As workers miss paychecks, shutdown set to hit record length

Katie Barron gestures while looking at a pay increase notice for her children’s day care, in her home in Madison, Ala., Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2019. Barron’s husband is a National Weather Service meteorologist forced to work without pay during the shutdown because his job is classified as essential. They’ve put off home and car maintenance, but the $450-a-week bill for day care still has to be paid, as do the mortgage and utility bills. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Jack Lyons, a contractor working on massive rocket test stands for NASA, stands in his workshop while spending the furlough on his small side business making props for marching bands, in Madison, Ala., Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2019. “They’re trying to use people as bargaining chips, and it just isn’t right,” Lyons said. Unlike civil service workers who expect to eventually get back pay, Lyons doesn’t know if he’ll ever see a dollar from the shutdown period. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

WASHINGTON — The partial government shutdown was on track Friday to become the longest closure in U.S. history as President Donald Trump and nervous Republicans scrambled to find a way out of the mess. A solution couldn’t come soon enough for federal workers who got pay statements Friday but no pay.

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