‘There’s a lot of people hurting right now’: Labor unions rally to demand government reopen

WASHINGTON — Claiming national leaders are playing politics with people’s lives, thousands gathered Thursday at AFL-CIO headquarters in downtown D.C. for a rally to demand an end to the partial government shutdown.

“We’re just really, really upset,” AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka told WTOP before the rally began. “The message is this: Stop playing politics with our lives. Open the government. Do your jobs, so we can do our jobs.”

Within sight of the White House, federal employees and contract workers belonging to two dozen U.S. labor unions gathered along 16th Street Northwest, outside AFL-CIO headquarters.

Among them was Lila Johnson, 71, of Hagerstown, Maryland, who works part time as a custodial services contractor for the Department of Agriculture. “Everybody is depressed now because they don’t know when they can go back to work,” Johnson said. She’s raising two boys, 15 and 7 years old, and she can’t afford not to be paid, she said.

“The part-time job that I’m doing is to put with my Social Security and my pension, because it’s not enough,” Johnson said. “That’s why at the age of 71, I’m still working.”

Discouraged at not being considered “essential,” Stephanie Marrone, of Alexandria, Virginia, said she misses working “and the paycheck, too.”

Buttons from the rally agains tthe government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
Buttons from Thursday’s rally against the government shutdown (WTOP/Kristi King)
A sign from the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
A sign from Thursday’s rally against the government shutdown (WTOP/Kristi King)
A shirt from the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
Protesters rallied against the government shutdown Thursday. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee from the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at Thursday’s rally against the government shutdown (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at the rally agains tthe government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at Thursday’s rally against the government shutdown (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at Thursday’s rally against the government shutdown (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at Thursday’s rally against the government shutdown (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at Thursday’s rally against the government shutdown (WTOP/Kristi King)
The rally against the government shutdown occcurred Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
Protesters rallied Thursday against the government shutdown. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
Protesters rallied Thursday against the government shutdown. (WTOP/Kristi King)
(WTOP/Kristi King)
(WTOP/Kristi King)
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Buttons from the rally agains tthe government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
A sign from the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
A shirt from the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee from the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at the rally agains tthe government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
The rally against the government shutdown occcurred Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)
An attendee at the rally against the government shutdown Jan. 10, 2019. (WTOP/Kristi King)

Marrone is a park guide for the National Park Service at Oxon Hill Farm, where she milks cows, drives a tractor and does farm demonstrations for school groups and families.

“I think of what we do as being essential, because we do programs for people for free. And people who can’t afford to take their families fancy places for fun, go to the national parks,” Morrone said. “There have been dozens and dozens of parks like mine that have been shut down.”

The concept of what makes a job essential is a bit different for Jim Salamon of Germantown, Maryland, whose developmentally disabled son is furloughed from the Curtis Bay Coast Guard Yard in Baltimore.

“He’s been there for 17 years. He really likes it; this is messing him up,” Salamon said.

Talten Hall, of Silver Spring, Maryland, was rallying not far from his typical job site. He’s a National Park Service worker assigned to President’s Park, which includes the park lands surrounding the White House.

“I just want to get back to work,” Hall said, adding that he doesn’t care about the political issues surrounding the shutdown.

“Those that are above me, maybe got more education than me, need to figure it out,” Hall said. “Because there’s a lot of people hurting right now. And I’m one of them.”

Kristi King

Kristi King is a veteran reporter who has been working in the WTOP newsroom since 1990. She covers everything from breaking news to consumer concerns and the latest medical developments.

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