Despite bringing
back a significant number of its furloughed employees Tuesday, things
are not back to normal for the West Virginia National Guard.
“We
are degrading readiness every day that they don’t pass a full blown budget,”
said state Adjutant General Major General James Hoyer.
In
week two of a partial federal government shutdown, the National Guard has
been able to call back roughly 996 of 1,150 employees that were furloughed last
week. That is partly due to efforts by Governor Earl Ray Tomblin
and from state lawmakers, both in the Senate and the House of Delegates,
who sent two letters containing over a hundred signatures to
Congress.
Around
75 employees are still sitting at home and Hoyer said that is still too many.
“These
people rely on that money for college payments, for car payments and for house
payments,” he said. “We have got to fix this.”
That
fix did not come Tuesday from Washington
as the standoff between Republican leaders in the U.S. House and U.S. Senate
Democrats along with the White House continued. During separate press
conferences, House Speaker John Boehner and President Barack Obama stood their
ground in the debate.
Boehner
claimed the president said he would not talk with them unless “there is
unconditional surrender by Republicans.” Boehner argued that is not how
government works.
President
Obama however, accused Republicans of threatening to cause a recession if the
administration didn’t agree to defund Obamacare. He said he would only
negotiate once Republicans “lift these threats” and pass a clean funding bill.
Meanwhile,
during a press conference Tuesday in Charleston, Hoyer pointed out several
areas where the Guard is still being adversely impacted by the shutdown even
though they have called back many of their employees.
Those
areas included small things such as not being able to make medical ID cards for
employees because there was no federal funds to pay for more material and the
cancellation of a motorcycle safety course.
A
larger impact deals with the Guard being unable to receive new helicopters
October 1 to replace aging ones that are used for counter drug support and state
active duty.
“The
first helicopter is still sitting at the depot because we can’t go pick it up,”
Hoyer said. “There were three pilots that were suppose to go to training to get
proficient on that aircraft that we can’t send to school.”
Guard
members are also unable to get their flu shots because the Guard doesn’t
have the federal funds to pay for the service which they
contract out. Hoyer said the impact is also felt in the local community.
“We
don’t have the ability to pay some of our contractors and vendors who are
finishing construction projects here,” he said.
Thanks
to the Governor’s Office, Hoyer has been given the flexibility to reallocate
funds from other projects to be used to float salaries and keep Guard members
working for the time being, at least till October 16.
“The
Guard in West Virginia
will overcome obstacles and will make things happen to take care of our people
in this state, but we shouldn’t have to operate this way,” said Hoyer.
Hoyer
urges Congress to come up with a solution quickly otherwise the shutdown is
going to continue to hurt National Guard members and hinder their ability
to do their duties of protecting the state and the nation.
With both sides holding their ground in