United States Department of Homeland Security shutdown extends TSA security delays

Change
United States Department of Homeland Security shutdown left Transportation Security Administration (TSA) workers unpaid for weeks and produced airport security screening waits up to two hours at peak times, including 42-minute waits at John F. Kennedy International Airport Terminal 4.
United States Department of Homeland Security shutdown extends TSA security delays
Why it matters
Passengers must allow additional time for security screening because reduced staffing has cut checkpoint throughput. Airport operations face constrained capacity at peak periods, increasing the risk of missed connections and disrupted boarding schedules.
Implications
  • Airport operations and customer service teams at major US airports must reassign staff to terminal queue management and passenger assistance to prevent unmanaged security backlogs and rising flight disruptions.
  • Corporate travel managers must notify travelers to build extra time into itineraries and adjust connecting flights to reduce the chance of missed departures from extended screening waits.

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Source

The Guardian

Topics

Security & Defense Aviation & Airspace

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