DHS Might Shut Down on Friday: Should You Be Worried?
Should you be worried?
-- In an ideal world the Department of Homeland Security submits a budget plan for the coming year, lawmakers who control federal money approve it and then DHS gets funded for that full year.
But since September, Republicans and Democrats haven’t been able to agree on a full year of funding –- instead, twice since then they’ve agreed to fund DHS for a couple of months, each time hoping to reach a deal on a full year of funding. Time runs out again Friday night, but no deal is in sight.
Republicans irked by President Obama’s plan to give legal status to 5 million illegal immigrants say this time they’ll let DHS “shut down” unless the Obama administration backs down from its immigration plan. Democrats insist DHS funding shouldn’t be tied to a presidential action taken without Congressional approval.
But if DHS does “shut down,” should you be worried? It depends who you are, and how long the shutdown lasts.
If you’re one of the 40,000 DHS employees who will be furloughed, you won’t get paid for your time off -- even if you're struggling to pay your mortgage or put food on the table. And if you’re one of the tens of thousands of front-line personnel who still has to show up at work each day, you won’t get paid either -- even those of you putting your lives on the line. It’s unclear whether any future deal in Congress will reimburse you for the paychecks you’ll miss.
If you’re one of the millions of others in America whom DHS is supposed to protect, there won’t be much of an impact from a shutdown lasting only a matter of days.
If a shutdown lasts weeks or months, however, here’s how that DHS mission will be affected, according to DHS officials: