Federal workers detail their worries as shutdown drags on

As the government shutdown barrels toward a month, some of the 800,000 federal employees impacted are in financial straits. The end of last week marked the first time workers did not receive a full paycheck. As a result, many are wondering how they’ll be able to pay bills.

According to real estate company Zillow, federal workers owe a combined $438 million in monthly mortgage and rent payments. Homeowners owe roughly $249 million while renters pay about $189 million a month.

Various government agencies have issued tips and letters for federal employees to help them weather the storm. Tips included things like holding a garage sale and doing maintenance work in exchange for rent.

“They’re insulting and absurd,” says Jacqueline Simon about the guidances. “It shows how out of touch [they] are with the lives of middle class people.” Simon is the policy director with the American Federation of Government Workers (AFGE), the largest federal employee union in the country, representing 700,000 government employees. The union tried to sue the Trump administration over delayed paychecks because of the shutdown, but a federal judge declined to compel the government to pay employees who are being forced to work with no pay.

“Our members are the rank and file. The federal correction officers, TSA officers, meat and poultry inspectors,” says Simon. “People who have very modest salaries who, after they pay their bills take home $500-$600 a week. They don’t have any cushion. This could be a disaster.”

A disaster is exactly what Suzette Pump says is waiting to happen to her family if her husband William isn’t paid soon. The couple lives in Vancouver, Wash.; he is a project coordinator for the Federal Aviation Administration. He’s worked for the government for 39 years, and has weathered government shutdowns before.

William Pump, a project coordinator for the FAA stands on the deck of his home in Vancouver, WA. He and his wife Suzette fear they might lose their home if this shutdown continues. Photo: Suzette Pump
William Pump, a project coordinator for the FAA stands on the deck of his home in Vancouver, WA. He and his wife Suzette fear they might lose their home if this shutdown continues. Photo: Suzette Pump

In the past, Pump says her husband was furloughed. But this time around, he was deemed essential and told to report to work. He worked without pay until last week, when he was told to go home.

The shutdowns, Pump complained, are “more frequent” now than ever before, and full of chaos. They’re frustrated, and also worried what will happen if the shutdown drags on for much longer and they’re forced to rely on just her paycheck.

‘They don’t like being pawns’

At 27 days, the partial shutdown is now the longest in modern history. President Trump has vowed to keep it going for “months, or even years” if he is not given the requested $5.7 billion in funding to build a wall along the southern border. He claims that many federal workers “approve” of his hardline tactic, but Simon disagrees.