Around 50 tourists strolled up to the Pullman National Historical Park Wednesday afternoon only to be halted by a locked front door and a sign reading, โClosed.โ
โBad news, bad news,โ one of the tour leaders announced to the group, which consisted of National Association of Evangelical members from across the country. โLooks like weโre all experiencing the government shutdown.โ
The U.S. government shut down after the Senate failed to approve a short-term funding bill Tuesday night, jeopardizing the pay and employment of thousands of workers across Illinois and the country, and scaling back operations at federal facilities, such as national parks.
โThereโs a lot of disappointment,โ said the Rev. James Meeks, who led the group through a tour of historic Pullman sites. Though the park remained open for tours, the building was closed. โIt hadnโt dawned on us until he pulled on the door.โ
Members of the National Association of Evangelicals found the Pullman National Historical Park closed Wednesday as a result of the federal government shutdown.
Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times
While most government shutdowns mean nonessential workers are furloughed until a government spending bill has been approved, President Donald Trump has said the shutdown may mean layoffs instead, adding to the mass cuts to the federal workforce made during his presidency.
The longest government shutdown lasted 34 days from late 2018 into early 2019 โ fueled by an impasse over Trumpโs request for a $5.7 billion border wall.
More than 153,000 federal workers lived in Illinois last year, according to the 2024 U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey.
News of the latest shutdown came to many workers with minimal information, causing confusion over whether theyโre expected to show up for work, uncertainties about the length of the shutdown, and anxiety over their ability to pay for groceries, rent, childcare, transportation and other essential costs as the money stops coming in, according to union leaders.
โThey [workers] didnโt have much time in advance of the shut down, I think they assumed the parties would do their job, come together and figure it out, get a budget in place,โ said Doreen Greenwald, president of the National Treasury Employees Union, which covers 38 departments and agencies. โThey didnโt have time to try to set aside funds. And when you live paycheck to paycheck, thereโs no funds to set aside.โ
A scene similar to the one in Pullman unfolded Wednesday morning in downstate Springfield, where north suburban Huntley High School A.P. U.S. Government teacher Jason Monson and his group of 56 students arrived after a three-and-a-half hour bus ride for a tour of the capital cityโs historical sites.
Among them was Abraham Lincolnโs home, which was closed Wednesday because of the government shutdown. Monson said he got the call right before they left Huntley.
โLuckily, I have done this trip enough times to be able to walk the kids through some of these sites,โ Monson said. โObviously, itโs really disappointing not being able to go in.โ
Shutdownโs impact on ICE in Chicago area
Federal workers for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which has been increasingly visible in the Chicago area as the Trump administration ramps up raids, patrols and detentions, were on the job at a suburban Broadview facility Wednesday.
Federal immigration agents stand outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview on the first day of a federal government shutdown Wednesday.
Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times
When asked if they were getting paid Wednesday, one agent shook his head. He didnโt share his thoughts on the shutdown when asked, but said it โhappens all the time.โ
Court employees at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse are expected to report to work during the shutdown. Officials there say they have money to pay staff and jurors through Oct. 17. But a prolonged shutdown could eventually mean missed paychecks and a halt to jury trials and grand jury hearings.
Meanwhile, U.S. District Chief Judge Virginia Kendall entered a general order Wednesday suspending all civil litigation involving the United States as a party. That led to the cancellation of a Friday hearing over allegations of warrantless arrests during the โOperation Midway Blitzโ deportation campaign.
U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Cummings wrote in his own order that he would rule in that case โin the coming days.โ His ruling could be based on claims that predate โMidway Blitz.โ But Justice Department lawyers argued that if the judge insists on taking more recent allegations into account, he should hold off and let them file a response two weeks after the shutdown ends.
โMorale is down, theyโre just disillusionedโ
Employees with the Environmental Protection Agency received an email Tuesday night saying employees were exempted from the shutdown because there was available funding to continue, but other details were unclear and the communication was โhaphazard,โ according to Loreen Targos, executive vice president of the American Federation of Government Employees Local 704, the union that represents 1,000 EPA workers in the Great Lakes region.
โThereโs no guidance on who else is working,โ she said. โAre the folks in headquarters working? Am I allowed to direct my contractor right now? โฆ But thereโs no understanding of whose funding that is and how long theyโre gonna be going on that.โ
Loreen Targos leads U.S. Environmental Protection Agency union members and environmental advocates in a protest in the Loop April 22 against cuts to the EPA and federal government.
Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times
Darrell English, a Transportation Security Administration officer at Midway International Airport and president of the AFGE Local 777, which represents more than 1,400 TSA employees, said TSA has sent out โinformation on letters we can send out to creditors, whether itโs your rent or your mortgage, to let them know that we are furloughed.โ But he worried that creditors would react indifferently.
If the furlough continues, it will cause โripple effectsโ for workers as well as for the TSA, English said. In the last government shutdown, experienced TSA workers retired or moved onto other opportunities, he added, leaving the agency with not enough experienced workers.
โOnce an individual [with] five to 10 years [of experience] leaves, itโs hard to get somebody [new] up to speed. It takes years to build up that library knowledge of screening,โ English said. He added that this yearโs shutdown is more concerning than the last โbecause this political atmosphere that weโre currently in is different than before.โ
Targos echoed that, saying some people who have left the job due to previous shutdowns or the threat of further cuts through the Department of Government Efficiency this year arenโt able to pass their historical knowledge on to other employees still at the agency. For the EPA in the Midwest, that means some of the countryโs heavy hitters in fighting pollution are gone.
โWeโre losing the people that are most effective in finding polluters that are betraying the public trust, and weโre losing the people that are most capable of that,โ Targos said. โThe institutional knowledge is not being passed along. Itโs easier to destroy than to create.โ
The second Trump presidency has come with mounting uncertainty for federal workers as the DOGE has made sweeping job cuts across government entities. For Targos and her peers, that means being beaten down and frustrated by the presidentโs impacts on their day-to-day life, she said.
โMorale is down, theyโre just disillusioned,โ Targos said. โThese are people who want to make our community stronger by protecting clean air and clean water โฆ In every step, the public trust is just being spit upon.โ
Greenwald said federal employees have faced threats of losing their jobs, funding and livelihood all year, but they still show up to work.
โItโs incredibly difficult because what weโve seen is the work has not gone away,โ she said. โEven through all this stress, federal employees continue to show up.โ
Contributing: Mawa Iqbal.


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