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News / Business

Companies jump in to help people amid shutdown

By Cécile Daurat, Bloomberg
Published: January 12, 2019, 6:05am

About 800,000 federal workers are about to miss their first checks in a partial government shutdown that’s now poised to become the longest in U.S. history. Among staff who won’t get paid Friday are law enforcement officers, NASA engineers and office workers across the country.

Some large corporations are jumping in to give a financial break to those workers — who are also their customers.

Here’s the rundown:

Bank fees, loans

• Major banks including Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co. are offering to waive fees or modify loans for affected workers. JPMorgan Chase & Co., the biggest U.S. lender, said Thursday it has been automatically waiving or refunding monthly service and overdraft fees for government employees with checking or savings accounts since Dec. 24.

• U.S. Bancorp said Friday it’s created a new loan of up to $6,000 available to federal government employees who are customers of the bank.

Car leases

• Toyota Motor Corp. is offering extensions on car loans and leases of as much as two months, calling it a “broad outreach” to furloughed workers but also contractors and suppliers and businesses directly affected by the shutdown.

• JPMorgan is also extending payments on car loans and leases.

Phone, web services

• All the big U.S. carriers are pitching in with payment options, including AT&T Inc., Sprint Corp. and T-Mobile US Inc. Verizon Communications Inc., the largest wireless carrier in the country, told customers affected the company is “here for you,” with options to keep their services running such as a “promise to pay” program that lets them pay later.

• AT&T promised to adjust late fees and provide extensions as long as the shutdown is in effect.

• T-Mobile and Sprint, which are in the process of merging, also offer help in the form of payment deferrals, among other things.

On a lighter note, one company got creative and turned the shutdown into a business opportunity to give unpaid federal workers some love. Adam & Eve, a Hillsborough, N.C.-based seller of sex toys and erotica, is offering a special 50 percent discount for federal employees “just in time for Valentine’s Day.”

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