Taxpayers Take Hit On Reagan Holiday
Government Shutdown Costs Millions
By Brian Faler
Special to The Washington Post
Monday, June 14, 2004; Page A15
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The Bush administration's decision to shut down most of the federal government Friday in honor of the late Ronald Reagan was in keeping with a tradition that stretches back more than 50 years. But it was also one that cost taxpayers millions of dollars in government employee wages.
After Reagan's death June 5, President Bush announced that most of the government would close June 11 for a national day of mourning. The former president's funeral service was Friday, at Washington National Cathedral.
The Bush directive affected federal employees across the country and around the globe, except for some in agencies whose missions are considered critical to national security and other essential business, such as the Defense Department and the Department of Homeland Security.
Employees who were given the day off will receive their regular pay, while those who were required to work will receive "premium" pay, which, in many cases, amounts to 150 percent of their regular daily wages. But OPM spokesman Michael Orenstein said the government employs about 1.8 million civilians -- not including postal workers -- at a daily payroll cost of about $423 million. He said the one-day cost will probably exceed that figure because an indeterminate number of federal employees will receive the premium pay. In his executive order issued last week, Bush said the closure was a "mark of respect for Ronald Reagan." But Paul Light, an expert in governmental affairs at New York University, said it was ironic that the administration closed the government for Reagan. "He was relentless in his criticism of fraud, waste and abuse in government and would have looked on a day off for his funeral as a remarkable waste of taxpayer money," Light said.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A39086-2004Jun13.html