Furloughed federal workers and those aligned with them protest the partial government shutdown in the Hart Senate Office Building on Jan. 23, 2019. In the latest showdown, if Congress fails to take action by March 22, funding for the departments of Defense, Treasury, Homeland Security, Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, State and other agencies, will expire.

Furloughed federal workers and those aligned with them protest the partial government shutdown in the Hart Senate Office Building on Jan. 23, 2019. In the latest showdown, if Congress fails to take action by March 22, funding for the departments of Defense, Treasury, Homeland Security, Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, State and other agencies, will expire. Win McNamee/Getty Images

More than 600K federal employees are facing furloughs this week

Congress and the White House are still negotiating over a funding plan as they face a partial shutdown deadline on Friday.

Updated March 19 at 6:15 p.m.

The federal agencies facing a shutdown threat later this week would send home more than 600,000 employees if Congress fails to enact funding by Friday, furloughing them with only the promise of backpay.

An additional 780,000 workers would remain on the job, either because they are funded through mechanisms other than annual appropriations or their jobs are deemed necessary to protect life and property. If Congress fails to take action by the March 22 deadline, funding for agencies appropriated through six of the 12 annual must-pass spending bills—the departments of Defense, Treasury, Homeland Security, Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, State and other agencies—will expire. The remaining roughly 600,000 federal employees would remain on the job, as their agencies already received full-year appropriations.

The agencies caught up in the current showdown employ about 1.4 million people, or about three-quarters of the federal workforce. About 44% of those would face furloughs, according to the contingency plans each agency must maintain and have largely updated in recent months. 

The Defense Department, the largest agency in government, would send home about 55% of its civilian workforce. The Education Department would send home the largest share of its workforce among cabinet-level agencies, with nearly 90% of its employees set to receive furloughs. Some agencies, such as the General Services Administration, most recently planned to use “carryover funds” to keep most of their employees on the job at the outset of a shutdown. The impacted agencies have been operating under a series of stopgap continuing resolutions since October, however, so their plans may change if a shutdown occurs this week. 

As of Tuesday morning, top lawmakers still had not released a package of bills to fund the parts of government still operating under a CR and facing a shutdown threat this weekend. They had hoped to release text of the “minibus” over the weekend, but talks stalled as leaders in both parties and the White House have failed to come up with a plan to fund DHS. Late Monday, however, the negotiators appeared to reach a breakthrough that would end the shutdown threat for the remainder of fiscal 2024.

According to multiple reports, much of the delay related to disagreements over funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention capacity and for the Transportation Security Administration pay raises the Biden administration implemented last year. While overall funding for non-defense spending is set to stay essentially flat relative to fiscal 2023, the White House is seeking a boost for DHS to address those concerns and alleviate the pressure it has faced at the southwest border. 

“DHS needs a bill that funds operational pace,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said on Monday. “That is what the White House is fighting for.” 

She added that negotiations are ongoing and the administration is working for a resolution ahead of the shutdown deadline. Jean-Pierre stressed it was Congress’ “basic duty” to keep government open. 

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has vowed to give his members 72 hours from the time a bill is introduced until a vote. In the Senate, any one member can delay expedited bill consideration. Those hurdles could make it difficult to get the forthcoming minibus to President Biden’s desk without either at least a short funding lapse or another temporary spending bill.

Correction: This story has been updated to remove EEOC from the chart, which has already received full-year appropriations.