Don’t pinch yourself, the shutdown’s no dream

The shutdown has created a kaleidoscopic of open, sort-of-open and closed federal operations. As it spins, the effects spread wider and wider.

If the federal government’s partial shutdown was a dream, Freud would say it has manifest and latent effects.

It’s hard to see the latent effects from the outside — experiments not completed, policy left undeveloped, grantees left in limbo, software still partially coded.

The more immediate manifest effects, though, are popping up all over.

A Washington, D.C. attorney told me one of his contractor clients is worried about whether to hire people. Why? Because the E-Verify system, operated by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, is down for the duration. By law, companies are supposed to run all hires’ names through E-Verify to check their eligibility to work in the United States. The question arises: If the company, or any company, hires but fails to get e-verification in a timely manner, is it indictable?

The online parts of government are as barren as some of the offices.

I spoke with one vendor about the National Insitute of Standards and Technology computer security team’s Special Publication 800-63. When I tried to call it up, the NIST web site displayed the modern day equivalent of the Indian-head test pattern: Unavailable.

You’ve read and heard the countless stories of restaurants, food trucks and hotels seeing their business drop. The Washington Post had an anecdote about a brewery that can’t bring out its latest ales. Who knew it required federal approval for a label on a beer bottle?

Hundreds of thousands of furloughed and exempted federal employees are about to reach their first day without a paycheck. They’ve received many offers of help. Two non-profit organizations I’m personally involved with are willing to wait on membership dues. At least one federal credit union, PenFed, is offering zero-percent bridge loans to its direct-deposit members. I appeared on CBC News: The National in a piece that included a D.C. bagel vendor offering free goodies to unpaid feds.

The sub-industry of federally-focused conferences is taking a hit, as well. Associations, media companies, commercial conference organizers, and agencies themselves have been postponing or canceling events requiring federal speakers and attendees. Even exempted federal managers on the job are reluctant to “speechify” as if everything is normal. Sponsors pull back because they don’t want to reach empty rooms.  Postponements and cancellations also drag rental venues and caterers into the affected mix.

For all the fuss, the government is not frozen. Among the green shoots I found, for example, was the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s web site, which says it’s resumed selling flood insurance. The IRS reopened the application for taxpayers to obtain new personal identification numbers, while the  State Department is still processing passport applications online, at acceptance facilities including post offices and through the mail. As far as I could tell, you can still apply for Pre✓ status at the Transportation Security Administration.

For contractors doing business with the government, the situation looks bleaker. I don’t know what’s worse, suspending work or having to go in and support federal operations with only the hope you’ll be paid. The SEC, for instance, published a list of contracts it says “are required to support certain SEC functions” during the shutdown. It adds up to more than 100 contracts and with about 75 companies.

The shutdown has created a mixed bag, a kaleidoscopic mishmash of open, sort-of-open and closed federal operations. As it spins, the effects spread wider and wider.

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