Worried about “Mass Exodus Monday” when an estimated 120,000 Super Bowl partiers will leave Atlanta en masse, the city is taking matters into its own hands to help keep unpaid airport screeners on the job.

An Atlanta credit union will be offering zero interest loans to Transportation Security Administration employees to try to prevent them from calling in sick after the game, said Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, a Democrat.

“Obviously, we’re concerned for all of our federal workers, but we do have a Super Bowl coming to Atlanta,” Bottoms said of the Feb. 3 title game between the Los Angeles Rams and the New England Patriots. “We are extremely concerned because of what’s called Mass Exodus Monday.”

The partial government shutdown is now in its 34th day, the longest of its kind. The impasse shows no sign of abating in time for the big game, with both parties still stuck this week voting on spending measures they acknowledge won’t be signed into law, though there’s still hope for a resolution over the next week and a half.

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