The longest US government shutdown on record is doing more than grind activities to a halt at home; an ocean away in Europe, local workers at US military bases have started to feel the pain.
At least 2,000 people working at overseas bases in Europe have had their salaries interrupted since the shutdown began almost six weeks ago. In some cases, governments hosting the US bases have stepped in to foot the bill, expecting the United States to eventually make good. In others, including in Italy and Portugal, workers have simply kept working unpaid as the gridlock in Washington drags on.
It's an absurd situation because nobody has responses, nobody feels responsible, said Angelo Zaccaria, a union coordinator at the Aviano Air Base in northeastern Italy.
This is having dramatic effects on us Italian workers, he told The Associated Press.
An array of needed jobs The jobs foreign nationals do at US bases around the world range from food service, construction, logistics, maintenance and other, more specialised roles. In some cases, foreign workers are employed by private companies hired by the US government, while others are direct hires.
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How local employees are paid varies by country and is based on specific agreements the US government has with each host nation, said Amber Kelly-Herard, a public affairs spokesperson for the US Air Forces in Europe and Africa.
During the shutdown, Kelly-Herard said local employees were expected to continue to perform their jobs in accordance with their work contracts.
The AP reached out to the Pentagon with multiple questions on the pay disruption, but was only provided a brief statement that did not acknowledge it.
We value the important contributions of our local national employees around the world, it said. The official declined to answer any follow-up questions.
American bases are feeling the pinch overseas In Germany, the government has stepped in to pay the salaries of nearly 11,000 civilian employees who work on US military bases, the nation's finance ministry said in a statement. American facilities in Germany include the Ramstein Air Base, a critical hub for operations in the Mideast and Africa and headquarters to the US Air Forces in Europe and Africa.
Workers in other countries have not been so fortunate.
More than 4,600 Italian nationals work at the five US bases in Italy, said union coordinator Zaccaria. Of those, over 900 local employees at US bases in Aviano and Vicenza, and another 400 workers at a base in Livorno, have not received their salaries since the shutdown began.
We are waiting for urgent responses, as there are workers struggling to pay their mortgages, to support their children, or even to pay for the fuel to come to work, Zaccaria said. He said the union had asked the Italian government to intervene, but that, in the meantime, those affected were continuing to show up to work.
Unfortunately, we see no political will to solve this situation, but we're asking the Italian government to intervene," he said.
In Portugal, a similar situation was playing out at the Lajes Field base in the Azores archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean, where more than 360 Portuguese workers have not been paid, according to Paula Terra, head of the Lajes base workers' committee.
Terra said unpaid staff are still turning up because furloughs aren't legally recognised in a US-Portugal agreement on this basis. Staying away could leave them open to disciplinary proceedings, she added.
But this week, the Azores Islands regional government approved a bank loan to pay the Portuguese workers at the base in the interim. Terra said she was waiting to hear when workers could claim the money.
Germany is counting on being repaid once the shutdown ends, the finance ministry's spokesperson told the AP, adding that during previous shutdowns, civilians were paid by the US government.
The governments of Poland, Lithuania and Greenland did not respond to a request for comment from the AP about whether they, too, have also stepped in to pay local workers.
Most vulnerable, at-risk workers Linda Bilmes, a professor of public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School and an expert on public finance, said local workers at US military bases who work as contractors are generally most at risk of losing pay during US government shutdowns.
She added that the US government in the past always paid back full-time employees, including those working at overseas facilities who may be foreign nationals, but that contractors are not always covered, which is why some add extra fees in their contracts to cover potential government funding stoppages.
But I doubt anyone anticipated this length of delay, Bilmes said.
In Spain, where the US operates the Moron and Rota military bases in the south, a union representing more than 1,000 Spanish workers said a delay in payments had been resolved last month with the help of the Spanish government.
Spain's defence ministry did not respond to multiple requests seeking to confirm its involvement in resolving the pay issue.
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