The federal government has shut down. Here’s what that means for you
Summary
The U.S. entered day one of a federal government shutdown after Congress failed to pass temporary funding by the 1 October deadline. Many non-essential federal services are paused and more than 750,000 federal workers could be furloughed, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Some essential services will continue — for example, certain public-health work at the FDA and USDA and air-traffic control — but other functions and payments may be delayed depending on the duration of the shutdown.
Key Points
- Congress missed the funding deadline, triggering a federal shutdown starting 1 October 2025.
- CBO estimates over 750,000 federal employees could be furloughed; actual impact varies by agency and length of shutdown.
- Essential workers such as TSA officers and air-traffic controllers are required to report to work, but passengers may face longer TSA lines and flight delays if staffing shortages occur.
- Medicare and Medicaid payments will continue, but people on disability may see delays in benefit processing.
- National parks and recreation areas may remain open but largely unstaffed; Lake Mead National Recreation Area said it will remain accessible.
- Local effects in Nevada will depend on how long the shutdown lasts; some services could be disrupted while emergency and public-safety roles continue.
Context and relevance
The shutdown follows an impasse between Democrats and Republicans over health-care policy and stopgap funding. While each shutdown plays out differently, this one immediately affects public-sector payrolls, travel and some benefit processing. For Nevadans — especially those who rely on federal benefits, work with federal lands, or travel through Harry Reid International Airport — practical disruptions are the most immediate concern.
Why should I read this?
Short answer: because this could hit your wallet or your holiday plans. We skimmed the official lines and pulled the stuff that actually matters — who still gets paid, what services stop, and what to expect at the airport and parks. Quick, practical, no fluff.