As night falls on inauguration eve, a government slumber party of historic dimensions will begin. Nearly 6,000 soldiers will unroll their sleeping bags in D.C. schools. Homeland Security employees will climb onto bunk beds in trailers. FBI agents will stretch out on cots in a District church hall.
And at the National Museum of American History, a few employees will live the ultimate childhood fantasy: a sleepover in a building with 5,000 musical instruments and a 1,354-piece doll's house.
With hotel rates sky-high and major bridges and streets closed, many government employees have concluded there is only one sure way to get to their workplaces Tuesday: sleep there. Even officials with decades of experience in Washington said they can't recall anything similar.
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