How a Government Shutdown Would Affect NASA

With the U.S. government just hours away from a potential shutdown as lawmakers struggle to agree on a new spending bill, more than 18,000 NASA employees around the country are bracing for the agency to temporarily shut down as well.

If Congress does not pass a continuing resolution by 12:01 a.m. EST (0501 GMT) on Saturday, almost all of NASA’s employees — along with most of the federal workforce — will be furloughed, their jobs suspended without pay. Only those employees whose work is deemed critical to protecting the health and safety of humans or property will be exempt from the furlough, NASA officials detailed in the agency’s official plan for a government shutdown.

For example, a shutdown will not leave the three NASA astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) high and dry. “ISS operations will continue with critical personnel,” Kenneth Todd, NASA’s ISS operations integration manager, said during a briefing on Thursday (Jan. 18), in which he discussed two upcoming spacewalks that NASA astronauts will conduct on Jan. 23 and Jan. 29.

With the U.S. government just hours away from a potential shutdown as lawmakers struggle to agree on a new spending bill, more than 18,000 NASA employees around the country are bracing for the agency to temporarily shut down as well.

If Congress does not pass a continuing resolution by 12:01 a.m. EST (0501 GMT) on Saturday, almost all of NASA’s employees — along with most of the federal workforce — will be furloughed, their jobs suspended without pay. Only those employees whose work is deemed critical to protecting the health and safety of humans or property will be exempt from the furlough, NASA officials detailed in the agency’s official plan for a government shutdown.

For example, a shutdown will not leave the three NASA astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) high and dry. “ISS operations will continue with critical personnel,” Kenneth Todd, NASA’s ISS operations integration manager, said during a briefing on Thursday (Jan. 18), in which he discussed two upcoming spacewalks that NASA astronauts will conduct on Jan. 23 and Jan. 29. [In Photos: President Donald Trump and NASA]

Those two spacewalks are expected to continue according to plan regardless of a government shutdown. However, if the government is still not up and running by the time those spacewalks take place, people on Earth will not be able to watch live webcasts of the spacewalks on NASA TV or online, ABC13 reports, because that would require “non-essential” furloughed personnel to be present at NASA’s Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston.

And don’t expect the astronauts to tweet any cool pictures from space during the shutdown — those are also published via employees at JSC, ABC13 reports.

NASA employees who are furloughed may or may not be paid for the time off work, as “pay for these days would depend on future appropriations,” NASA’s shutdown plan explains.

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