Unions demand to know debt ceiling impact on feds

A coalition of 21 groups representing five-million federal employees and retirees wrote a letter to OMB and Treasury asking for information about what happens to...

By Emily Kopp
Reporter
Federal News Radio

Unions representing federal workers are demanding details from the Office of Management and Budget and the Treasury Department about how the failure to raise the national debt ceiling by Aug. 2 may affect government workers.

The Federal-Postal Coalition, a group of 21 unions, sent a letter to OMB Director Jacob Lew and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner asking them to clarify whether missing the early August deadline would shut down government operations, lead to furloughs or impact workers’ pay or retirement funds.

“The prospect of congressional inaction by Aug. 2 over raising the debt ceiling is generating significant concern throughout the federal community,” the letter said.

The coalition represents nearly five-million federal workers, postal employees and retirees.

One signatory, the National Treasury Employees Union, is planning a rally in New York on Tuesday to oppose proposed cuts to federal funding and services.

President Barack Obama has warned that the United States may not be able to pay all of its bills if Congress fails to raise the federal borrowing limit before next month’s deadline.

RELATED STORIES:

SSA tells employees to keep mum on debt ceiling questions

Pay, Pensions, Puppies & The Debt Limit

Debt limit countdown: Day-to-day costs to keep your agency open

Copyright © 2024 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    US Election 2024 Congress

    Government shutdown is averted just after deadline as Congress rejects Trump’s debt limit demands

    Read more
    Alyson Fligg/Labor DepartmentClare Martorana

    Why OMB’s human-centered policy design effort is paying off

    Read more