What to know about government shutdowns and advanced ED

During the first week of the closure, about 95% of the Ministry of Education’s employees who do not engage in federal student aid will be taken on leave.
Justin Morrison / Photo Illustrations of Internal Premium ED | Getty Images
Congress has failed to reach a deal to fund federal agencies since 2019, the first time the government has closed.
Among the employees in the education department that do not work in federal student aid, about 95% of employees will be paid without pay during the first week and thousands of others across the federal government provide salaries. Other workers considered critical to keeping critical operations running will have to work for free. According to the agency’s draft plan, the education department expects the closure to last more than a week, and the education department is expected to bring in 330 employees, which will keep 87% of the workforce’s leave.
Student Aid Dollar will continue to browse programs including Pell Grant, student loan payments, and will provide free applications for federal student aid. However, the department plans to stop grant activities and suspend civil rights investigations. Officials will also continue meetings to review the proposed regulatory changes, a key step in a long process known as negotiating rulemaking. The postponement of this week’s meeting could make it difficult for the department to comply with an already tightened schedule to complete the new rules by July next year.
Elsewhere, closures will reduce federal services, and the Department of Labor will not release new employment data. Trump officials suggest they can fire employees and cut off other services. But for senior emergency rooms, closures may not cause significant disruption in the initial stage.
Three things to know about closures and how they affect American universities.
Currently directly affects the Co., Ltd.
The general rule of thumb for closing is that the longer it lasts, the more it will be subverted. The U.S. Board of Education’s statement on the closure said that brief people have “limited direct impact” on the institution. But within eight months of the Trump administration, such closures could provide more uncertainty to universities, faculty and students.
“When colleges and university budgets are budgeted for the current fiscal year, they have no budgets closed,” said Emmanual Guillory, senior director of government relations at ACE. “Potential loss of revenue is always a problem at the bottom line.”
He added that communication with the agency could be disrupted due to furloughs. For example, if an institution has questions about an ongoing civil rights investigation, they may just have to wait for the answer. He advised agency leaders to “beware of the time of closing” and “what this means for revenue and compliance”. When operations resume, agents may return to backlogs.
According to the ACE, the previous closures began in December 2018 and lasted for 34 days and delayed $18 billion in federal discretionary spending.
Experts predict that the closure could last for at least a few weeks.
Research interruption, visa
The National Institutes of Health will torture 75% of its employees and stop all grants as well as travel and basic research. Similarly, the National Science Foundation will not grant new grants, science Report. But both institutions will still accept applications.
The last closure hindered research and caused other headaches for researchers who rely on the federal government for support. Some federal websites are expected to be offline, and the ACE fact sheet states that in previous closures, the integrated college education data system was inaccessible.
According to the ACE, international students may also see some disruption if they are waiting for visa appointments, but embassies and consulates will remain open.
A deeper threat
Apart from the uncertainty of the shutdown, President Trump and others have shown that they plan to make Democrats miserable, and they blame them for the deadlock. For example, Russ Vought, director of the Office of Management and Budget, threatened to lay off more federal employees last week, unless Democrats agree to a continued solution sponsored by Republicans, which will keep the lights until November 21 (VOUGHD and OMB determine which governments continue to perform what governments during the shutdown).
Trump responded to the threat of layoffs on Tuesday.
“We can do something irreversible during shutdown, which is bad for them, they are irreversible, such as cutting off a large number of people, cutting what they like, cutting the program they like, cutting the program they like,” he told reporters.
The Trump administration has fired thousands of federal employees, including nearly half of the Department of Education. Unions, Democratic-led states and others have sued to prevent layoffs, but so far the Supreme Court has allowed the government to do so. Unrestricted firing of federal workers led Congressional Democrats to argue that when the government opens up, there are few stops Trump officials from firing employees, so shutdowns won’t change things, politics Report.
“Whether there is a closure or not, they just continue to fire government employees,” said Rep. Glenn Ivey, Democrat of Maryland. “I don’t know that it will slow down in this regard. In fact, it might actually encourage them to think they can stay on the current track.”
Republicans in the Senate have a 53-seat majority, but they need Democrats’ support to get the 60 votes they need to pass their ongoing resolutions to fund the government by November 21.
Democrats hope to reach a deal that will partially expand tax credits to extend the Medicaid package included in the Affordable Care Act program and the A Large Beauty Act. They think they are willing to negotiate, while Republicans say they are hijacking the government.
The house is not in class this week.