Government shutdown damage Garbage sits in a parking lot at Golden Gate National Recreation Park in San Francisco, California, on Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2019. (Photo: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg)

The government may be reopening, but the consequences of the longest federal shutdown in U.S. history are likely to linger for national parks, forests, the federal workforce and cutting-edge scientific research. Some may even be permanent.

Wildfire prevention not done, property damage in national parks

Many fire crews missed their window for controlled burns to prevent wildfires. Irreplaceable relics may have been damaged in unguarded national parks. Science experiments were abandoned. And a generation of talent may now think twice about signing up for government, while workers returning to a month of unopened emails and missed meetings will have to decide which of their priorities to sacrifice this year.

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