Department Of Housing And Urban Development Plans Weeklong Shutdown Due To Sequestration

Sequestration To Force Weeklong Closure Of Government Agency
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WASHINGTON - FEBRUARY 26: Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan testifies during a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on Capitol Hill February 26, 2009 in Washington, DC. The committee is hearing testimony on HUD's homeowner affordability and stability plan. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON, March 11 (Reuters) - The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development on Monday said it plans to shut its doors for a total of seven days between May and September due to budget cuts and will furlough more than 9,000 employees on those days.

Across-the-board cuts known as sequestration are forcing government agencies to reduce spending. The government furloughs are a result of those $85 billion cuts that began on March 1 after a gridlocked U.S. Congress was unable to resolve fiscal fights and find a solution to replace the sequestration.

The seven furlough days will be spread out, according to HUD, and will impact HUD's work force at its main headquarters and all 80 field offices.

All employees will be impacted, and only staffers considered as critical would be required to work during designated closure days. The critical staffers will be scheduled for furlough on seven other days.

"Everybody will have the same number of furlough days," said HUD spokesman Jerry Brown. "We're trying to not have more than one furlough day per period," referring to the federal government's standard two-week pay period.

The agency will determine the exact shutdown dates at a later time.

In cataloging the impact of sequestration to a Senate panel last month, HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan warned lawmakers that the government spending cuts would have harsh consequences for housing programs and could threaten Superstorm Sandy recovery efforts in the U.S. Northeast.

"The ripple effects are enormous because of how central housing is to our economy," Donovan told lawmakers.

HUD has held a town hall meeting to go over the furlough plans, but no formal notices have been sent at this time.

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Before You Go

What Sequestration Would Cut
Defense(01 of11)
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About half of the sequestration consists of defense spending cuts, which would "drastically" shrink the military and cancel defense contracts, according to the House Armed Services Committee.(John Cantlie/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
Emergency Response(02 of11)
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The sequestration would slash funding for the government's emergency response system for disasters such as hurricanes, according to the White House.(Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
Unemployment Benefits(03 of11)
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Checks for unemployed people looking for work would shrink by up to 9 percent, according to the White House.(J Pat Carter/AP Photo) (credit:AP)
Homelessness Programs(04 of11)
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More than 100,000 formerly homeless people would lose their current housing as a result of sequestration, according to the White House.(Mark Lennihan/AP Photo) (credit:AP)
Rental Assistance(05 of11)
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About 125,000 low-income families would be at risk of losing their housing because of rental assistance cuts, according to the White House.(Barry Gutierrez/AP Photo) (credit:AP)
Mental Health Programs(06 of11)
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The sequestration would eliminate care for up to 373,000 "seriously mentally ill" people, according to the White House.(Eric Gay/AP Photo) (credit:AP)
Food Safety(07 of11)
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The FDA would conduct fewer food inspections as a result of sequestration, according to the White House.(Mike Hentz/AP Photo) (credit:AP)
Head Start(08 of11)
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About 70,000 children would lose access to the early education program Head Start as a result of the sequestration, according to the White House.(Elaine Thompson/AP Photo) (credit:AP)
Small Business Assistance(09 of11)
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The government's small business loan guarantees would get slashed by nearly $1 billion as a result of the sequestration, according to the White House.(Steven Senne/AP Photo) (credit:AP)
Scientific Research(10 of11)
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The sequestration would slash scientific research funding at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and National Science Foundation (NSF), according to the White House.(Spencer Platt/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
HIV Prevention(11 of11)
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Up to 424,000 HIV tests would be on the chopping block as a result of sequestration, according to the White House. Thousands of people with HIV also would lose access to "life-saving" HIV medications.(Darren Abate/AP Images for AIDS Healthcare Foundation) (credit:AP)