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Holiday Flights Safe, But Not National Park Trips in Shutdown

Holiday Flights Safe, But Not National Park Trips in Shutdown

(Bloomberg) -- The federal government is running out of time to avert a shutdown in the days leading up to the Christmas holiday as Democrats, Republicans and the White House are at an impasse about a line item representing .004 percent of the spending this fiscal year -- $5 billion for President Donald Trump’s border wall.

Without a funding bill, nine federal departments and several agencies -- representing about a quarter of the $1.24 trillion in government spending for fiscal year 2019 -- will shut down early Dec. 22. The remaining three-quarters of the government, including the Department of Defense, Department of Labor and Health and Human Services, were already funded and won’t be affected by the shutdown.

Holiday Flights Safe, But Not National Park Trips in Shutdown

Federal rules prohibit employees classified as “essential” from taking paid time off, including time for illness, vacation or religious obligations during a shutdown. That includes security staff at airport checkpoints and air traffic controllers. Roads to national parks and campgrounds would remain accessible, but services, such as restrooms and visitors’ centers, would be closed.

Here’s a look at how a lapse in government funding would affect key agencies and federal functions:

Transportation

The U.S. Department of Transportation would keep about two-thirds of the department’s more than 50,000 employees on the job, according to its shutdown plan.

  • Air traffic controllers, critical airline safety inspections and the registration of aircraft would continue to work if a government shutdown occurs, according to a statement by the Federal Aviation Administration.
  • Transportation Security Administration’s airport functions would continue to operate, so air travel would not be affected.
  • The Federal Highway Administration and Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, which regulates trucking, would continue their operations.
  • Amtrak would continue its normal operations during a short-term shutdown, according to a spokeswoman for the railroad.
  • Work developing rules for self-driving cars, investigations of vehicle safety defects, crash testing, enforcement efforts and some research projects would be halted at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, according to the plan.
  • Most functions of the Federal Transit Administration would cease, including the flow of federal funds through grants, contracts and reimbursements to local and regional transit agencies.
  • Railroad inspectors and accident investigators at the Federal Railroad Administration will remain at work.
  • Highway tollbooths are typically staffed by state authorities.

Treasury and Trade

The Treasury Department, which includes the Internal Revenue Service, would continue to address any disruptions in the liquidity in the financial system, monitor financial and terrorism intelligence and continue small businesses lending. The U.S. Trade Representative would continue negotiations and enforcement.

  • The start of the 2019 tax filing season, which will begin at the end of January or early February, won’t be delayed even if the government shuts down, according to Ken Corbin, the commissioner of the IRS’s Wage and Investment division. The agency has yet to announce an official start date.
  • The IRS typically issues refunds within 21 days of the tax return being filed, according to the agency’s website. If the shutdown were to extend into the filing season, or another one were to occur, refunds would be delayed, according to the agency’s shutdown plan.
  • Requests for disaster relief for victims of hurricanes or wildfires would continue to be processed, but audits would be paused.

SEC and CFTC

The Securities and Exchange Commission would halt many of its routine activities and significantly scale back its law enforcement and litigation efforts. The Wall Street regulator would reduce staff to around 300 from over 4,500 normally, according to a plan for a shutdown.

  • The SEC would continue working only on "emergency enforcement matters" and not open new investigations or exams that can be deferred until the government reopens. The agency would halt processing applications for regulatory exemptions, pause work on ongoing litigation, and generally pause the rule-making process.
  • Searches on its Edgar corporate filing database, which is run by a contractor, would continue to be available.
  • The Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which oversees a chunk of the roughly $500 trillion global derivatives market and trading in Bitcoin futures, will “severely curtail” its operations with a shutdown, the agency said in a memo.
  • The CFTC would halt most of the functions of its enforcement unit, including starting new actions against alleged wrongdoers. About 10 percent of its total workforce of 675 would remain on the job.
  • The agency would stop rule-making work and all functions of the press offices and the unit in charge of dealing with Congress and international issues.
  • It would, however, continue vital oversight of markets, clearinghouses, and intermediaries and deal with pressing open and active litigation cases.
Holiday Flights Safe, But Not National Park Trips in Shutdown

Business & the Economy

The shutdown could postpone the release of several scheduled economic data releases with market-moving potential.

  • Those wanting to get certain details on the state of the housing market and trade would have to wait until the government reopens: The U.S. Census Bureau would delay all economic releases, which next week include new home sales, merchandise trade and inventories.
  • Agencies not affected by the shutdown -- including the Labor Department, Federal Housing Finance Agency, and the regional Federal Reserve banks -- would continue releasing data on a regular schedule. That means the markets would still get data on weekly unemployment claims, regional manufacturing surveys and house prices.
  • The independent Energy Information Administration, which publishes projections and reports relied upon by oil traders and energy analysts, was already funded through the fiscal year and wouldn’t be affected by a shutdown.
  • The last major government shutdown in 2013 delayed some releases for more than a month, such as new home sales and housing starts; others were delayed for several weeks, including trade and inflation.
  • The Federal Communications Commission would continue to run its 24-hour emergency-calls center, according to an agency plan. The FCC wouldn’t take consumer complaints, process broadcast and mobile licenses or authorize new wireless devices, the agency said.

Parks & Public Lands

National Park Service roads, lookouts, trails and open-air memorials generally would remain accessible -- just don’t try to use the bathroom or get insight from park rangers. All Smithsonian museums and the National Zoo will remain open with normal hours until Jan. 1.

  • The park service won’t provide visitor services, including restrooms, collecting trash and plowing roads. Campgrounds, boat ramps and other recreational sites overseen by the Bureau of Land Management would stay open, but restrooms would be locked and water systems would be shut down.
  • Campgrounds, picnic areas and boat launches operated by the Forest Service funded by user fees would remain open.
  • Ski areas operating on Forest Service land with a permit can remain open if a federal employee isn’t required to be present.

Energy & Environment

Oil, gas and coal companies should see little impact on day-to-day operations, as several federal agencies dip into non-lapsing appropriations and use exemptions to ensure most permits keep flowing and inspectors don’t stop examining drilling rigs and coal mines.

  • The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement would keep processing new permits to drill and performing inspections needed to begin drilling. Applications to modify drilling permits would be considered on a case-by-case basis, with the agency focusing on those needed to ensure safe operations.
  • The Bureau of Land Management would keep deploying inspectors to oil and logging facilities on federal land. The BLM also would keep permitting selected energy, minerals, grazing and other activities where it collects a processing fee. Employees focused on the administration and regulation of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline that ferries crude from the North Slope also would stay on the job.
  • At the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which includes the National Weather Service, all services related to weather forecast and warning would continue during a shutdown, according to a plan released in July. Most research, however, would halt, aside from what’s needed for hurricane and air travel planning.
  • The Environmental Protection Agency, which seeks to safeguard air, water and public health, wouldn’t abandon hundreds of toxic sites in the midst of cleanup, but much of the agency’s day-to-day work would cease.
  • The EPA would continue operations at Superfund sites where halting the work could put human life in jeopardy, for instance by sending polluted drainage into a community’s drinking water supply, according to a contingency plan.
  • Little would change at NASA, which has said in a contingency plan released in November 2017 that it would continue to support the International Space Station, satellites and research activity that can’t safely be suspended. For satellites that haven’t yet been launched, “unfunded work will generally be suspended.” All public tours of NASA facilities would be canceled.

DOJ and Courts

The Department of Justice activities will largely continue uninterrupted during a shutdown since its operations involve protection of life and property. U.S. attorneys will continue their activities without interruption, according to a shutdown plan from the department.

  • Special Counsel investigations, such Robert Mueller’s probe into the Russian interference into the 2016 presidential election, also wouldn’t be affected because it has permanent, indefinite funding, according to the DOJ plan.
  • The Supreme Court would continue its normal operations and the building will continue to be open to the public during normal business hours.
  • Federal courts could remain open for about three weeks using funds from other sources, but the courts would look for ways to limit expenses, such as cutting travel and training, according to U.S. Courts spokeswoman Jackie Koszczuk.

Foreign Affairs and Homeland Security

Interruptions at the Department of Homeland Security and the State Department would likely be minimal, since most operations and personnel are considered essential.

  • The vast majority of Customs and Border Protection and Immigration and Customs Enforcement workers would stay on the job if there’s a shutdown.
  • At the Federal Emergency Management Agency, almost 90 percent of the agency’s more than 20,000 employees are exempt from furlough, according to a contingency plan released in March of this year. Nor would the shutdown halt FEMA’s disaster payments, which go to victims of recent hurricanes, wildfires and other emergencies.
  • Embassies overseas are open in the event of a shutdown. Department guidance from the last time there was a threat of a shutdown, in January 2018, says that consular operations at home and abroad “will remain 100 percent operational as long as there are sufficient fees to support operations.” The only hitch would be if a passport office is located in a government building that’s closed because of a shutdown, according to the document.
  • Secretary of State Michael Pompeo is still expected to travel to Brazil, where he’ll attend the Jan. 1 inauguration of President-elect Jair Bolsonaro, even if the U.S. government shuts down.

Housing and Agriculture

The Department of Housing and Urban Development would continue to make Section 8 housing voucher payments, which assist low-income families. The U.S. Department of Agriculture would continue to inspect meat, poultry and eggs, and its data releases on cotton, dairy, produce and livestock would continue as needed to minimize market disruptions.

  • New housing voucher requests would not be processed but staff would be available to provide oversight of the program.
  • HUD’s homeless assistance grants, including support for veterans, would continue to operate.
  • Ginnie Mae, a government-owned corporation whose job is making mortgages more affordable, would continue to guarantee mortgage securities.

--With assistance from Ben Bain, Jennifer Epstein, Teaganne Finn, Katia Dmitrieva, Todd Shields, Ryan Beene, Jennifer A. Dlouhy, Ari Natter, Christopher Flavelle, Elizabeth Dexheimer, Nick Wadhams, Shawn Donnan and Greg Stohr.

To contact the reporter on this story: Laura Davison in Washington at ldavison4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alexis Leondis at aleondis@bloomberg.net, Gregory Mott

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.