S-21-116
Read the second time. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 2. (text: CR S27)
Sponsored by John Thune (R-SD)
What it does
This bill would automatically provide funding to the U.S. Coast Guard whenever a lapse in appropriations (a government shutdown) leaves the agency without an approved budget. The funding would cover pay and allowances for active-duty members, civilian employees, and contractors; death benefits and housing allowances for families of members who die on active duty; and retired pay. The automatic funding would remain in place until Congress passes a Coast Guard-specific appropriations bill or a broader spending package that includes the Coast Guard.
Who benefits
Active-duty Coast Guard members (approximately 41,000) who would continue receiving paychecks during a government shutdown. Coast Guard civilian employees (approximately 8,500) who would avoid furloughs or delayed pay. Coast Guard contractors whose work and compensation would continue uninterrupted. Retired Coast Guard personnel who would continue receiving retirement pay. Families of Coast Guard members who die on active duty, who would continue receiving death gratuities and housing allowances without interruption.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who oppose automatic spending mechanisms that remove Congress's leverage to negotiate budget disputes, as the bill reduces the fiscal pressure that shutdowns create. Members of other military branches and federal agencies not covered by this bill who would still face pay disruptions during a shutdown, potentially creating inequity across the federal workforce. Legislators who use shutdown threats as a negotiating tool would lose some of that leverage specifically over Coast Guard funding.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Coast Guard is unique among the armed forces because it falls under the Department of Homeland Security rather than the Department of Defense, which receives automatic funding during shutdowns under existing law. This structural quirk means Coast Guard members — who perform life-saving search-and-rescue missions, drug interdiction, and port security — are the only branch of the military legally required to work without pay during a lapse in appropriations. Supporters contend that forcing armed service members to work without compensation is both unjust and a threat to national security, as financial stress can impair readiness and retention. The bill would simply put the Coast Guard on equal footing with the other military branches.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill, while sympathetic in intent, chips away at one of Congress's most fundamental constitutional powers: the power of the purse. By automating appropriations for one agency, Congress sets a precedent that could be extended to other agencies, gradually eroding the leverage that funding deadlines provide to force budget negotiations. Opponents also contend that the proper solution is for Congress to pass appropriations on time, not to create automatic spending mechanisms that reduce accountability. Some fiscal conservatives further argue that continuing resolutions and automatic funding provisions can lock in spending levels and reduce incentives for rigorous annual budget review.