for members of the military, who were set to miss their first paycheck Wednesday.

But civilian employees won’t see the same treatment — and the Trump administration’s budget office also argued in a draft opinion last week that furloughed workers are not entitled to back pay when the shutdown ends.

The first wave of missed paychecks is likely to hurt the underlying economy in many communities.

And the longer other services remain shut off, the more the shutdown’s effects will spread.

The Washington Post wants to hear from anyone affected by or with knowledge of the Trump administration’s changes to federal agencies.
You can reach our reporters by email or Signal encrypted message:
Hannah Natanson: hannah.natanson@washpost.com or (202) 580-5477 on Signal.
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Consumers are already facing mounting economic uncertainty.

The last government shutdown — a 34-day closure during Trump’s first term, the longest closure in U.S. history

shaved $11 billion off the country’s economic output, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Across the country, food banks are stocking up on provisions and community service organizations are telling at-risk clients to warn their lenders of the potential for missed payments, leaders of the groups told The Washington Post.

Small business owners are keeping a close eye on their foot traffic.

Federal workers are preparing their families for some financial belt-tightening.

“Families around the country are already seeing the impacts, and it’s about to get a whole lot worse,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-South Dakota) said Friday.

“The American people are going to feel a lot more pain and miss a lot more paychecks in the near future.”

In Philadelphia, serving the hungry has gotten more difficult for one of the region’s largest food banks, said George Matysik, the executive director of Share Food Program.

Before the shutdown, demand for Share’s services had already gone up by 120 percent, Matysik said, as the nonprofit saw

$8.5 million worth of federal resources vanish under the Trump administration’s cuts to federal spending.

“I have never seen our warehouse as empty as it has been in the last three months,” Matysik said.

“And on top of all this, we’re now layering a shutdown.”

The organization runs a delivery program for seniors, dropping off 30-pound boxes of food for 7,000 clients each month, Matysik said. Share has enough surplus stock to continue deliveries for another month, he said, but is looking into how to continue the program in case federal help remains shut off.

In Colorado, service members and veterans have been flooding the phones of Homefront Military Network, a nonprofit that helps military families in financial and community support, said Kate Hatten, the group’s executive director.

“A lot of the calls we’ve been getting over the past few days have been concern in anticipation of not getting a paycheck on the 15th,” she said.

“Missing a paycheck or having one catastrophic expense is a problem for a lot of people across the nation, regardless of whether they’re actively serving in the military,” Hatten said.

“And I think that the challenge now in general is that the cost of living outpaces pay raises and housing allowances and benefits checks and all those sorts of things.”

At several federal agencies, meanwhile, some services have been put on ice for the duration of the shutdown.

Early on, Social Security Administration staff were given a list of activities that must stop, according to emails reviewed by The Post and several employees who, like others interviewed for this story, spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.
Among the items on pause: benefit verification letters, which Social Security gives people so they can finalize their eligibility for state benefits like food stamps; subsidized housing and old age pensions; and earning corrections, which are issued when someone reports missing income.

Also halted are any interactions with “third parties,” including some attorneys and disability advocacy groups.

All of those services are essential for people who rely on them.

“Callers are already expressing frustration about the limits of our work, specifically when they’re asking us to complete something that we’ve discontinued due to the lapse in funding,” the employee said.

Jonathan Stewart, an air traffic control supervisor who handled flights in and around Newark Liberty International Airport, said the system was showing signs of cracking just a few days into the shutdown.

“When you further stress out an already stressed out career field, controllers are going to be in no way fit to control airplanes,” said Stewart, who is out on trauma leave after technology outages at his facility in the spring left controllers unable to communicate with aircraft.

“It’s as simple as a field already stressed to the max.

What is happening is pretty clearly predictable for anyone with any knowledge of it at all.”

Controllers’ last paycheck will come Tuesday, deepening the uncertainty they face as the shutdown drags on and threatening to make deepen flight delays.

“The closer it gets to end of the pay period, the more distracted people are getting,” said a controller at a major West Coast facility, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk about his work.

“Sure, no one is not trying to, but we are all definitely distracted.

It’s the topic of conversation while we are working.

And then distraction itself is a safety risk.”

In an interview on Fox Business on Thursday, Transportation Secretary Sean P. Duffy said that typically an average of 5 percent of flight delays are linked to staffing shortages.
In recent days, 53 percent of delays have been caused by staffing shortages, he said.

Federal workers are bracing for the financial consequences of missed paychecks.

A Social Security worker said his wife has picked up extra shifts at her job to compensate for his loss of pay.

A furloughed NIH staffer said he visited a food pantry last week to stock up in preparation for who knows how many weeks of going without a salary.

“My wife has been so stressed,” he said.

“I’m so angry at this administration.”

Lori Aratani, Ian Duncan, Riley Beggin and Kadia Goba contributed to this report.

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… w

warm? … is anyone warm? … ????  Oh well ….

 

 

 

 

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