5 Ways the Trump Shutdown Is Harming Struggling Workers, Families, and Communities

Credit: Win McNamee, Getty

President Donald Trump recently claimed that he can relate to the strain experienced by federal workers living paycheck-to-paycheck. However, his efforts to prolong the current government shutdown—already the longest in U.S. history—suggest otherwise. In addition to furloughed federal workers, this cruel, manufactured crisis has added immeasurable uncertainty to already stressed low-wage workers and families, disproportionately harming low-income families with children, people with disabilities, and seniors.

Here are just five of the myriad ways that Trump’s shutdown is irresponsibly harming and holding low-income communities hostage.

1. The paychecks of federal workers, contractors, and support staff are being withheld

An estimated 800,000 federal employees—and hundreds of thousands more federal contractors and support staff—have missed paychecks since the shutdown began on December 22. Initially, more than 420,000employees were required to work without pay while another 380,000 had been sent home without pay. But now, nearly 50,000 of the latter group have been pulled back to work without pay at the president’s command. Federal government workers’ salaries run the gamut, with some making as little as $26,000 a year. The Center for American Progress has estimated that these employees, in aggregate, miss out on more than $2 billion per pay period. With President Trump and congressional Republicans still refusing to fund the government and the shutdown continuing for nearly four weeks, workers’ income shortfall continues to grow. While both houses of Congress have approved legislation that guarantees back pay to furloughed federal workers once the government reopens, the lapse in pay exacerbates financial hardship and uncertainty for many American families. Affected families are struggling to pay rent, dipping into savings, and cutting back on food.

View the complete January 1y article by Donovan Hicks, Heidi Schultheis, Rejane Frederick, Azza Altiraifi and Rachel West on the Center for American Progress website here.

‘You feel trapped’: The shutdown’s impact on Minnesota’s weather service

Unpaid but unable to take time off, Chanhassen’s NWS workers are finding the shutdown tough.

Their paychecks are frozen just as the ground is in Minnesota this time of year, but 38 employees of the National Weather Service office in Chanhassen continue to show up to work every day as mission-critical government employees.

Each day they arrive at the office knowing their next paycheck might be weeks or even months away, but they continue educating and informing the public about pending weather events, like the winter storm preparing to layer the ground in southern Minnesota with 5-8 inches of snow on Friday.

For some employees, the shutdown threatens their ability to pay bills on time, forcing them to make a few extra bucks through side hustles they never thought they’d need, all while hoping their applications for unemployment benefits are accepted.

View the complete January 17 article on the Bring Me the News website here.

Pelosi spokesman says White House leaked commercial travel plans to Afghanistan

A bus is seen of the East Front of the Capitol after members of the House disembarked, after an overseas CODEL was postponed by President Trump on Thursday, January 17, 2019. Credit: Tom Williams, CQ Roll Call

Alternate plan was canceled after State Department warned against it

The shutdown feud between Speaker Nancy Pelosi and President Donald Trump escalated Friday after the California Democrat’s office revealed it had made commercial travel arrangements to continue an Afghanistan trip the president tried to cancel — but the administration leaked their plans.

There was already a security risk with the speaker and her congressional delegation continuing the overseas troop visit after Trump announced Thursday where they’d be going. But the heightened threat from Trump leaking the commercial travel plans led the delegation to call off the trip for now, a Pelosi spokesman said.

“After President Trump revoked the use of military aircraft to travel to Afghanistan, the delegation was prepared to fly commercially to proceed with this vital trip to meet with our commanders and troops on the front lines,” Pelosi spokesman Drew Hammill said in a statement.

View the complete January 18 article by Lindsey McPherson on The Roll Call website here.

Who Gets to Fly During the Government Shutdown? Nancy Pelosi? No. Melania Trump? Yes

Credit: Andrew Harnik, AP, REX, Shutterstock

As the government shutdown rages on, it’s not just commercial flying that’s affected; now some members of government are being prevented from flying too.

After House Speaker Nancy Pelosi asked President Donald Trump to delay his State of the Union addressTrump on Thursday blocked Pelosi from using military aircraft for a bipartisan congressional trip to Afghanistan.

In his letter to Pelosi, Trump wrote, “In light of the 800,000 great American workers not receiving pay, I am sure you would agree that postponing this public relations event is totally appropriate.”

View the complete January 18 article by Natasha Bach on The Fortune website here.

House Democrats’ latest gambit for ending shutdown involves bills Republicans negotiated

Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer, D-MD Credit: Tom Williams, CQ Roll Call

Plan is to bring up spending bills next week that both chambers agreed to in conference last year

House Democrats plan to ramp up the pressure on Republicans to reopen the government by holding votes next week on spending bills the GOP helped negotiate.

The plan is to hold a vote on a package of six fiscal 2019 appropriations bills that were agreed to by House and Senate negotiators last year but never brought to the floor.

The package also includes language to pay federal employees who have been working without pay or who have been furloughed during the partial government shutdown.

View the complete January 17 article by Lindsey McPherson on The Roll Call website here.

WORKERS SPEAK OUT: ‘I Don’t Know How Long I Can Go On Like This’

The Trump Shutdown is the longest shutdown in our history. Trump is holding the paychecks of hundreds of thousands of workers hostage, and as each day passes, it gets more and more difficult for them to get by.

Here are real stories of workers hurt by the Trump Shutdown:

“The shutdown makes me nervous.” – 6th grader whose father is a federal worker

“The stress is just too much. … How can I set up a payment plan when I don’t have income?” – Federal worker Continue reading “WORKERS SPEAK OUT: ‘I Don’t Know How Long I Can Go On Like This’”

Minnesota House DFLers Write to President Trump About His Federal Government Shutdown

Yesterday, members of the DFL House Majority sent a letter to President Trump respectfully requesting he re-open the government and end the shutdown.

Here’s a link to that document.

 

IRS shutdown plan fails to quell worries

The IRS’s new contingency plan to deal with the shutdown has failed to quell concerns from Democratic lawmakers and tax professionals about the upcoming tax-filing season.

The Treasury Department’s updated shutdown plan for the IRS released Tuesday provides for 46,000 employees, or 57.4 percent of the agency’s workforce, to be working during the tax-filing season. It also confirms that the IRS will issue refunds during the shutdown.

But the plan didn’t answer all of the questions that lawmakers and tax experts have, and there are lingering doubts about how effective the IRS will be at doing its job while its employees are working without pay due to the funding lapse.

View the complete January 17 article by Naomi Jagoda on The Hill website here.

5 Ways the Trump Shutdown Is Harming Struggling Workers, Families, and Communities

President Donald Trump answers questions from the press as he departs the White House, January 2019. Credit: Win McNamee, Getty

President Donald Trump recently claimed that he can relate to the strain experienced by federal workers living paycheck-to-paycheck. However, his efforts to prolong the current government shutdown—already the longest in U.S. history—suggest otherwise. In addition to furloughed federal workers, this cruel, manufactured crisis has added immeasurable uncertainty to already stressed low-wage workers and families, disproportionately harming low-income families with children, people with disabilities, and seniors.

Here are just five of the myriad ways that Trump’s shutdown is irresponsibly harming and holding low-income communities hostage.

1. The paychecks of federal workers, contractors, and support staff are being withheld

An estimated 800,000 federal employees—and hundreds of thousands more federal contractors and support staff—have missed paychecks since the shutdown began on December 22. Initially, more than 420,000employees were required to work without pay while another 380,000 had been sent home without pay. But now, nearly 50,000 of the latter group have been pulled back to work without pay at the president’s command. Federal government workers’ salaries run the gamut, with some making as little as $26,000 a year. The Center for American Progress has estimated that these employees, in aggregate, miss out on more than $2 billion per pay period. With President Trump and congressional Republicans still refusing to fund the government and the shutdown continuing for nearly four weeks, workers’ income shortfall continues to grow. While both houses of Congress have approved legislation that guarantees back pay to furloughed federal workers once the government reopens, the lapse in pay exacerbates financial hardship and uncertainty for many American families. Affected families are struggling to pay rent, dipping into savings, and cutting back on food.

View the complete January 17 article by Donovan Hicks, Heidi Schultheis, Rejane Frederic, Azza Altiraifi and Rachel West on the Center for American Progress website here.

Trump’s Shutdown is Harming Federal Workers

The Trump Shutdown has put an unnecessary burden on families just like Jamie’s across the country.

Share this video if you believe it’s time for Republicans in Congress to listen to the American people and end this shutdown.