Lawmakers detail $4 billion in shutdown costs

A new Senate staff report lays out the huge costs of shutting down federal agencies during funding fights over the past five years.

Mark Van Scyoc / Shutterstock.com DECEMBER 26, 2018: Sign at the visitor’s entrance of the US National Archives states it is closed due to the government shutdown. - Image
 

A Senate report puts the price tag on 52 days of government shutdowns over the past five years at $4 billion, including $3.7 billion in back pay to furloughed or unpaid federal workers and $338 million in associated costs.

The report from the bipartisan staff of the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee listed some of those associated costs as administrative work, lost revenue and reopening costs. Additionally, the report detailed social costs of shutdowns such as the lack of financial fraud enforcement, damage to closed or unattended national parks and delays in implementing recalls of dangerous consumer products. More substantially, the report noted estimates from the Congressional Budget Office that shutdowns take a toll on the national economy.

"Federal government shutdowns don't save money, they actually cost taxpayers billions of dollars," said Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio), the chairman of the subcommittee that handled the report.

Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.), the subcommittee ranking member, said that government shutdowns are "avoidable failures of governance that hemorrhage taxpayer dollars, put our nation's federal agencies in organizational and financial disarray and pose risks to our national security. The impacts can be felt in every corner of our country, in red states and blue states alike."

The report said lost productivity hours totaled more than 56,000 years of work time and back wages paid totaled more than $3.66 billion.

The report recommended Congress pass legislation to institute automatic continuing resolutions in the event of a lapse in appropriations -- essentially a ban on shutdowns.

Portman has offered bills in the past designed to do just that -- put in place a stopgap funding bill in the event that Congress and the White House can't agree on a funding package before the start of a new fiscal year or the expiration of a short-term continuing resolution.

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