north, when and where migrants will arrive is often still uncertain. manuel bojorquez, cbs news, new york. norah: the big nasa announcement about the mission to send astronauts back to the moon. the details next. tried everything. erally i was on the verge of getting gastric bypass surgery, and i saw the golo commercial, and it was the last thing i tried cause it worked. i was stuck. unresolved depression symptoms were in my way. i needed more from my antidepressant. vraylar helped give it a lift. adding vraylar to an antidepressant. is clinically proven to help relieve overall depression symptoms. .better than an antidepressant alone. and in vraylar clinical studies, most saw no substantial impact on weight. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. report unusual changes in behavior or suicidal thoughts. antidepressants can increase these in children and young adults.
are not reusable. they were actually trying to reuse the entire rocket to bring it all back those two things together, these conic the economy of scale is shaving off the cost of work did bit to bring thousands of dollars per kilogram down to hundreds of dollars, and that s a real paradigm shift in space expiration if they manage to succeed. ., ., ., ., ., succeed. how far away are we, do you think, from succeed. how far away are we, do you think, from sending succeed. how far away are we, do you think, from sending someone - succeed. how far away are we, do you think, from sending someone to - succeed. how far away are we, do you think, from sending someone to mars| think, from sending someone to mars for example? because this is the beginning of that exploration to the moon and to mars, then even beyond. that s a really good question. first of all, they have to go into orbit around the earth in the need to repeat that a few times to test all the various different parts of th
41,000 federal employees. hans, tell us not just what the government workers are telling you there, but local businesses, businesses in a town with that many federal workers and buildings that are closed down, they can t stay open. reporter: well, they re seeing their sales decline. that s kind of what you would expect to happen when you have that many furloughed workers here who aren t getting a paycheck. of course, you also have workers say at the t.s.a. who are going in and aren t getting paid, but you have a lot of people here. you mentioned the 41,000. about 15% of that is nasa. you have a big nasa base here. nasa home here. that s why it s called rocket city. and the challenge really in backing this out from an economic perspective, you and ali know this so well. it s difficult to figure out how it all knockout effects in the economy. contract workers living with uncertainty. families living with uncertainty. income not coming in. all that has an effect
1,229 workers. think about all the back paperwork if not just the money. workers for nasa, now they are owed $8,082 per worker. you know how many people work for nasa? 17,564. that equals a total of 140 million bucks. but perhaps the biggest group affected here is the department of homeland security. that matters. it has a total of 245,406 workers. thus far, $5,895 have not been paid out to them during this shutdown. and that equals a total of more than a billion dollars. it s all stuff that s not in the economy. all of these numbers are people who are not spending that money in some way, and that s hurting other businesses. in restaurants, at the movies, and paying their basic necessities. that includes airport screeners who make $41,000 a year on average, and have missed about
tweet-up, i might come. go to nasa.gov/tweetut and you could be 1 of 150 people that if you sign up you have to sign up from a certain date to a certain date, you could be on kennedy space center for the next shuttle, i think it s discovery going up. and it is going to be private for these 150 people and it s going to be a big nasa event for twitter followers. i could never understand if i m supposed to tweet or twit or whatever but it s tweeting. it s going to be discovery. that will be fun. id like that. i will go but yo with you bring bagels. chad, great to see you as always. that s off the radar with chad. millions of people in pakistan are fighting for basic needs as they face a flooding disaster. but enough aid just isn t coming. why? why isn t enough aid coming? why is this not on the top of everyone s agenda? we ll show you why after the break.