Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Some workers still unpaid after shutdown, worrying

- Michelle R. Smith

Nearly two weeks after the end of the longest government shutdown in U.S history, many federal workers are still reeling financiall­y and waiting to be made whole by government agencies that have struggled with payroll glitches and delays in ensuring everyone gets paid.

Thousand have not yet received full back pay while scrambling to catch up on unpaid bills and repay unemployme­nt benefits — all while another government shutdown looms next week.

“President Trump stood in the Rose Garden at the end of the shutdown and said, ‘We will make sure that you guys are paid immediatel­y.’ … And here it is, it’s almost two weeks later,” said Michael Walter, who works for the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e food safety inspection service in Johnstown, Pennsylvan­ia, and only got his paycheck Wednesday. He said two coworkers told him they still had received nothing.

The government has been short on details about how many people are still waiting to be paid.

Bradley Bishop, a spokesman for the Office of Management and Budget, said the Trump administra­tion had taken “unpreceden­ted steps to ensure federal employees impacted by the shutdown received back pay within a week.”

“Much opposite of ‘slow and chaotic,’ an overwhelmi­ng majority of employees received their pay by Jan. 31,” he said, though he didn’t respond to questions about how many people still hadn’t been paid.

The USDA said in a statement that pay was its top priority, but also did not respond to questions about how many workers were still awaiting paychecks. Asked to confirm that some people hadn’t been paid, USDA spokeswoma­n Amanda Heitkamp replied, “I’m not sure.”

Donna Zelina’s husband works for the Bureau of Indian Affairs in South Dakota. He has received only a portion of his back pay, and does not expect to be fully paid until Feb. 12. The couple had to drain their savings shortly before the shutdown when both his parents died, leaving them in a precarious financial position.

Zelina said she called her creditors, but they wouldn’t work with her. Her husband’s car loan went into forbearanc­e, causing them to rack up fees.

“I don’t think people really understand what people do in government and just assume that everybody … makes millions of dollars,” she said.

A spokesman for the Department of Interior, which handles payroll for more than five dozen government offices, did not answer when asked how many workers were due back pay, but said a “small group of employees” had not received anything.

The Census Bureau acknowledg­ed Tuesday that about 250 employees, or 6 percent of its work force, had yet to receive back pay. A spokesman said they expected those workers to be paid by Friday.

Other affected agencies include the Federal Aviation Administra­tion, where two unions representi­ng FAA workers said their members had not yet received all of their back pay.

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