Transportation Agencies Reopen After Truce Ends Historic Shutdown
Senior Reporter

The truce between congressional Democrats and President Donald Trump on Jan. 25 halting the longest federal government shutdown in history meant more than 16,000 staffers at the U.S. Department of Transportation will no longer be furloughed.
DOT furloughed 16,501 staffers across its agencies. The Federal Aviation Administration, for instance, furloughed the highest number of staffers at 13,944 during the shutdown. The Maritime Administration furloughed the fewest at 274, according to the department鈥檚 鈥淧lan for Appropriation Lapse鈥 guidance, revised as of Jan. 11.
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Employees at the Federal Highway Administration and the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration were not furloughed, due primarily to a funding structure backed by the Highway Trust Fund. The federal account operates on revenue generated from the 24.4-cents-per-gallon diesel tax and 18.4-cents-per-gallon gas tax.
DOT did not comment on the effect the 35-day partial shutdown may have had on transportation agencies.
The National Transportation Safety Board, an independent agency, announced its employees had resumed normal operations and were planning a way forward to conduct the work halted during the shutdown. It indicated 367 employees out of 397 employees had been furloughed.
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After Trump announced the truce from the Rose Garden, members of Congress reported to the Capitol. The agreement to reopen the government for three weeks included establishing a bipartisan conference committee of senior lawmakers to negotiate a compromise on Trump鈥檚 $5.7 billion request for a border wall. The president insisted repeatedly Mexico would fund his campaign promise, before turning to taxpayers.
鈥淥ver the next 21 days, I expect that both Democrats and Republicans will operate in good faith. This is an opportunity for all parties to work together for the benefit of our whole beautiful, wonderful nation,鈥 Trump said. 鈥淚f we make a fair deal, the American people will be proud of their government for proving that we can put country before party. We can show all Americans, and people all around the world, that both political parties are united when it comes to protecting our country and protecting our people.鈥
.: "If we don鈥檛 get a fair deal from Congress, the Government will either shutdown on February 15th again鈥攐r I will use the powers afforded to me under the laws and the Constitution of the United States to address this emergency. We will have great security." 鈥 The White House (@WhiteHouse)
Acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney indicated Trump would be ready to again shut agencies down if negotiations do not prove fruitful for the administration.
鈥淓verybody wants to look at this and say the president lost. We鈥檙e still in the middle of these negotiations. He just agreed to open the government while that was going on. So the president takes this deadly seriously,鈥 Mulvaney said on 鈥淔ace The Nation鈥 on Jan. 27.
On 鈥淢eet The Press鈥 on Jan. 27, House Democratic Caucus Chairman Hakeem Jeffries of New York indicated his party would welcome an opportunity to collaborate with Republicans on 鈥21st century鈥 border security and other policies during the 116th Congress.
鈥淲e鈥檝e said we鈥檙e going to fight hard for lower health care costs, to increase pay for everyday Americans, strengthen the Affordable Care Act, protect people with pre-existing conditions, enact a real infrastructure plan. We want to do that in a bipartisan way. Trillion-dollar infrastructure plan,鈥 Jeffries noted. 鈥淲e think it鈥檒l create 16 million good-paying jobs. Republicans, Democrats, even the president has supported the notion that we鈥檝e got to fix our broken infrastructure.鈥
Assessing the shutdown鈥檚 economic impact, the Congressional Budget Office announced that the gross domestic product was reduced by $3 billion in the fourth quarter of 2018 鈥渋n relation to what it would have been otherwise,鈥 while GDP is estimated to be $8 billion lower in the first quarter of 2019.
鈥淚n subsequent quarters, GDP will be temporarily higher than it would have been in the absence of a shutdown,鈥 according to CBO.
National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow took issue with CBO鈥檚 assessment. Briefing reporters at the White House on Jan. 28, he said, 鈥淲e frequently disagree with CBO.鈥
鈥淚 won鈥檛 acknowledge any of that right now. And, you know, in a $20 trillion economy, it鈥檚 awfully hard to make even the best guesstimates of those kinds of small fractions of numbers.鈥
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