shutdown, U.S. government
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As the government reopens, various timelines are in place for when affected areas such as SNAP and air travel return to normal.
Congress is moving quickly to pass a funding package that would end the longest federal shutdown in the nation’s history.
Federal employees across the country have been ordered to return to work as they await over a month of back pay. Here's what to know.
As politicians argue, what does refunding the federal government mean for everyday people? Here’s what you need to know about SNAP benefits, air travel, military members, federal worker backpay,
The shutdown’s end is positive for markets because it brings “increased but not instant clarity on everything from air traffic to social programs to economic data,” one analyst says.
The previous longest government shutdown was under the first Trump administration and lasted 35 days. Spanning from Dec. 22, 2018 to Jan. 25, 2019, it is also the most recent federal shutdown in U.S. history.
The federal government has reopened and all federal employees are returning to work. Backpay for federal workers and November benefits for Texas SNAP recipients may take a few days to be distributed.
The funding package to end the government shutdown, passed out of the United States House of Representatives Wednesday night and now heading to President Donald Trump’s desk, has fractured Nevada’s Democratic delegation