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United States Government

US Geological Survey Unable To Provide Indonesia Tsunami Data Due To Government Shutdown (huffingtonpost.com.au) 370

An underwater landslide caused by activity from the Anak Krakatau volcano is being blamed for a tsunami that struck Indonesia late Saturday, killing at least 222 people and injuring more than 800 others. Normally, the U.S. Geological Survey would report on such events and provide any necessary data it had to the public. But it can't due to America's partial government shutdown, which began Saturday after President Donald Trump refused to sign legislation that didn't include funding for his southern border wall. From a report: The USGS website is dormant as of Sunday, except for a notice at the top. "Due to a lapse in appropriations, the majority of USGS websites may not be up to date and may not reflect current conditions," the note reads. "Websites displaying real-time data, such as Earthquake and Water and information needed for public health and safety will be updated with limited support." According to the government shutdown contingency plan, the USGS will retain just 75 of its estimated 8,032 employees, or 0.9 percent. "The USGS will suspend the majority of its activities with the exception of those functions to protect life and property," the plan states. The document also claims that 450 employees will be "on call" for natural disasters, but it's unclear if that process has been enacted, as the USGS website says the agency is not "able to respond to inquiries until appropriations are enacted."
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US Geological Survey Unable To Provide Indonesia Tsunami Data Due To Government Shutdown

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    It's a shame that this far right tantrum us wasting money and will keep government employees from being paid on time. Furloughed workers will get back pay for them not to work during the shutdown. The shutdown will probably extend into January, and employees who are working will have their paycheck delayed. Meanwhile, many very useful but non-essential services aren't being provided at all. Shame on the far right.

    • Schumer, Pelosi, Obama, Clinton [bostonglobe.com] - all supported a wall back in 2006. What's changed since then? Their own political fortunes. Not a whole lot else...
      • Technology has changed. Cameras and sensors got cheap. Drones got cheap.

        Better analytics mean we know that the value of a wall at controlling the border is less than other alternatives. Texas sent the national guard to police the border at a cost of $120k per illegal immigrant caught. Statistically we know those illegals would have caused less trouble than their native counterparts, so we know we didn't save any money on crime prevention. We could have given every American put out of work a full, 4 year
        • I would LOVE to pull out from all overseas military "actions". But is seems the Democrats are all up-in-arms over that very move...
      • Perhaps, but I don't remember them promising that Mexico would pay for it -- with a net zero cost to American taxpayers.
  • Why aren't the Trump-loving libertarians opposing this on the fact that it will be the US taxpayer paying for the wall when their dear leader promised them the Mexicans would pay for it?

    Could it be libertarians are just a bunch of hypocritical cunts?
  • Regardless of whether you blame Trump or the DNC for the shutdown, what astounds me is that it is permitted to happen at all.

    The solution to this would be to enact some legislation that automatically funds major departments at (say) 95% of the previously agreed budget until a new budget is agreed.

    Even if that is not acceptable, some employees are expected to work without a paycheck - again legislation should be enacted that 'essential' employees (e.g. emergency services) are automatically funded.

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )

      I seem to recall hearing the president boast a couple of weeks ago when the matter came up that he himself would take full responsibility for the shutdown:

      "I am proud to shut down the government for border security... I will take the mantle. I will be the one to shut it down. I'm not going to blame you for it."

      Has he now recanted this former position?

      Can't say I'm terribly surprised, however...

  • Approximately 420,000 federal employees continued to work through the shutdown [time.com]. The handful of employees needed to handle this certainly could have been deemed "essential" as well under the circumstances.

    This is just a cynical political decision to suspend a high-visibility, low-cost service to try to pressure the shutdown to end, exactly like the cynical political decision to barricade national monuments [latimes.com] (and even disable the corresponding websites) during the 2013 shutdown.

  • Or in other words, "Fake News"".

    "which began Saturday after President Donald Trump refused to sign legislation that didn't include funding for his southern border wall."

    President Trump cannot sign legislation that hasn't been approved by both houses of Congress, and the "McConnell/Schumer Shutdown" is the result of the SENATE's failure to pass the budget. Schumer is adamant that there will be no border wall, and McConnell is content to let Schemer continue to hold the budget hostage. Americans by and large

  • ... or shut it the heck down.

    Period. As a legal immigrant that came on O1 visa I hate the lazy asses who crawled into the first world from their shitholes as "fiances" or crawled under the fence.

    From the other hand. Every single foreigner who decided "screw this shit, I am going to America" immediately becomes a spiritual American in many ways more American that people born here. He is courageous, he is enterprising enough to deserve a shot at the pursuit of happiness, to climb to that city on the hill.

    That

  • by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Tuesday December 25, 2018 @11:59PM (#57859974)

    Part of me would like to see the shutdown last exactly as long as it would take to balance the budget and pay off the national debt. What an interesting experiment THAT would be.... Of course, that can't happen (for pretty obvious reasons).

    I really do wish we had a Constitutional Amendment that required a balanced budget or it just cuts all spending across the board, automatically, until it is balanced. Of course, that does nothing for the $21 *TRILLION* debt (which cost us $310 BILLION to service in 2018 alone, $2.6 TRILLION over the last 10 years), but at least it is a start. In the mean time, raise taxes, stop spending (my preference), or some combination of both!

    • by theCoder ( 23772 )

      Part of me would like to see the shutdown last exactly as long as it would take to balance the budget and pay off the national debt. What an interesting experiment THAT would be.... Of course, that can't happen (for pretty obvious reasons).

      The real reason that cannot happen is that when every shutdown is resolved, the government pays all the federal workers for the time they were not working. So shutdowns don't actually save the federal government any money at all. It's all just politics and grandstanding

The truth of a proposition has nothing to do with its credibility. And vice versa.

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