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Federal Employees Moonlight To Pay The Bills

Frank Ruopoli of Charleston, S.C., works at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. After the 2013 partial shutdown he earned an emergency medical technician certification. Now he's found a part-time job to earn money during this shutdown.
Courtesy of Frank Ruopoli
Frank Ruopoli of Charleston, S.C., works at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. After the 2013 partial shutdown he earned an emergency medical technician certification. Now he's found a part-time job to earn money during this shutdown.

As the standoff between President Trump and Congress continues over funding for Trump's proposed border wall, the partial shutdown of the federal government means workers will go weeks without a paycheck. That has some looking for temporary jobs to pay their bills.

In Boise, Idaho, Chris Kirk says he's worked for the federal government for 19 years. He administers contracts for the hundreds of millions of dollars the U.S. Forest Service spends on fighting wildfires. But these days he's on furlough and looking for extra income.

His job search was featured on a local television news program. A store owner saw the story and offered him a temporary job.

"What I do is basically throw freight around, load boxes, unload boxes, stock shelves and work a cash register," Kirk says. It's quite a change from his Forest Service job. Even though he's earning less than a quarter of his federal salary, Kirk says he's thankful for the work and for his new employer's flexibility.

"As soon as the government shutdown ends, I have to drop whatever I'm doing and go back to work," he says.

In Florida, Dorothy Dearborn also administers contracts for the government, but for the space agency NASA.

I feel a little betrayed by our politicians. You know they take an oath of office to serve our country and I do the same. I got into this many years ago and I chose to, in a way, serve my country and I expect the same out of my politicians.

A single mom of three kids, Dearborn says she lives "paycheck-to-paycheck." She's using no-interest and low-interest credit cards to get by and says her family has offered help.

'We're only looking for people to stay'

Finding a temporary job has been difficult, though she did apply to a restaurant. When the restaurant owner learned she'd be going back to NASA after the partial shutdown is over, Dearborn remembers the owner saying, "That's not going to work for us right now — we are only looking for people who are going to stay."

That's a common problem federal workers say they're encountering. Still a few have found creative ways around this issue.

Frank Ruopoli of Charleston, S.C., works as a graphic designer and illustrator at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. He says the 2013 furlough, which lasted 16 days, was hard on his family. So he developed a plan to be prepared for the next partial government shutdown.

"What I decided to do is go and get my EMT certificate," Ruopoli says. When he's working at NOAA he volunteers as an emergency medical technician with a local rescue squad. But now that he's on furlough he landed a part-time EMT job.

"It's a lot of medical transport and what I mean by that is a lot of transporting patients from hospital to hospital," Ruopoli says. The job also involves responding to 911 calls and staffing special events.

Ruopoli says the new job helped ease the financial burden of this shutdown. Still he's disappointed the country is in this position.

"I feel a little betrayed by our politicians. You know they take an oath of office to serve our country and I do the same. I got into this many years ago and I chose to, in a way, serve my country and I expect the same out of my politicians," Ruopoli says.

He and others interviewed for this story are careful to say their views are their own, not their agencies'. Most also said they were uncomfortable speaking publicly. But given that this is the longest partial shutdown in U.S. history, they hope doing so will encourage the president and Congress to resolve their differences.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Jeff Brady is a National Desk Correspondent based in Philadelphia, where he covers energy issues and climate change. Brady helped establish NPR's environment and energy collaborative which brings together NPR and Member station reporters from across the country to cover the big stories involving the natural world.
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