国土安全部政府停摆将影响哪些服务?


2026年2月13日 / 美国东部时间下午3:10 / CBS新闻

华盛顿 — 由于国会未能在周五傍晚临时拨款法案到期前通过为国土安全部(DHS)运营提供资金的法案,国土安全部几乎肯定将在午夜时分停摆。

民主党提出了多项要求以限制政府的移民打击行动,以此换取对该资金法案的支持,但未能与共和党达成协议。

上个月明尼阿波利斯联邦执法人员枪杀Renee Good和Alex Pretti后,民主党希望要求司法令状、更好地识别国土安全部官员、新的使用武力标准、停止在未先核实是否为美国公民前拘留人员,以及停止基于种族、语言、口音或职业进行搜查。

没有资金支持,国土安全部的部分职能将停止运作,不过除非停摆持续到总统日假期周末之后,否则影响可能不会广泛显现。国土安全部网站称,在资金中断期间,该部门“可能仅能继续‘豁免’活动,如执法和海上保护”。

通常,那些工作“对人类生命安全或财产保护必要”的人员,将被要求“在无资金情况下继续工作”。根据国土安全部2025年资金中断计划,那些“履行总统宪法职责和权力所必需”的联邦雇员将在无资金情况下继续工作。

停摆将影响运输安全管理局(TSA)、联邦紧急事务管理局(FEMA)、海岸警卫队、网络安全和基础设施局以及其他维护国家安全的国土安全部机构。根据国土安全部和人事管理办公室的数据,约13%的联邦文职人员受到影响,其中大多数被迫无薪工作。

以下是国土安全部停摆将受影响的方面:

大多数国土安全部员工将继续工作


根据该部门2025年9月的资金中断计划,绝大多数国土安全部员工将被豁免(即必须工作)。他们在停摆期间不会获得报酬,但停摆结束后会收到欠薪。

2025年,国土安全部估计其271,927名员工中有249,065人(近92%)将在资金中断期间被豁免并继续工作。但随着时间推移,这一数字可能会减少,因为员工无薪工作、休假或缺勤。

航空旅行将如何受影响?


空中交通管制员属于交通部预算范围,而该部门本财年的资金已获通过。因此,空中交通管制运营不会受到影响。

但运输安全管理局(TSA)属于国土安全部,因此TSA员工将不得不无薪工作。最终,TSA和机场安全人员配置水平可能会受到影响,具体取决于停摆持续时间,因此旅客最终可能会看到更长的安检队伍。

移民执法将继续


由于去年《美丽法案》提供了1650亿美元现金注入,包括750亿美元用于移民和海关执法局(ICE)以及650亿美元用于海关和边境保护局(CBP),此次停摆预计不会影响特朗普政府备受争议的移民执法行动。这些资金远超机构通常获得的年度拨款,意味着它们将能够在停摆期间继续运作。

国会未通过的国土安全部资金法案本财年将提供640亿美元可自由支配资金,其中包括100亿美元用于ICE。

特勤局


美国特勤局的保护职能(如保护总统和副总统)将继续。白宫的其他特勤局职能也预计将继续。

海岸警卫队


海岸警卫队是国土安全部旗下唯一的军事部门。它可能会暂停训练等职能,但搜救行动将继续。

反恐


反恐监视和情报收集预计不会受到干扰。

其他执法职能


国土安全部此前的停摆指南称,职责包括保护生命或财产的联邦执法人员将继续工作,但那些仅从事行政工作且不直接参与保护生命或财产的人员将在停摆期间被休假。

灾区救援将继续,但停摆将导致联邦紧急事务管理局(FEMA)工作中断,一名官员表示


在过去资金中断期间,联邦紧急事务管理局(FEMA)对重大灾害或紧急情况的部署仍在继续。但联邦紧急事务管理局副局长Gregg Phillips周三在国会作证时表示,停摆将导致多名员工被休假,“将严重破坏FEMA向各州偿还灾害救济费用和支持灾后恢复的能力”。

上一次停摆(2025年底)前的国土安全部指南显示,截至5月,FEMA有不到25,000名员工,其中约21,000人将处于豁免状态并在停摆期间工作。

Caitlin Yilek为本报道提供了帮助。

What services would be affected by a DHS government shutdown?

February 13, 2026 / 3:10 PM EST / CBS News

Washington — The Department of Homeland Security is all but certain to shut down when the clock strikes midnight, since Congress failed to pass a bill to fund its operations before a stopgap measure lapses at the end of the day Friday.

Democrats had made a number of demands to restrain the government’s immigration crackdown in exchange for their support of the funding measure but could not reach an agreement with the GOP.

After the shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal law enforcement officers last month in Minneapolis, Democrats wanted a requirement for judicial warrants, better identification of DHS officers, new use-of-force standards, an end to detaining people without verifying they aren’t U.S. citizens first and to conducting searches based on a person’s race, language, accent or job.

Without funding, some DHS functions will cease, although the impact may not be more widely felt unless the shutdown continues well beyond the Presidents Day holiday weekend. DHS’ website says that during a funding lapse, the department “may only continue ‘exempt’ activities such as law enforcement and maritime protection.”

Generally, those whose work is “necessary for safety of human life or protection of property,” will be required to work “as necessary to continue even without funding.” Federal employees whose jobs are “necessary to the discharge of the president’s constitutional duties and powers” continue without funding, according to DHS’ 2025 funding lapse plan.

The shutdown will affect the Transportation Security Administration, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Coast Guard, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency and other agencies within DHS that safeguard national security. About 13% of the total federal civilian workforce is implicated, with most forced to work without pay, according to DHS and Office of Personnel Management data.

Here is what would be affected in a DHS shutdown:

Most DHS employees will continue to work


The vast majority of DHS employees would be exempted — meaning they’re required to work — according to the department’s September 2025 funding lapse plan. They would not be paid during the shutdown but would receive backpay after it ends.

In 2025, DHS estimated 249,065 of its 271,927 employees — nearly 92% of its workforce — would be exempt and continue to work during a funding lapse. But that number can dwindle as time goes on, as workers going without pay, take leave or do not show up for work.

How would air travel be affected?


Air traffic controllers fall under the Department of Transportation’s budget, and that department’s funding for this fiscal year has already been enacted. So, air traffic control operations will not be affected..

But the Transportation Security Administration falls under DHS, so TSA workers will have to work without a paycheck. Eventually, TSA and airport security staffing levels may be affected, depending on the duration of the shutdown, so travelers could eventually see longer security lines.

Immigration enforcement will continue


The shutdown is not expected to affect the Trump administration’s controversial immigration enforcement campaign, thanks to the $165 billion cash infusion from last year’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, including $75 billion for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and $65 billion for Customs and Border Protection. The funding goes well beyond the annual allotments that the agencies typically receive and means they will be able continue operations despite the shutdown.

The DHS funding measure that failed in Congress would have provided $64 billion in discretionary funding for the fiscal year, including $10 billion for ICE.

Secret Service


Protective functions of the U.S. Secret Service, such as protection for the president and vice president, will continue. Other Secret Service functions at the White House are expected to continue, as well.

Coast Guard


The Coast Guard is the only military branch under the DHS umbrella. It will likely suspend functions like training, but search and rescue operations will continue.

Counterterrorism


Counterterrorism surveillance and intelligence gathering are not expected to face disruptions.

Other law enforcement functions


DHS’ previous shutdown guidelines said federal law enforcement officers whose duties include protecting human life or property will continue their work, but those whose jobs are administrative and aren’t directly involved in protecting life or property would be furloughed during the shutdown.

Disaster zone help will continue, but shutdown would cause disruption for FEMA, one official said


When funding has lapsed in the past, Federal Emergency Management Agency deployments to major disasters or emergencies have continued. But Gregg Phillips, associate FEMA director, testified before Congress Wednesday that a shutdown would mean a number of employees would be furloughed and it “would severely disrupt FEMA’s ability to reimburse states for disaster relief costs and to support our recovery from disasters.”

DHS guidelines before the last shutdown at the end of 2025 said FEMA, as of May, had just under 25,000 employees, and about 21,000 would have exempt status and would work during a shutdown.

Caitlin Yilek contributed to this report.

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