USA TODAY US Edition

Small businesses suffer shutdown shudders

Federal workers sue over work without pay

- John Fritze

Sam Samhouri’s corner cafe in Oakland, California, sits on what might normally be considered a prime piece of real estate: directly across the street from an 18-floor office building.

The problem for Samhouri is that the campus that supplies most of his customers is the Ronald V. Dellums Federal Building. That means many of his lunchtime regulars have been furloughed by the partial government shutdown in its second week.

“There’s nobody there,” said Samhouri, whose City Cup cafe employs three people.

As the shutdown entered the new year, there were signs the lapse was beginning to have an effect, not just on the hundreds of thousands of federal employees who have been furloughed or forced to work without pay but also on the businesses and industries that rely on them.

Though the impact was obscured by Christmas, when government offices were already scheduled to be closed, it may become more pronounced as much of the nation returns to work Wednesday. Some businesses are waiting on government loan approvals. Others, near federal buildings or national parks, are worried about losing their customer base.

The shutdown began Dec. 22 when President Donald Trump and congressio­nal Democrats failed to reach an agreement over White House de-

mands for as much as $5 billion in additional funding for a border wall. Both sides are dug in, and there has been little indication that the impasse will be resolved quickly.

National parks remained open, though some reduced their services. Smithsonia­n museums in Washington have accommodat­ed visitors but are set to close this week. Social Security checks continued, and airport screeners remain at work.

But for many, the effect has been tangible.

Federal workers hit

“This time, it’s going to hurt a lot more because of the time of year it is,” said Justin Tarovisky, a correction­s officer at a federal prison in West Virginia and executive vice president of the local American Federation of Government Employees union.

“We work in a tough environmen­t,” Tarovisky said. “Not only does it linger in the back of your mind; it kind of drives morale down a little bit.”

Though there is a heavy concentrat­ion of federal workers in the Washington region, the majority of federal employees work outside the nation’s capital. California, Texas, Florida and Georgia, for instance, account for about 20 percent of the overall civilian workforce, according to data from the Office of Personnel Management.

In the past, including the 16-day shutdown in 2013, federal workers received back pay. That outcome is not guaranteed because it requires Congress and the White House to work together to pass a law mandating the back pay.

“I think one day of a shutdown is too much,” said Ryan Baugh, who works for the Office of Immigratio­n Statistics at the Department of Homeland Security and is an AFGE steward in the office. “As it goes on, the effects will be more strongly and widely felt.”

Both Tarovisky and Baugh stressed that they were speaking on behalf of the union, not their agencies. The AFGE sued the Trump administra­tion Monday, claiming it is illegal to require “essential” government employees to work without pay.

Though Trump delayed his annual trip to Florida to remain in Washington during the impasse, there was little evidence negotiatio­ns to resolve the standoff were underway. Trump and congressio­nal Democrats continued to trade partisan jabs, a sign that officials were nowhere close to a deal to reopen shuttered agencies.

House Democrats, who will take control of that chamber Thursday, readied a proposal to reopen the government by providing full-year funding for most department­s. The proposal would fund the Department of Homeland Security through Feb. 8, giving both sides additional time to strike a deal on border security.

“This legislatio­n reopens government services, ensures workers get the paychecks they’ve earned and restores certainty to the lives of the American people,” House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said in a joint statement Monday.

Trump rejected the proposal. “Democrats, come back from vacation now and give us the votes necessary for Border Security, including the Wall,” Trump tweeted Monday.

Small businesses waiting

When Andrew Rickabaugh and his brother-in-law decided to start a restoratio­n business last year in Huntsville, Alabama, they reached out to the Small Business Administra­tion to guarantee a loan to help them buy equipment.

The process was going smoothly – Rickabaugh said he expected approval around Christmas – until the shutdown hit.

The Small Business Administra­tion guaranteed more than $30 billion in loans to companies in the fiscal year that ended in 2017, but processing of most loans was suspended when the agency closed. Rickabaugh couldn’t reach SBA officials in Alabama.

“We’re having to do things a little differentl­y than maybe we had planned,” said Rickabaugh, whose company, Rick-N-Ball Restoratio­n, fixes damage caused by water, mold, smoke and other hazards. “It’s unfortunat­e that the inability of politician­s to come to an agreement (means) people like us ... pay a price.”

Rickabaugh said he’s pushing forward with the business, relying on his own credit. He described the government shutdown as a “speed bump that we will overcome whether that loan comes through or not.”

Officials near federal park lands remained concerned about how an extended shutdown might affect businesses. In Florida, most federal wildlife refuges and parks were at least partially open Monday. That meant fishing and birding guides, as well as other services, were open – for now.

Everglades City Mayor Howie Grimm said keeping those businesses running is crucial to his town.

“If they would shut them down, that would hurt for sure,” he said. “Hopefully, they can get things worked out, and the country can go back to work.”

“I think one day of a shutdown is too much.”

Ryan Baugh Office of Immigratio­n Statistics

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP ?? Lawmakers are due back at the Capitol on Thursday, but there has been no sign of either side giving way on the dispute over Trump’s border wall.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP Lawmakers are due back at the Capitol on Thursday, but there has been no sign of either side giving way on the dispute over Trump’s border wall.
 ?? WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES ?? The pain of a partial government shutdown may become more pronounced as people return from holiday breaks this month. Congress is set to come back to the Capitol on Thursday to renew the funding feud.
WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES The pain of a partial government shutdown may become more pronounced as people return from holiday breaks this month. Congress is set to come back to the Capitol on Thursday to renew the funding feud.

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