Thumper wrote:And yes, while employees are either on furlough or required to work, without a paycheck, somehow the Dept. of Interior is able to fund and pay for meetings in Alsaka aimed at opening up drilling in the National Wildlife Refuge. A move that many say is unconstitutional. With some offices shuttered and travel restricted, many cannot get to these meetings raising serious questions that they are "open" and "public."
https://www.alaskapublic.org/2019/01/04 ... g-in-anwr/
lady_*nix wrote:He chickened. Boo ya, I guess.
@Fisher, nah, Congressional Republicans are loving every minute of this. They'll be okay, they're richer than an oil tanker filled with lard.
Rommie wrote:It was estimated 10-15% of all the astronomers stated to attend the AAS couldn't make it due to the shutdown. I felt bad for those folks who worked so hard on their science all year and then couldn't share it with others- and a complete waste because of course all the fees and flights etc were already paid for. Maybe minor compared to the struggles others will face in this shutdown, but still a shame that it happened for no good reason.
Interestingly, only the NASA people were really affected, as most of the other government science organizations have arranged their budgets since the last big shutdown a few years ago to make sure they can run awhile when a shutdown happens. But of course no one plans forever, so for most they have 2-3 weeks more before they have to shut down too. The VLA, for example, will have to stop operating in February if things go that long.
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