Paychecks Restored: Coast Guard Funded as 76-Day DHS Shutdown Ends
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For 76 days, the Department of Homeland Security operated without full funding. Coast Guard units stayed on mission the entire time, continuing patrols, interdictions, and search-and-rescue operations while paycheck uncertainty followed them home, with an overwhelming absence of communication from Coast Guard leadership.
Congress passed a funding bill restoring most DHS operations through the end of the fiscal year, and President Donald Trump signed it into law on April 30. The shutdown began on February 14 and now stands as the longest government shutdown for a single federal department in U.S. history.
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For active-duty Coast Guard members and their families, pay expectations resume normalcy under the new law. Coast Guard operations didn’t pause during the shutdown, even as the department it falls under lacked full appropriations. That gap is now closed across most of DHS.

The Bill Doesn’t Fund Everything
Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection were excluded from the funding approved by Congress, a division widely reported as the leading reason for the holdout on federal funding.
The version of the bill that was just signed into law is the same version that’s been sitting on a desk on Capitol Hill for more than 30 days. There is no final agreement in place for the outlying agencies yet to be funded.
Across the rest of DHS, agencies that had been operating under contingency conditions return to funded status. TSA screening continues under restored funding as the department moves into peak PCS travel season, and FEMA and cybersecurity units regain full funding authority after weeks of constrained planning.

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Pay Restarts Immediately, But Everything Else Lags
The threat of missed paychecks forced some Coast Guard families to lean on savings, defer bills, or take on short-term debt. For the Coast Guard families caught in the middle of monetary debates, the lapse in funding and official communication is so much more disruptive than headlines.
These worries show up in overdraft fees, deferred payments, and decisions that don’t get reversed when funding returns. The fear of losing income and the scarcity mindset that follows doesn’t exactly encourage peak military readiness or financial fitness at home.
DHS rarely feels visible to military families until something slips. It supports the travel system behind PCS moves, disaster response around installations, and infrastructure that overlaps with defense networks. During the shutdown, those systems continued past the point of comfort or reason. They did so with much less flexibility and far fewer options.
76 days were enough to reopen the department. It was not enough to force an agreement on the issue that shut it down, and that decision is now back in front of Congress without the pressure that made this one happen. Until September comes around again.
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BY NATALIE OLIVERIO
Veteran & Senior Contributor, Military News at MilSpouses
Natalie Oliverio is a Navy Veteran, journalist, and entrepreneur whose reporting brings clarity, compassion, and credibility to stories that matter most to military families. With more than 100 published articles, she has become a trusted v...
- Navy Veteran
- 100+ published articles
- Veterati Mentor
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