The government is shut down, but work on International Space Station continues


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Summary

ISS and the shutdown

Many federal employees have been furloughed as the government shutdown continues, including at NASA. Those at the International Space Station are still working, though.

Microgravity research

Members of the crew on the ISS are researching microgravity and doing other experiments. They're also doing scheduled maintenance.

'Excepted employees'

During a shutdown, NASA guidelines state that some employees are exempted from furloughs as they are doing work deemed "necessary to prevent harm to life or property."


Full story

With the federal government shutdown, some services are unavailable, and federal employees are furloughed. That includes 15,000 employees at NASA — though astronauts at the International Space Station are still working.

Those at the ISS are doing work that has been deemed “necessary to prevent harm to
life or property, making them what’s called an “excepted employee” from furloughs per NASA’s shutdown guidelines.

Space.com reports that “for the most part, life aboard the ISS has continued as usual.” Members of the Expedition 73 crew currently onboard the space station are researching microgravity and other experiments, as well as performing scheduled maintenance. NASA employees Jonny Kim, Zena Cardman and Mike Fincke are at the ISS, along with three from Russia’s space agency, Roscosmos: Sergey Ryzhikov, Alexey Zubritsky and Oleg Platonov and one from Japan, Kimiya Yui.

Last week, all the astronauts were there as Japan’s HTV-X1 cargo spacecraft launched and landed on the ISS, Space.com reported. The NASA astronauts helped their colleagues unload its cargo on Friday.

Work also continues on Artemis, as NASA calls that critical, according to Space.com. The goal is to launch an Artemis 2 mission around the moon as soon as February 2026.

Because of the shutdown, though, the NASA astronauts are not getting paid. They and fellow federal employees working amid the shutdown are expected to get backpay, however.

NASA and the shutdown

For the NASA employees who aren’t exempt from furloughs, life looks different. NASA said on its website that it is “currently CLOSED due to a lapse in government funding.”

Employees received two emails, one on Oct. 29 and the other on the 30th, from the Office of the Chief Human Capital Officer, NASA said. The second contained a formal furlough office.

This all means NASA temporarily stopped educational outreach and other research programs not having to do with ISS. The Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida is still open, though, USA Today reported, as it does not receive taxpayer money. Instead, it gets funds from guest revenue. Delaware North is contracted to operate the center for NASA.

Diane Duenez (Managing Weekend Editor) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

The federal government shutdown affects NASA operations, with most employees furloughed and research activities paused, while excepted staff at the International Space Station continue essential missions without pay.

Government shutdown

A funding lapse has led the federal government to suspend many services and furlough employees, including those at NASA, impacting ongoing projects and daily operations.

Essential space operations

NASA astronauts aboard the International Space Station continue vital scientific and maintenance work classified as necessary, demonstrating which activities the agency prioritizes during shutdowns.

Impact on workers

Excepted NASA staff must work without pay during the shutdown, while most employees are furloughed, highlighting the financial and operational effects on the workforce and federal programs.

SAN provides
Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

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