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A potential shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security threatens to impact various agencies, including ICE, TSA, and the Coast Guard. Essential services like immigration enforcement and airport security are expected to continue, but with potential consequences for employees and operations. The article details the potential effects on different agencies.
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- AI Headline
- The Homeland Security Shutdown Could Affect ICE, Travelers and the Coast Guard
- Simplified Title
- Homeland Security Shutdown Affects ICE Travelers Coast Guard
- AI Excerpt
- A potential shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security threatens to impact various agencies, including ICE, TSA, and the Coast Guard. Essential services like immigration enforcement and airport security are expected to continue, but with potential consequences for employees and operations. The article details the potential effects on different agencies.
- Subject Tags
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Homeland Security Government Shutdown ICE TSA Coast Guard FEMA Immigration Politics
- Context Type
- News
- AI Confidence Score
-
1.000
- Context Details
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{ "tone": "informative", "perspective": "neutral", "audience": "general", "credibility_indicators": [ "expert_quotes" ] }
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Completed
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- Donato V. Pompo
- Submission Date
- February 13, 2026 at 1:31 PM
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{ "source_type": "extension", "content_hash": "82e06d465170a20a968202cf62ea10ea6b0b2aa3c334cfd512d8ccd62ec7fec5", "submitted_via": "chrome_extension", "extension_version": "1.0.18", "original_url": "https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2026\/02\/12\/us\/politics\/dhs-shutdown-impact-ice-tsa-coast-guard.html?campaign_id=9&emc=edit_nn_20260213&instance_id=171041&nl=the-morning®i_id=122976029&segment_id=215219&user_id=b25c5730c89e0c73f75709d8f1254337", "parsed_content": "Trump AdministrationHow Trump Sees the WorldEpstein\u00a0FalloutEl Paso AirspaceWhistle-Blower ReportTariff TrackerAdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENTSupported bySKIP ADVERTISEMENTThe Homeland Security Shutdown Could Affect ICE, Travelers and the Coast GuardA lapse in funding probably won\u2019t bring immigration enforcement operations to a screeching halt, but the department is also home to other agencies, including the Coast Guard and FEMA.Listen to this article \u00b7 7:26 min Learn moreShare full articleAbout 95 percent of T.S.A.\u2019s employees are expected to report to work through a shutdown without pay.Credit...Jason Henry for The New York TimesBy Karoun Demirjian and Madeleine NgoReporting from WashingtonFeb. 12, 2026Funding for the Department of Homeland Security is set to lapse early Saturday morning, barring a breakthrough in negotiations, with no clear sign of when it may be revived.The looming shutdown of the sprawling department is the result of a bitter impasse over the Trump administration\u2019s immigration crackdown in cities including Minneapolis, where two U.S. citizens were fatally shot by federal agents last month. Democrats do not want to fund the department unless Congress imposes rules requiring immigration officers to identify themselves during operations, remove their masks and obtain judicial warrants to make arrests on private property. Republicans have rejected those demands as overly burdensome.But a lapse in funding is not expected to bring the department\u2019s immigration enforcement operations to a screeching halt. And the department is also home to several agencies unrelated to immigration, including the Coast Guard and FEMA, that will be affected.During last fall\u2019s record-long federal shutdown, more than 90 percent of the department\u2019s employees were required to work. The department has not updated its public guidance for funding lapses since then, but it is expected to handle a D.H.S.-focused shutdown similarly.\u201cD.H.S. essential missions and functions will continue as they do during every shutdown,\u201d the department said in a statement. \u201cHowever, during a shutdown, many employees will be forced to work without pay, putting strain on the frontline defenders of our nation.\u201dHere\u2019s how a shutdown could affect some of the department\u2019s most visible activities.Immigration Enforcement: ICE and Customs and Border ProtectionThe agencies at the heart of the dispute over D.H.S. funding would almost certainly be among the least affected by a department shutdown. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which employs about 22,000 officers, and Customs and Border Protection, which employs over 60,000 officials, perform work seen as essential to public safety, and employees can therefore be legally required to work, even without pay. (Under a 2019 law, they \u2014 like others employed directly by the federal government \u2014 are entitled to back pay once funding resumes.)ICE in particular has an extra cushion: Last summer, Congress drastically expanded its operating budget as part of a sweeping domestic policy bill with an extra $75 billion, resources it can use to ride out a lapse in funding.Airport Security: The Transportation Security AdministrationAbout 95 percent of the Transportation Security Administration\u2019s roughly 60,000 employees are required to report to work through a shutdown without being paid, according to the agency\u2019s acting administrator, Ha Nguyen McNeill.Still, during the fall\u2019s shutdown, that open-ended requirement proved untenable to many workers, who found it difficult to ride out what became a 43-day shutdown without taking side jobs. T.S.A. saw a spike in resignations after that shutdown, Ms. McNeill told lawmakers this week, while she noted that the agency was trying to increase hiring before the World Cup later this year.Staffing shortages did cause screening delays at Houston\u2019s two airports during the later weeks of shutdown after employees had missed multiple paychecks.The Homeland Security secretary, Kristi Noem, awarded $10,000 bonuses to some T.S.A. officials after the shutdown ended for going \u201cabove and beyond.\u201d It is not clear if the potential for another windfall \u2014 though Ms. Noem has not promised one \u2014 will keep more T.S.A. employees reporting to work through another shutdown.Disaster Response: Federal Emergency Management AgencyDisasters pay no heed to federal funding lapses, and for that reason, nearly 85 percent of Federal Emergency Management Agency employees are expected to work without pay through any shutdown, based on how the agency handled last fall\u2019s lapse in funding.FEMA\u2019s disaster relief fund has enough money to carry out its current and anticipated emergency response activities, according to Gregg Phillips, the associate administrator for the agency\u2019s Office of Response and Recovery. But if a catastrophic disaster were to occur during a Homeland Security Department shutdown, the fund \u201cwould be seriously strained,\u201d he told lawmakers on Wednesday.FEMA would find it difficult to reimburse states for disaster relief operations quickly, Mr. Phillips said. Those delays could in turn slow recovery efforts, he added.Immigration Benefits: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration ServicesU.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the agency that processes green cards, naturalization and other benefit applications, is largely funded by fees it charges applicants, so most operations would typically continue during a shutdown. During the last shutdown, a vast majority of the agency\u2019s roughly 22,000 employees continued working.Some programs do receive appropriated funds, including E-Verify, which allows employers to check their employees\u2019 eligibility to work in the country. During the last shutdown, the program was temporarily suspended. In a statement on Thursday, Matthew Tragesser, an agency spokesman, said the administration would \u201ctake decisive action to keep E-Verify open during a shutdown.\u201dCoast GuardThough the Coast Guard is part of the Homeland Security Department, it operates like any other branch of the military when it comes to government shutdowns: Uniformed personnel must keep coming to work, even though most of them will not be paid until after the shutdown is over.Vice Admiral Thomas Allan, the acting vice commandant of the Coast Guard, has warned that a prolonged shutdown would erode mission readiness and hurt morale. Certain training for pilots, aircrews and boat crews would stop, Mr. Allan said. Aircraft and boats could also degrade as scheduled maintenance is deferred, he added.Cybersecurity Operations: Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security AgencyMost employees at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which helps protect the country\u2019s election system, power grids and water utilities, would be furloughed during a shutdown. The agency would require 888 of its 2,341 employees to continue working, many of them without pay. Although the agency would continue operations that are \u201cessential to protecting life and property,\u201d it would delay strategic planning and development of cybersecurity guidance.Secret ServiceAbout 94 percent of the Secret Service\u2019s work force of more than 8,000 would stay on the job, many without pay, during a shutdown. Matthew C. Quinn, the deputy director of the agency, said on Wednesday that agents would continue to protect the president and vice president, along with their families. They would also continue to protect former presidents and their spouses, in addition to visiting heads of state and other top government officials. Still, Mr. Quinn warned about fading morale \u201cas bills come due.\u201dHe also said critical agency priorities would be delayed, such as efforts to hire or train agents and officers.Karoun Demirjian is a breaking news reporter for The Times.Madeleine Ngo covers immigration and economic policy for The Times.See more on: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Homeland Security Department, Transportation Security Administration, U.S. Coast GuardShare full articleRelated ContentAdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENT", "ai_headline": "The Homeland Security Shutdown Could Affect ICE, Travelers and the Coast Guard", "ai_simplified_title": "Homeland Security Shutdown Affects ICE Travelers Coast Guard", "ai_excerpt": "A potential shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security threatens to impact various agencies, including ICE, TSA, and the Coast Guard. 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Trump AdministrationHow Trump Sees the WorldEpsteinΒ FalloutEl Paso AirspaceWhistle-Blower ReportTariff TrackerAdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENTSupported bySKIP ADVERTISEMENTThe Homeland Security Shutdown Could Affect ICE, Travelers and the Coast GuardA lapse in funding probably wonβt bring immigration enforcement operations to a screeching halt, but the department is also home to other agencies, including the Coast Guard and FEMA.Listen to this article Β· 7:26 min Learn moreShare full articleAbout 95 percent of T.S.A.βs employees are expected to report to work through a shutdown without pay.Credit...Jason Henry for The New York TimesBy Karoun Demirjian and Madeleine NgoReporting from WashingtonFeb. 12, 2026Funding for the Department of Homeland Security is set to lapse early Saturday morning, barring a breakthrough in negotiations, with no clear sign of when it may be revived.The looming shutdown of the sprawling department is the result of a bitter impasse over the Trump administrationβs...
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Claims from this Source (33)
All claims extracted from this source document.
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Congress is at odds over how to fund the Department of Homeland Security before a Friday deadline.1.000π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Politics , Finance π a1162e38-9428-4226-a779-94aaeef928c1Simplified: Congress is at odds over how to fund the Department of Homeland Security before a Friday deadline
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Immigration , Politics π a1162cdd-a26e-403b-bfcf-e950422615f7Simplified: Residents of Minnesota and other cities subject to Trump immigration crackdown recently experienced a version of it
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Politics , Immigration , Legal π a1162e38-f253-43e9-9754-4710b04fddd0Simplified: They include barring immigration officers from wearing masks requiring them to show visible identification and mandating the use of judicial warrants...
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Politics , Immigration π a1162e39-1ab7-4b6f-bd85-cebeecf4dad3Simplified: Republican leaders have rejected those proposals as an unrealistic wish list calling the new restrictions overly burdensome to an immigration crackdow...
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Politics , Immigration π a1165891-e793-46dd-b49f-e208b2cc46e0Simplified: Shutdown will not affect administrationβs deportation campaign
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Military π a1163cf7-4c6f-4b84-a751-2f20679638f2Simplified: Coast Guard is part of Homeland Security Department
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Employment π a1163cf6-1f1f-4d7e-aeb5-79666924d2f3Simplified: During last fall's federal shutdown more than 90 percent of department's employees were required to work
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Simplified: DHS essential missions and functions will continue as they do during every shutdown
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Personnel π a1163cf7-897e-49d9-8556-9ef6a8608ed7Simplified: Uniformed personnel must keep coming to work during shutdowns
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Immigration π a1163679-ad07-4cd9-a915-5ec30c8d8be7Simplified: During last year's 43-day government closure ICE and Border Patrol agents continued work without pay
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Employment , Finance π a1163cf6-6652-4028-a93a-2ff0e6c7ccccSimplified: Under 2019 law employees employed directly by federal government are entitled to back pay once funding resumes
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Finance , Government π a1163cf6-838d-4335-8713-76ad127bfda6Simplified: Last summer Congress drastically expanded operating budget as part of sweeping domestic policy bill with extra $75 billion resources it can use to rid...
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Employment π a116492f-e524-48f2-a6b7-cdd452ddcbaaSimplified: About 95 percent of Transportation Security Administrationβs employees are required to report to work through a shutdown without being paid
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π€ Ms. McNeill π News Article π·οΈ Employment , Government π a1168adb-ea82-49f8-aed6-7515c8d041e8Simplified: TSA saw spike in resignations after that shutdown Ms McNeill told lawmakers this week while she noted that agency was trying to increase hiring before...
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Employment , Safety π a1163cf6-b601-44b7-a3c6-2fb4aacaf0f4Simplified: Staffing shortages caused screening delays at Houston's two airports during later weeks of shutdown after employees missed multiple paychecks
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Finance π a1168add-8c1b-416f-b090-ead983bc9190Simplified: Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem awarded $10000 bonuses to some TSA officials after shutdown ended for going above and beyond
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Finance , Government π a1163cf6-e4c2-437f-bd02-e602014b8194Simplified: FEMA's disaster relief fund has enough money to carry out current and anticipated emergency response activities
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π€ Gregg Phillips π News Article π·οΈ Finance , Disaster Relief π a1164930-2bdf-4314-8bde-0f3b02d6130fSimplified: A catastrophic disaster during a Homeland Security Department shutdown would seriously strain the fund according to Gregg Phillips.
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π€ Mr. Phillips π News Article π·οΈ Government , Disaster Relief π a1164930-4893-42dc-863d-68aba463984cSimplified: FEMA would find it difficult to reimburse states for disaster relief operations quickly Mr Phillips said.
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Finance π a1163cf6-ff31-4792-a472-067ba2699d38Simplified: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services is largely funded by fees it charges applicants most operations would typically continue during shutdown
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Employment π a1163cf7-2eca-415a-8eb9-887ac597536bSimplified: During last shutdown program was temporarily suspended
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π€ Matthew Tragesser π News Article π·οΈ Government , Employment , Immigration π a1164931-6c35-4de7-84ab-b5e4daa88676Simplified: The administration would take decisive action to keep E-Verify open during a shutdown according to Matthew Tragesser.
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π€ Vice Admiral Thomas Allan π News Article π·οΈ Government , Military π a1163cf7-a4da-4b66-b864-03bf464a5f78Simplified: Vice Admiral Thomas Allan warned prolonged shutdown would erode mission readiness and hurt morale
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Personnel π a1163cf7-f962-47b6-9316-907ca7817fe5Simplified: Most employees at Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency would be furloughed during shutdown
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Operations π a1163cf8-344f-4b5a-9fdf-c6a688df5c23Simplified: Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency would delay strategic planning and development of cybersecurity guidance
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Personnel π a1163cf8-634e-4290-97b7-3e30efaafdc6Simplified: About 94 percent of Secret Service workforce of more than 8000 would stay on job during shutdown
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π€ Matthew C. Quinn π News Article π·οΈ Government , Security π a1163cf8-7efb-415b-b39a-aa4a3ff9d808Simplified: Agents would continue to protect president and vice president along with families
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π€ Matthew C. Quinn π News Article π·οΈ Government , Personnel π a1163cf8-a82a-440b-bd45-18f082ceda7fSimplified: Mr Quinn warned about fading morale as bills come due
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Critical agency priorities would be delayed, such as efforts to hire or train agents and officers.1.000π€ Matthew C. Quinn π News Article π·οΈ Government , Personnel π a1163cf8-c32a-4321-ac13-119521a0e58fSimplified: Critical agency priorities would be delayed such as efforts to hire or train agents and officers