Government
Agencies Have To Tear Down Their Websites, Even If It's Cheaper To
Leave Them Up
1
October, 2013
Underscoring
the peculiarity of the wealthiest nation on the planet partially
shutting down its government because it doesn't have enough
money, multiple
government agencies had to take down their websites today.
But
there's a catch. For many of these websites, it's entirely possible
that the cost of taking their site down and eventually spooling it
back up exceeds the
cost of just leaving it running without updates.
One
would think — if the actual goal of a shutdown were to conserve
limited cash resources — the government would prefer the cheaper
option.
Actually,
as far as the federal government is concerned, this has zero bearing
on whether the sites will remain online, as outlined in
this memo from
the Office of Management and Budget yesterday:
What
The Shutdown Means For Energy And Environmental Programs
1
October, 2013
As
you’ve probably heard, the U.S. government has shut down for the
first time in 17 years.
That
means many of the agencies responsible for weather, climate and
energy regulation are largely shuttered as well, forced to whittle
down their staffs to only their most essential employees. These
include:
The
Environmental Protection Agency.
The EPA is taking one of the biggest hits of any federal agency —
about
96 percent
of the agency’s staff aren’t coming to work, meaning the agency,
in EPA Chief Gina
McCarthy’s words,
has “essentially shut down.” The staff that will be coming to
work include
employees who “ensure continued public health and safety, including
safe use of food and drugs and safe use of hazardous materials,” as
well as workers who protect federal lands and research property and
provide disaster and emergency aid.
Managers of some Superfund
cleanup sites must come to work if stopping the work would pose a
threat to human health; pesticide regulators, staff who
write and implement
major air pollution rules, and staff who are in charge of the EPA’s
proposal for renewable fuel standards, on the other hand, will stay
home.
National
Parks.
Google celebrated the 123rd anniversary of Yosemite National Park
today; ironically, because the park — and all other national parks,
monuments
and government-funded museums — is now closed
to the public.
The oil and gas industry, however, will keep on drilling on public
lands, though the process for issuing new oil and gas permits will be
halted.
Only a few employees will be
at work
overseeing drilling activities such as “well shut-ins,
re-completions, and downhole/equipment changes in drilling/plugging
operations.”
The
Department of Energy.
The DOE is losing 69 percent of its staff. Most employees conducting
energy research are staying home during the shutdown, but those
employees who oversee
nuclear materials
and power grids, as well as one employee from the Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy and a few employees responsible
for environmental cleanup
are still at work.
NASA.
The agency is taking the biggest hit of all – 97 percent of its
employees are staying home due to the shutdown. Scientists at the
international space station, of course, are still at work, and the
agency
is making sure
they’re still being taken care of. NASA’s Asteroid Watch Twitter
account, however, is down,
which means it won’t be warning the public via social media of
potentially dangerous asteroids. The account clarified
that “many observatories, astronomers are watching the skies” so
at least they’ll be on the lookout, even if they won’t be
tweeting.
The
good news, however, is that a few government agencies and
organizations have managed to skirt the shutdown. Here are a few of
the major energy and climate-related exceptions:
The
National Weather Service.
You’ll still be able to recieve weather forecasts and warnings,
because the NWS is considered
an essential service.
As NOAA, which houses the NWS, explains:
“emergency operations that protect against a significant and
imminent threat to the safety of human life and property” will
remain open, despite the shutdown. At 3,935 employees, the NWS is by
far the largest organization within NOAA to remain open, but it’s
not the only weather-related organization to avoid the shutdown —
the National Hurricane Center, too, will continue
to track storms.
Colorado
flood relief.
FEMA has assured
Coloradans
that aid to the state devastated by recent flooding will continue.
“Our ongoing response operations, such as the individual assistance
being provided to survivors of the flooding in Colorado, will not be
impacted directly by a government shutdown,” said
FEMA spokesperson Dan Watson. “FEMA’s response to disasters and
emergencies is funded by the Disaster Relief Fund, which would not
initially be affected by a funding lapse for annual appropriations.”
However, the roughly 120 Colorado National Guard members working to
repair roads and bridges could
be told to go home
if Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel doesn’t reclassify them as
“essential.”
Hurricane
Sandy rebuilding.
There were worries that a shutdown would halt much of the rebuilding
of the East Coast from Superstorm Sandy’s destruction, but the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers says
dredging and dune rebuilding projects are already funded, so work on
these projects will continue. But there’s a caveat: relief fund
recipients will still have access to their money, but all new funding
would be halted during the shutdown, which could, as President Obama
said Monday, cause some home and business owners to see delays in
rebuilding.
The
Energy Information Administration.
According to one EIA official, the administration has enough
funds
to stay open until Oct. 11, despite the shutdown. The EIA provides
weekly updates on U.S. oil and natural gas inventories as well as
periodical information about the state of renewable energy in
America.
The
Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research and the National Marine
Fisheries Service.
Both housed within NOAA, these departments are responsible for air
quality and climate monitoring research that ensures “continuity of
crucial long-term historical climate records,” and protection and
monitoring of endangered ocean species and protected marine areas,
respectively. They employ 547 staff members between the two of them,
and they both are staying
open.
As US Government Shuts
Down the Poorest Set to Lose
Most
US Congress fails to pass budget legislation before midnight deadline, shuttering large portions of the government
1
October, 2013
For
the first time in 17 years the U.S. government began a partial
shutdown of government programs Tuesday morning following a failure
across the House and Senate to agree on a stop-gap budget proposal
before its midnight deadline.
As
Wall Street looked shaky among uneasy implications for the economy,
Imara Jones at Colorlines points out, "the parts of the
government affected by the shutdown disproportionately impact
economic opportunity programs for the working poor."
"Historically
marginalized communities are likely to the feel the effects of a
shutdown acutely as time goes on," Jones states.
According
to Jones, those negative consequences include:
- delays in application processes for essential programs such as Medicare and Medicaid
- an impaired ability to fight disease as The Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health will be forced to scale back
- closure of the Women Infants and Children Program (WIC)—a food aid program "which covers seven million children and infants, and their mothers"
- cuts in funding for programs designed for children in need such as Head Start, educational services for low income students such as Title I education grants, and student loan and grant application programs
- and much much more
As
roughly one million government employees brace themselves for forced
furloughs, it is not clear when Congress will squeeze through a
budget bill that would end the shutdown.
And
as Jones points out:
What’s
particularly distressing about the shuttering of the government is
that it comes at a time when unemployment remains in the double
digits for blacks and Latinos. As the Center for American Progress
points out, federal, state and local governments since 2008 have
eliminated 750,000 public sector jobs. Given unionization and strong
anti-discriminatory hiring practices, people of color are more likely
to have jobs in the public sector. This is particularly true for
African-Americans, and it’s why joblessness remains so stubborn in
communities of color.
The
next bill deadline set for the lawmakers is on October 17, when they
must decide on whether or not to raise the country's debt
ceiling—another decision likely to put Washington in deadlock.
Reuters
reports:
The
shutdown will continue until Congress resolves its differences, which
may be days or months. But the conflict could spill over into the
more crucial dispute over raising the federal government's borrowing
authority.
A
failure to raise the $16.7 trillion debt ceiling would force the
country to default on its obligations, dealing a blow to the economy
and sending shock-waves around global markets."The
key to this is not what happens in Washington," Democratic
strategist Chris Kofinis told Reuters.
"The key is what happens
out in the real world. When Joe Public starts rebelling and the
financial markets start melting down, then we'll see what these guys
do."
At
the center of this week's feud was the Republican led House's
insistence on including within the bill a provision that would delay
or diminish the Obama administration's cherished Affordable Care Act.
The
budget bill was repeatedly sent back and forth between the two
chambers, who were unwilling to pass the other's version.
The
ACA, otherwise known as Obamacare, will not be affected by the
shutdown, and as of Tuesday officially began implementation.
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