Houston Chronicle

JSC contractor­s denied back pay

Budget bill signed by Trump denies refunds to some who worked through the shutdown

- By Alex Stuckey

Contract workers at NASA’s Johnson Space Center are denied back pay for the 35-day federal government shutdown in a budget deal President Donald Trump signed on Friday.

Contract workers at NASA’s Johnson Space Center were denied back pay for the 35-day federal government shutdown in a budget deal signed by President Donald Trump on Friday.

“The rejection of federal contract worker back pay by the GOP leadership in this funding deal is outrageous and unfair,” Robert Martinez Jr., president of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Machinists and Aerospace Workers union, said in a statement. “It was a 35-day disaster that created extreme stress for federal contract workers and continues to put their financial well-being at risk. We need Congress to act now.”

The shutdown — which started Dec. 22 over a political battle for funding a border wall between the U.S. and Mexico — left thousands of Johnson employees out of work until the budgetary impasse ended Jan. 25. Trump signed a budget deal Friday, averting another shutdown and funding the government through September.

Included in the legislatio­n is 55 miles of border fencing, but Trump wanted more than 200.

During the 35-day shutdown, about 94 percent of Johnson’s 3,055 federal employees were out of work, but they quickly received back pay after the shutdown ended. The four postdoctor­al fellows working at the Houston site also received back pay.

But there wasn’t much NASA could do about the contractor­s who work on site, NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e said in January. Contractor back pay was on a case-by-case basis, depending on the contract, he added.

About 7,500 contractor­s work at the site, according to a fiscal year 2017 report released by the Houston center last year, though it was not clear how many were out of work during the shutdown. Many were able to continue working — with pay — for some or all of the 35 days.

Bills were filed in Congress to provide as much as $1,400 per week to contractor­s affected by the shutdown, and those mea-

sures have not yet been approved. But language to pay contractor­s for their time without work was left out of the budget deal reached this week.

So contractor­s, for the most part, are out of luck.

“We urge Republican and Democratic leadership to quickly pass legislatio­n to secure back pay for the federal contract workers,” Martinez said. “This shutdown created hardship for more than 1 million hardworkin­g, dedicated federal contract workers through no fault of their own.”

Bridenstin­e said in January that he hopes to standardiz­e this process more over time, and asked that federal employees be sensitive and understand­ing.

“Every contract is different and so we’re working through that right now,” he said. “In the future, we’d like to standardiz­e that more, but we’re working with what we have right now.”

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