Shutdown of the Federal Government:
Causes, Processes, and Effects

Clinton T. Brass
Analyst in Government Organization and Management
February 18, 2011
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RL34680
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress

Shutdown of the Federal Government: Causes, Processes, and Effects

Summary
When federal agencies and programs lack appropriated funding, they experience a funding gap.
Under the Antideficiency Act, they must cease operations, except in emergency situations. Failure
of the President and Congress to reach agreement on interim or full-year funding measures
occasionally has caused government shutdowns, the longest of which lasted 21 days, from
December 16, 1995, to January 6, 1996. Government shutdowns have necessitated furloughs of
several hundred thousand federal employees, required cessation or reduction of many government
activities, and affected numerous sectors of the economy. This report discusses the causes,
processes, and effects of federal government shutdowns, including potential issues for Congress.
For questions concerning congressional operations, see the contact information contained in the
“Key Policy Staff” table at the end of this report.
For background on funding gaps, see CRS Report RS20348, Federal Funding Gaps: A Brief
Overview
, by Jessica Tollestrup.

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Shutdown of the Federal Government: Causes, Processes, and Effects

Contents
Budget Negotiations and Choices ................................................................................................ 1
Causes of Federal Shutdowns...................................................................................................... 2
OMB and Agency Shutdown Processes ....................................................................................... 3
Effects of a Federal Government Shutdown................................................................................. 5
Effects on Federal Officials and Employees........................................................................... 5
Examples of Excepted Activities and Personnel..................................................................... 6
Effects on the Public ............................................................................................................. 7
Effects on Mandatory Spending Programs ............................................................................. 8
Potential Issues for Congress....................................................................................................... 9
Quality and Specificity of Agency Planning .......................................................................... 9
Availability of Agency Shutdown Plans............................................................................... 10

Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 10
Acknowledgments .................................................................................................................... 10
Key Policy Staff........................................................................................................................ 10

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Shutdown of the Federal Government: Causes, Processes, and Effects

Budget Negotiations and Choices1
It has been said that “conflict is endemic to budgeting.”2 If conflict between Congress and the
President or within Congress impedes the timely enactment of annual appropriations acts or
continuing resolutions, the possibility of a government shutdown arises.
During high-stakes negotiations over appropriations measures, a number of options present
themselves to Congress and the President, including
• coming to agreement on regular appropriations acts before the beginning of a
new fiscal year;
• using one or more interim continuing resolutions (CRs) to extend temporary
funding until final decisions are made; or
• not agreeing on full-year or interim appropriations acts, resulting in a funding
gap and a corresponding shutdown of federal activities.
If Congress and the President pursue the second or third options, they may agree on full-year
appropriations after the beginning of the fiscal year by using a full-year CR or, more commonly,
regular appropriations acts (e.g., singly or in omnibus legislation). Congress and the President
frequently agree on full-year or interim funding without coming to an impasse.3 On other
occasions, however, Congress and the President may not come to an accommodation in time to
prevent a funding gap.
This report discusses the causes of funding gaps and shutdowns of the federal government,4
processes that are associated with shutdowns, and how agency operations may be affected by
shutdowns. The report concludes with a discussion of potential issues for Congress.

1 Justin Murray, Information Research Specialist in the Knowledge Services Group, provided research support for this
report.
2 Irene S. Rubin, “Understanding the Role of Conflict in Budgeting,” in Roy T. Meyers, ed., Handbook of Government
Budgeting
(San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1999), p. 30.
3 For discussion, see CRS Report RL32614, Duration of Continuing Resolutions in Recent Years, by Jessica Tollestrup.
For analysis of the potential functions and impacts of CRs, see CRS Report RL30343, Continuing Resolutions: Latest
Action and Brief Overview of Recent Practices
, by Sandy Streeter; and CRS Report RL34700, Interim Continuing
Resolutions (CRs): Potential Impacts on Agency Operations
, by Clinton T. Brass. For more detailed discussion of the
potential impacts of CRs, see CRS Congressional Distribution Memorandum, Potential Impacts of Interim Continuing
Resolutions (CRs) on Agency Operations and the Functioning of the Federal Government
, coordinated by Clinton T.
Brass, July 8, 2008.
4 The report focuses on funding gaps and shutdowns that are associated with annual appropriations acts. It does not
focus on funding gaps and shutdowns that may occur when a specific program or agency is funded by legislation other
than annual appropriations acts, but the statutory authorization for the program or agency expires. Nevertheless, these
“expired authorization” shutdowns are similar in many ways to broader “annual appropriations” shutdowns. An
example of an expired authorization shutdown occurred in early 2010, when authorization for certain surface
transportation programs and trust funds expired after 11:59 p.m. on February 28, 2010. The expiration caused a lapse in
authority to expend funds that, among other things, affected certain construction projects on federal lands and required
nearly 2,000 U.S. Department of Transportation employees to be furloughed. On March 2, 2010, P.L. 111-144
reauthorized these activities (124 Stat. 45). On April 15, P.L. 111-157 provided compensation to furloughed federal
employees and ratified retroactively all “essential actions” taken during the lapse by federal employees, contractors,
and grantees to “protect life and property and to bring about orderly termination of Government functions” (124 Stat.
1118).
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Causes of Federal Shutdowns
The federal fiscal year begins October 1. For agencies and programs that are funded through
annual appropriations acts, Congress and the President must enact interim or full-year
appropriations by this date if many governmental activities are to continue operating. If interim or
full-year appropriations are not enacted into law, the time interval when agency appropriations are
not enacted is referred to as a “funding gap.”5 A funding gap also may occur any time a CR
expires and another CR (or regular appropriations bill) is not enacted immediately thereafter.
When a funding gap occurs, the federal government begins a “shutdown” of the affected
activities, including the furlough of non-emergency personnel and curtailment of agency activities
and services. Programs that are funded by laws other than annual appropriations acts (e.g.,
entitlements like Social Security) also may be affected by a funding gap, if program execution
relies on activities that receive annually appropriated funding.
Funding gaps and government shutdowns have occurred in the past when Congress and the
President did not enact regular appropriations bills by the beginning of the fiscal year. They also
have occurred when Congress and the President did not come to an agreement on stop-gap
funding through a CR. As noted in another CRS report, six fairly lengthy funding gaps occurred
from FY1977 to FY1980, ranging from 8 to 17 full days.6 Subsequently, the durations of funding
gaps shortened considerably. From FY1981 to FY1995, nine funding gaps occurred with
durations of up to three full days. A significant exception to the trend occurred in FY1996, when
President William Clinton and the 104th Congress engaged in extended negotiations over budget
policy. Two funding gaps and corresponding shutdowns, amounting to 5 days and 21 days,
ensued. There have been no similar funding gaps since FY1996.
The Constitution, statutory provisions, court opinions, and Department of Justice (DOJ) opinions
provide the legal framework for how funding gaps and shutdowns have occurred in recent
decades.7 Article I, Section 9 of the Constitution states that “No Money shall be drawn from the
Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law.” Federal employees and
contractors cannot be paid, for example, if appropriations have not been enacted. It would still be
possible under the Constitution, nevertheless, for the government to make contracts or other
obligations if it lacked funds to pay for these commitments.8 The so-called Antideficiency Act
prevents this, however. The act prohibits federal officials from obligating funds before an
appropriations measure has been enacted, except as authorized by law.9 The act also prohibits

5 CRS Report RS20348, Federal Funding Gaps: A Brief Overview, by Jessica Tollestrup. Some observers use
alternative terms “lapse in appropriations” and “appropriations hiatus” instead of “funding gap.”
6 Ibid. These funding gaps occurred before the Department of Justice issued opinions in 1980 and 1981 about allowable
agency activities during a funding gap. The opinions, which are discussed later, were restrictive in their implications
about allowable agency activities compared to what agencies had done in the past during a funding gap.
7 For legal analysis of funding gaps, see U.S. Government Accountability Office (formerly the General Accounting
Office; hereafter “GAO”), Principles of Federal Appropriations Law, 3rd ed., vol. II, GAO-06-382SP, February 2006,
ch. 6, pp. 6-146 - 6-159.
8 For discussion, see prepared statement of Walter Dellinger, Assistant Attorney General, in U.S. Congress, Senate
Committee on the Budget and House Committee on the Budget, Effects of Potential Government Shutdown, hearing,
104th Cong., 1st sess., September 19, 1995, S.Hrg. 104-175 (Washington: GPO, 1995), p. 18 (hereafter Effects of
Potential Government Shutdown
).
9 31 U.S.C. § 1341. The Antideficiency Act (31 U.S.C. §§ 1341-1342, §§ 1511-1519) is discussed in CRS Report
RL30795, General Management Laws: A Compendium, by Clinton T. Brass et al., pp. 93-97. GAO provides
information on the act, available at http://www.gao.gov/ada/antideficiency.htm.
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acceptance of voluntary services and employment of personal services exceeding what has been
authorized by law.10 Exceptions are made under the act to the latter prohibition for “emergencies
involving the safety of human life or the protection of property.” Therefore, the Antideficiency
Act generally prohibits agencies from continued operation in the absence of appropriations.
Failure to comply with the act may result in criminal sanctions, fines, and removal.
For years, many federal agencies continued to operate during a funding gap, while “minimizing
all nonessential operations and obligations, believing that Congress did not intend that agencies
close down” while waiting for the enactment of annual appropriations acts or continuing
resolutions.11 In 1980 and 1981, however, Attorney General Benjamin R. Civiletti issued two
opinions that more strictly interpreted the Antideficiency Act in the context of a funding gap,
along with its exceptions.12 The opinions stated that, with some exceptions, the head of an agency
could avoid violating the Antideficiency Act only by suspending the agency’s operations until the
enactment of an appropriation. In the absence of appropriations, exceptions would be allowed
only when there is “some reasonable and articulable connection between the function to be
performed and the safety of human life or the protection of property.”
In 1990, in response to the 1981 Civiletti opinion, Congress amended 31 U.S.C. § 1342 to clarify
that “the term ‘emergencies involving the safety of human life or the protection of property’ does
not include ongoing, regular functions of government the suspension of which would not
imminently threaten the safety of human life or the protection of property.”13 DOJ’s Office of
Legal Counsel (OLC) issued a memorandum in 1995 that interpreted the effect of the amendment
(hereafter, “1995 OLC opinion”).14 The 1995 OLC opinion said one aspect of the 1981 Civiletti
opinion’s description of emergency governmental functions should be modified in light of the
amendment, but that the 1981 opinion otherwise “continues to be a sound analysis of the legal
authorities respecting government operations” during a funding gap.15
OMB and Agency Shutdown Processes
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) provides agencies with annual instructions on
how to prepare for and operate during a funding gap in Circular No. A-11.16 The circular cites the
two Civiletti opinions and the 1995 OLC opinion as “background” and “guidance.” The circular
establishes two “policies” regarding the absence of appropriations: (1) a prohibition on incurring

10 31 U.S.C. § 1342; see also § 1515.
11 U.S. GAO, Funding Gaps Jeopardize Federal Government Operations, PAD-81-31, March 3, 1981, pp. i, 2, at
http://archive.gao.gov/f0102/114835.pdf.
12 43 Op. Att’y Gen. 224 (Apr. 25, 1980), 43 Op. Att’y Gen. 293 (January 16, 1981). The Civiletti opinions are
included in a GAO report as Appendices IV and VIII. See U.S. GAO, Funding Gaps Jeopardize Federal Government
Operations
. For discussion of exceptions, see U.S. GAO, Principles of Federal Appropriations Law, pp. 6-146 - 6-159.
13 Ibid., p. 6-151, citing P.L. 101-508, 104 Stat. 1388, at 1388-621.
14 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Legal Counsel, Government Operations in the Event of a Lapse in
Appropriations
, memorandum from Walter Dellinger, Assistant Attorney General, for Alice Rivlin, Director, Office of
Management and Budget, August 16, 1995, reprinted in Effects of Potential Government Shutdown, pp. 77-85.
15 Ibid., p. 78.
16 U.S. Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget (hereafter, “OMB”), Circular No. A-11:
Preparation, Submission, and Execution of the Budget
, July 2010, Section 124, available at
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_a11_current_year_a11_toc. See also CRS Report RS21665, Office of
Management and Budget (OMB): A Brief Overview
, by Clinton T. Brass.
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obligations unless the obligations are otherwise authorized by law and (2) permission to incur
obligations “as necessary for orderly termination of an agency’s functions,” but prohibition of any
disbursement (i.e., payment).
The circular also directs agency heads to develop and maintain shutdown plans, which are to be
submitted to OMB when initially prepared and also when revised. Agency heads are to use the
DOJ opinions and the circular to “decide what activities are essential to operate their agencies
during an appropriations hiatus.” Among other things, a shutdown plan is required to include
• an estimate of the time to complete the shutdown, to the nearest half-day;
• the number of employees expected to be on-board (i.e., filled positions) before
implementation of the plan;
• the total number of employees to be “retained” under the plan (i.e., not subject to
furlough), broken out into two categories: (1) employees “engaged in military,
law enforcement, or direct provision of health care activities” and (2) employees
whose “compensation is financed by a resource other than annual
appropriations”; and
• the total number of additional employees who will be retained, in order to protect
life and property, who are not “exempt” from furlough because of the two
previous criteria, above.
In general, the circular refers to employees who are to be furloughed as “released,” and
employees who will not be furloughed as “retained” or “exempt.”17 OMB’s circular also instructs
agencies to take personnel actions to release employees according to applicable law and Office of
Personnel Management (OPM) regulations.18
OMB documents and guidance from previous funding gaps and shutdowns may provide insights
into current and future practices. OPM has recommended on a website that agencies use OMB
guidelines to determine “excepted” positions (i.e., those not subject to furlough) and provided
retyped copies of previous OMB bulletins and memoranda for reference.19 These and other OMB
documents also have been reproduced in several legislative branch documents.20

17 In congressional hearings that focused on the first FY1996 shutdown, some witnesses expressed regret that the terms
“nonessential” and “essential” had been used to describe employees subject to furlough, and not subject to furlough,
respectively. Use of the term “nonessential” was demeaning, they suggested. See U.S. Congress, House Committee on
Government Reform and Oversight, Subcommittee on Civil Service, Government Shutdown I: What’s Essential?,
hearings, 104th Cong., 1st sess., December 6 and 14, 1995 (Washington: GPO, 1997) (hereafter, Government Shutdown:
What’s Essential?
), pp. 48, 228-229.
18 OPM maintains a website with guidance, historical OMB documents, and frequently asked questions about
furloughs, available at http://www.opm.gov/furlough/furlough.asp.
19 See ibid. The reproduced OMB documents include, in chronological order:
(1) OMB Bulletin No. 80-14, Shutdown of Agency Operations Upon Failure by the Congress to Enact Appropriations,
August 28, 1980 (citing the 1980 Civiletti opinion and requiring agencies to develop shutdown plans);
(2) OMB Memorandum, Agency Operations in the Absence of Appropriations, November 17, 1981 (referencing OMB
Bulletin No. 80-14; saying the 1981 Civiletti opinion remains in effect; and providing examples of “excepted activities”
that may be continued under a funding gap);
(3) OMB Bulletin No. 80-14, Supplement No. 1, Agency Operations in the Absence of Appropriations, August 20,
1982 (“updating” OMB Bulletin No. 80-14 and newly requiring agencies to submit contingency plans for review by
OMB);
(continued...)
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Effects of a Federal Government Shutdown
Effects on Federal Officials and Employees
Effects of a shutdown may occur in anticipation of a funding gap (e.g., planning), during a gap
(furlough and curtailed operations), and afterwards (e.g., reducing backlogs of work). An
immediate shutdown effect is the “shutdown furlough” of certain federal employees (i.e.,
placement in a temporary, nonduty, nonpay status).21 Several types of officials and employees are
not subject to furlough. These include Members of Congress,22 the President, presidential
appointees, certain legislative branch employees, and federal employees deemed “excepted.”23
“Excepted” employees, who are required to work during a shutdown, are described as
“employees who are excepted from a furlough by law because they are (1) performing emergency
work involving the safety of human life or the protection of property, (2) involved in the orderly
suspension of agency operations, or (3) performing other functions exempted from the
furlough.”24 Shutdown furloughs are not considered a break in service and are generally
creditable for retaining benefits and seniority.
During a funding gap, congressional employees whose pay is disbursed by the Secretary of the
Senate or the Chief Administrative Officer of the House of Representatives would not be paid if
there is no appropriation to fund legislative branch activities. Any decision regarding
requirements that a congressional employee continue to work during a government shutdown
would appear to fall to his or her employing authority.25

(...continued)
(4) OMB Memorandum M-91-02, Agency Operations in the Absence of Appropriations, October 5, 1990 (referencing
OMB Bulletin No. 80-14; stating that OMB Bulletin No. 80-14 was “amended” by the OMB Memorandum of
November 17, 1981; saying the 1981 Civiletti opinion remains in effect; and directing agencies on a Friday how to
handle a funding gap that begins during the weekend); and
(5) OMB Memorandum M-95-18, Agency Plans for Operations During Funding Hiatus, August 22, 1995 (referencing
OMB Bulletin No. 80-14, as amended; citing the 1981 Civiletti opinion; transmitting to agencies the 1995 OLC opinion
as an “update” to the 1981 Civiletti opinion; and directing agencies to send updated contingency plans to OMB).
20 See Effects of Potential Government Shutdown, pp. 77-85; U.S. GAO, Funding Gaps Jeopardize Federal
Government Operations
, Appendices V, VI, and VII; and Government Shutdown: What’s Essential?, pp. 99-112, 121-
131, and 428-430.
21 See http://www.opm.gov/furlough/furlough.asp.
22 Additional information regarding compensation for Members of Congress is available in CRS Report 97-615,
Salaries of Members of Congress: Congressional Votes, 1990-2010, by Ida A. Brudnick.
23 For additional discussion, including the status of legislative branch agencies and personnel, see ibid., U.S. GAO,
Principles of Federal Appropriations Law, pp. 6-149 - 6-150, and U.S. GAO, Letter from James F. Hinchman, GAO
General Counsel, to John J. Kominski, Library of Congress General Counsel, B-241911, October 23, 1990, at
http://archive.gao.gov/lglp2pdf23/087761.pdf.
24 See http://www.opm.gov/furlough/furlough.asp.
25 Congressional employing authorities include the following: individual Members of Congress for staff working in
personal offices; chairs of individual House, Senate, and joint committees for committee staff; Members who hold
leadership positions for staff in their respective leadership offices; House or Senate officers or officials for staff
working in those offices. In addition, those with authority to obligate funds may choose to constrain the incurring of
obligations for congressional activities such as travel, state or district facilities, or other non-personnel costs. For
questions regarding congressional and legislative branch operations, see the “Key Policy Staff” table at the end of this
report.
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Federal employees who have been affected by shutdowns historically have received their salaries
retroactively.26
As noted earlier, the two most recent shutdowns occurred in FY1996.27 The first, which lasted
five full days between November 13-19, 1995, resulted in the furlough of an estimated 800,000
federal employees. It was caused by the expiration of a continuing resolution agreed to on
September 30, 1995 (P.L. 104-31), and by President Clinton’s veto of a second continuing
resolution and a debt limit extension bill. The second FY1996 partial shutdown of the federal
government, and the longest in history, lasted 21 full days between December 15, 1995, and
January 6, 1996. The shutdown was triggered by the expiration of a continuing funding resolution
enacted on November 20, 1995 (P.L. 104-56), which funded the government through December
15, 1995. On January 2, 1996, the estimate of furloughed federal employees was 284,000.28
Another 475,000 excepted federal employees continued to work in nonpay status. There were
several short-term continuing resolutions between January 6, 1996, and April 26, 1996, when the
Omnibus Consolidated Rescissions and Appropriations Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-134) was enacted to
fund any agencies or programs not yet funded through FY1996.
Examples of Excepted Activities and Personnel
Previous determinations of excepted activities and personnel would not necessarily hold for any
future shutdown. However, past experience may inform future OMB and agency decisions. An
OMB memorandum of November 17, 1981, from Director David A. Stockman to the heads of
executive agencies, identified “examples of excepted activities.”29 The memorandum, which still
was in effect for the FY1996 shutdowns, explained
Beginning [on the first day of the appropriations hiatus], agencies may continue activities
otherwise authorized by law, those that protect life and property and those necessary to begin
phasedown of other activities. Primary examples of activities agencies may continue are
those which may be found under applicable statutes to:
1. Provide for the national security, including the conduct of foreign relations essential to the
national security or the safety of life and property.
2. Provide for benefit payments and the performance of contract obligations under no-year or
multi-year or other funds remaining available for those purposes.
3. Conduct essential activities to the extent that they protect life and property, including:
a. Medical care of inpatients and emergency outpatient care;

26 For example, for the FY1996 shutdowns, affected employees were guaranteed to be paid retroactively by provisions
in continuing resolutions (P.L. 104-56, Section 124, which itself was continued in P.L. 104-94), but did not receive
compensation until funding for their agencies was enacted.
27 This paragraph draws on CRS Report 95-906, Shutdown of the Federal Government: Effects on the Federal
Workforce And Other Sectors
, by James P. McGrath (September 25, 1997, out of print; available upon request).
28 Fewer employees, agencies, and programs were affected because some funding bills were enacted during the period
between the two shutdowns.
29 OMB Memorandum, Agency Operations in the Absence of Appropriations, November 17, 1981.
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b. Activities essential to ensure continued public health and safety, including safe use of
food and drugs and safe use of hazardous materials;
c. The continuance of air traffic control and other transportation safety functions and the
protection of transport property;
d. Border and coastal protection and surveillance;
e. Protection of Federal lands, buildings, waterways, equipment and other property
owned by the United States;
f. Care of prisoners and other persons in the custody of the United States;
g. Law enforcement and criminal investigations;
h. Emergency and disaster assistance;
i. Activities essential to the preservation of the essential elements of the money and
banking system of the United States, including borrowing and tax collection activities of
the Treasury;
j. Activities that ensure production of power and maintenance of the power distribution
system; and
k. Activities necessary to maintain protection of research property.
You should maintain the staff and support services necessary to continue these essential
functions.
Effects on the Public
The effects of the two FY1996 shutdowns on government activities and the public received
extensive attention. Although the effects on the public of any future shutdown would not
necessarily reflect past experience, past events may be illustrative of effects that are possible.30
Several examples follow that were reported in congressional hearings, news media, and agency
accounts.31
Health. New patients were not accepted into clinical research at the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) clinical center; the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention ceased disease surveillance; hotline calls to NIH concerning diseases

30 In 1981, GAO developed a “hypothetical case” of the possible effects of a 30-day government-wide funding gap and
shutdown, which the agency characterized as “unthinkable.” After the release of the first Civiletti opinion concerning
compliance with the Antideficiency Act, GAO characterized the opinion as “fundamentally alter[ing] the environment
in which Federal agencies must prepare for a period of expired appropriations.” Previously, interpretation of the
Antideficiency Act had been much less strict. The results of GAO’s illustrative survey are available in U.S. GAO,
Funding Gaps Jeopardize Federal Government Operations, pp. 48-56.
31 The examples are drawn from more extensive discussion in CRS Report 95-906, Shutdown of the Federal
Government: Effects on the Federal Workforce And Other Sectors
, by James P. McGrath (out of print; available upon
request). Many of the examples come from agency accounts in congressional hearings after the first FY1996 shutdown
(see Government Shutdown: What’s Essential?) and media accounts during and after the second shutdown.
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were not answered; and toxic waste clean-up work at 609 sites reportedly stopped
and resulted in 2,400 Superfund workers being sent home.32
Law Enforcement and Public Safety. Delays occurred in the processing of
alcohol, tobacco, firearms, and explosives applications by the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, and Firearms; work on more than 3,500 bankruptcy cases reportedly
was suspended; cancellation of the recruitment and testing of federal law-
enforcement officials reportedly occurred, including the hiring of 400 border
patrol agents; and delinquent child-support cases were delayed.33
Parks, Museums, and Monuments. Closure of 368 National Park Service sites
(loss of 7 million visitors) reportedly occurred, with loss of tourism revenues to
local communities; and closure of national museums and monuments (reportedly
with an estimated loss of 2 million visitors) occurred.34
Visas and Passports. Approximately 20,000-30,000 applications by foreigners
for visas reportedly went unprocessed each day; 200,000 U.S. applications for
passports reportedly went unprocessed; and U.S. tourist industries and airlines
reportedly sustained millions of dollars in losses.35
American Veterans. Multiple services were curtailed, ranging from health and
welfare to finance and travel.36
Federal Contractors. Of $18 billion in Washington, DC, area contracts, $3.7
billion (over 20%) reportedly were affected adversely by the funding lapse; the
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) was unable to issue a new
standard for lights and lamps that was scheduled to be effective January 1, 1996,
possibly resulting in delayed product delivery and lost sales; and employees of
federal contractors reportedly were furloughed without pay.37
Effects on Mandatory Spending Programs
Programs that are funded by laws other than annual appropriations acts—for example, some
entitlement programs—may, or may not, be affected by a funding gap. Specific circumstances
appear to be significant. For example, although the funds needed to make payments to
beneficiaries may be available automatically, pursuant to permanent appropriations, the payments
may be processed by employees who are paid with funds provided in annual appropriations acts.
In such situations, the question arises whether a mandatory program can continue to function
during a funding gap, if appropriations were not enacted to pay salaries of administering
employees. According to the 1981 Civiletti opinion, at least some of these employees would not

32 Government Shutdown: What’s Essential?, p. 23; and Stephen Barr and Frank Swoboda, “Jobless Aid, Toxic Waste
Cleanup Halt,” Washington Post, January 3, 1996, p. A1.
33 Government Shutdown: What’s Essential?, pp. 62, 228; and Stephen Barr and David Montgomery, “At Uncle Sam’s
No One Answers,” Washington Post, November 16, 1995, p. A1.
34 Dan Morgan and Stephen Barr, “When Shutdown Hits Home Ports,” Washington Post, January 8, 1996, p. A1.
35 Thomas W. Lippman, “Inconvenience Edges Toward Emergency,” Washington Post, January 3, 1996, p. A11.
36 Government Shutdown: What’s Essential?, pp. 115-117.
37 Peter Behr, “Contractors Face Mounting Costs from Government Shutdowns,” Washington Post, January 23, 1996,
p. C1; Government Shutdown: What’s Essential?, p. 270; and Peter Behr, “Latest Federal Shutdown Hits Contractors
Hard,” Washington Post, December 22, 1995, p. D1.
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be subject to furlough, because authority to continue administration of a program could be
inferred from Congress’s direction that benefit payments continue to be made according to an
entitlement formula.38 That is, obligating funds for the salaries of these personnel would be
excepted from the Antideficiency Act’s restrictions during a funding gap. However, such a
determination would depend upon the absence of contrary legislative history in specific
circumstances.
Nevertheless, the experience of the Social Security Administration (SSA) during the FY1996
shutdowns illustrates what might happen over a period of time in these situations. The lack of
funds for some employees’ salaries, for example, may impinge eventually on the processing and
payment of new entitlement claims. SSA’s administrative history describes how 4,780 employees
were allowed to be retained during the initial stages of the first shutdown.39 The majority of these
employees were “in direct service positions to ensure the continuance of benefits to currently
enrolled Social Security, SSI and Black Lung beneficiaries.” Avoidance of furloughs was
possible, because “appropriations were available to fund the program costs of paying benefits,
[which] implied authority to incur obligations for the costs necessary to administer those
benefits.” SSA furloughed its remaining 61,415 employees. Before long, however, SSA and OMB
reconsidered. SSA had not retained staff to, among other things, respond to “telephone calls from
customers needing a Social Security card to work or who needed to change the address where
their check should be mailed for the following month.” SSA then advised OMB that the agency
would need to retain 49,715 additional employees for direct service work, including the
processing of new claims for Social Security benefits. Further adjustments were made during the
considerably longer second shutdown, in response to increasing difficulties in administering the
agency’s entitlement programs.
Potential Issues for Congress
Quality and Specificity of Agency Planning
In December 1995, Representative John L. Mica, chairman of the Subcommittee on Civil Service
of the House Committee on Government Reform and Oversight, convened a hearing that focused
on the first FY1996 shutdown and potential implications for the future.40 Among other things,
then-Chairman Mica raised concerns about the shutdown’s planning and execution by agencies
and OMB, saying “the execution of the shutdown was, in many instances, disorganized and
illogical, at best, and oftentimes chaotic experience.”41 As an example, he cited the “recall of
more than 50,000 Social Security personnel [three days into the furlough], raising questions about
whether they should have been furloughed in the first place.”42 In addition, then-Ranking Member
James P. Moran expressed interest in clarifying the distinction between exempt and nonexempt
activities and employees. If similar issues were currently of concern, Congress might consider

38 1981 Civiletti opinion, reprinted in U.S. GAO, Funding Gaps Jeopardize Federal Government Operations, p. 82
(footnote 7). For discussion, see U.S. GAO, Principles of Federal Appropriations Law, pp. 6-149 - 6-150.
39 See SSA’s “History of SSA 1993 - 2000,” Ch. 5, available at http://www.ssa.gov/history/ssa/ssa2000chapter5.html.
40 See Government Shutdown: What’s Essential?, pp. 1-3.
41 Ibid., p. 2.
42 Ibid.
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Shutdown of the Federal Government: Causes, Processes, and Effects

lawmaking and oversight options related to the quality and specificity of agency shutdown
planning.
Availability of Agency Shutdown Plans
OMB’s Circular No. A-11 requires executive agencies to submit to OMB “plans for an orderly
shutdown in the event of the absence of appropriations” when the plans are either first prepared or
later revised.43 OMB has required the development and maintenance of these shutdown plans
since 1980. It is not clear, however, the extent to which agency shutdown plans have been made
publicly available or systematically shared with Congress and agency stakeholders for feedback.
Scrutiny over agency shutdown plans may provide incentives for agencies to improve the quality
of the plans, should it become necessary at some point for agencies to execute the plans, and may
inform budget policy debates about the potential impacts of shutdowns. On the other hand, such
inquiries may distract agency personnel from other duties and raise sensitive issues regarding
what activities and employees should be considered exempt from Antideficiency Act restrictions.

Author Contact Information

Clinton T. Brass

Analyst in Government Organization and
Management
cbrass@crs.loc.gov, 7-4536


Acknowledgments
R. Eric Petersen and Ida A. Brudnick of the Government and Finance Division contributed portions of this
report that relate to congressional operations.
Key Policy Staff
Area of Expertise
Name
Phone
E-mail
Executive branch operations
Clinton T. Brass
7-4536
cbrass@crs.loc.gov
Congressional operations
Ida A. Brudnick
7-6460
ibrudnick@crs.loc.gov

R. Eric Petersen
7-0643
epetersen@crs.loc.gov
Programmatic impact of shutdown on
CRS subject matter expert 7-5700

specific agency or policy area




43 OMB, Circular No. A-11: Preparation, Submission, and Execution of the Budget, July 2010, Section 124, p. 1.
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