Trump, Congress leaders set to huddle on border wall, government shutdown
Updated: 2019-01-04 11:03
AGENCIES HOBBLED
Democratic Representative Lucille Roybal-Allard, speaking to reporters late on Thursday, argued that funding a border wall, which ultimately could cost more than $24 billion, would hamper other, more important national security protections.
She noted that more federal law enforcement agents were needed to intercept illegal opioids and other "contraband" moving through US ports of entry. She added more money was needed for the Coast Guard to beef up the US presence in the Arctic at a time when Russia and China increasingly were on the prowl for that region's natural resources.
Without a deal to end the partial government shutdown, the Department of Homeland Security will not be able to bring some furloughed workers back to their jobs while others continue to be forced to work without paychecks for the time being.
An array of other federal agencies are similarly hobbled, including the Justice Department, Commerce Department and departments of Agriculture, Labor, Interior and Treasury.
Visitors to Smithsonian museums, among Washington's most popular tourist attractions, were being turned away during the shutdown, as were visitors to many of the nation's federal parks.
Reuters