“It feels terrible.” Federal worker’s family tightens their belts as shutdown drags on
In a way, Stephanie Rogers started preparing for the current moment months ago, when she and her two daughters moved in with her mother about half an hour south of Denver. High prices for everything was certainly one reason.
“When you added up the numbers between both of our family households, it was going to be something that we could not keep going long term,” says Rogers, who’s 44 and divorced with no child support.
Rogers has been a microbiologist with the Food and Drug Administration for 16 years and is now among hundreds of thousands of federal employees not working. She is also a chapter president with the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU).
Another big motivation for living together? The uncertainty of a new administration focused on shrinking the government, plus Rogers’ memory of the last federal shutdown, back in 2018.
“And we’re living in that reality now,” she says. “And so that is our decision, to just make sure all of us survive this process.”
Her mother, Nina Chapman, says she loves having her granddaughters around. “I was grateful we had a basement. It was just a wonderful area to put everybody,” she says.
Planning ahead for life without a paycheck
When the previous shutdown dragged on for 35 days, from late 2018 into 2019, Rogers says she was “utterly unprepared.” So she made sure to plan better this time.
In the weeks before this shutdown, as the deadline for the funding lapse approached, she rushed to squeeze in medical appointments. She requested early refills of the kids’ medications in case she couldn’t afford them without a paycheck.
Rogers also made a painful decision that will carry its own financial cost. “I had to pull out of my retirement, which has some tax consequences for next year,” she says.
Rogers has asked for flexibility with her car payment and is thinking twice about extracurriculars for her girls, who are 10 and 12. They might have to skip field trips that cost extra or volleyball games that are a long drive away. And the plan has been to buy only essential food.
“In fact, we just had our freezer go out,” she says. “We lost our meat, and that’s just devastating to us because we were counting on that.”
Rogers has also applied for state unemployment. Furloughed federal workers are generally eligible for that, though they must refund the money when the shutdown ends, and after they get any retroactive pay withheld during that time.
“We don’t know what our future looks like”
But President Trump has floated the idea that some workers might be denied backpay, despite a law he signed mandating it in 2019. He’s also threatened mass firings during the shutdown, a process the administration said had begun Friday. And Trump has talked about permanently cutting “Democrat programs,” without saying specifically what that means. Rogers says all of this makes the current shutdown feel very different.
“It feels terrible,” she says. “I don’t know if I even have a job when I walk away from this, much less if I will get paid. Do I have health insurance if we don’t get back pay? It’s a really hard place to be in when you have children who rely on you.”
Rogers believes she and other federal employees do essential work — such as food inspections — that the general public may only appreciate when they’re gone.
But across the federal government, it’s been stressful all year. Mass layoffs and funding cuts have left fewer people working longer hours, she says, only to be sent the message now that they’re not really wanted.
“My mother worries about [it] constantly. My daughter has woken up and said, ‘Does mommy have a job today?’ We don’t know what our future looks like,” she says.
So even though she’s in her dream job, Rogers says she’s started applying for other positions outside the federal government.
Alabama Power seeks to delay rate hike for new gas plant amid outcry
The state’s largest utility has proposed delaying the rate increase from its purchase of a $622 million natural gas plant until 2028.
Former U.S. Sen. Doug Jones announces run for Alabama governor
Jones announced his campaign Monday afternoon, hours after filing campaign paperwork with the Secretary of State's Office. His gubernatorial bid could set up a rematch with U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville, the Republican who defeated Jones in 2020 and is now running for governor.
Scorching Saturdays: The rising heat threat inside football stadiums
Excessive heat and more frequent medical incidents in Southern college football stadiums could be a warning sign for universities across the country.
The Gulf States Newsroom is hiring an Audio Editor
The Gulf States Newsroom is hiring an Audio Editor to join our award-winning team covering important regional stories across Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana.
Judge orders new Alabama Senate map after ruling found racial gerrymandering
U.S. District Judge Anna Manasco, appointed by President Donald Trump during his first term, issued the ruling Monday putting a new court-selected map in place for the 2026 and 2030 elections.
Construction on Meta’s largest data center brings 600% crash spike, chaos to rural Louisiana
An investigation from the Gulf States Newsroom found that trucks contracted to work at the Meta facility are causing delays and dangerous roads in Holly Ridge.

