'I need to get back to work,' plead furloughed Latino contract workers

By Patricia Guadalupe

WASHINGTON — Angela Vásquez, a maintenance worker at the U.S. Department of Agriculture and a single mother of six, says she’s perpetually worried.

“I’m in this situation right now where I have no money coming in,” said Vásquez, a native of Guatemala who has lived in the nation’s capital for 26 years.

“I have a lot of bills to pay, including tuition for my son in college,” she said. “What am I supposed to tell my kids when they open the refrigerator and there’s no food? I can’t afford to not work.”

Vásquez is one of thousands of contract workers losing wages during the nearly month-long partial federal government shutdown. Vásquez said she has been looking for another job, but “you don’t get most jobs overnight with an application process and all.”

Federal contract workers on the lower end of the pay scale — such as food service and maintenance workers — are especially hit hard by the shutdown because they cannot afford to go without wages or lower pay.

The non-profit advocacy group Good Jobs Nation estimates that more than a million federal contract workers are idle or working fewer hours because of the shutdown, and a third of those workers make $15 or less an hour.

Most of the workers on the lower pay scale are Hispanic or other people of color. The federal government does not keep specific figures on its number of contract workers, but a New York University report estimates them at more than 40 percent of the total federal workforce — or 3.7 million out of 9.1 million employees.

José Orellana, 52, is one of these contractors affected by the closure of nine of the 15 federal government departments and several agencies while the White House and congressional members battle over funding for a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

source: nbcnews.com