Disruptive, Disappointing, Chaotic: Shutdown Upends Scientific Research

"Kay Behrensmeyer was supposed to be preparing for a three-week expedition to look for evidence of ancient humans in Kenya. Instead, she spent Thursday packing her research permits, her fossil-collecting supplies, and maps she’d spent weeks compiling and annotating by hand into a FedEx box, which she shipped to a junior colleague on the project. Behrensmeyer, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the National Museum of Natural History, wasn’t going anywhere. The federal government was shut down.

In research labs and at field sites across the world, the week-long government shutdown has ground scientific progress to a halt. Thousands of scientists are among the hundreds of thousands of federal employees and contractors who must stay at home without pay. The furlough is expected to persist into the new year, which would mean a rocky start to 2019 for American science.

“It’s distressing, dispiriting, deflating,” said Behrensmeyer, who has spent two years planning this trip. She was supposed to leave on Saturday but was instructed not to go when it became clear that the Smithsonian would run out of stopgap funding before a budget agreement was reached."

Ben Guarino, Sarah Kaplan, Angela Fritz, and Carolyn Y. Johnson report for the Washington Post December 28, 2018.

Source: Washington Post, 01/02/2019