Atlanta: Airports nationwide experienced long security lines after TSA agents missed their first full paycheck amid a partial Department of Homeland Security funding lapse that began on February 14. Airports including Hartsfield-Jackson, William P. Hobby, Salt Lake City International, New Orleans and Philadelphia reported extended waits, occasional checkpoint closures, and reopened food pantries to assist unpaid workers. TSA officials and unions reported staffing losses, citing more than 300 resignations and that 60,000 employees received paychecks worth zero; some workers received half-paychecks earlier. Officials advised travelers to arrive earlier as spring break travel increased. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
Your travel plans could be affected. Long security lines and checkpoint closures mean you'll need extra time at the airport. If you're flying soon, consider arriving earlier than usual.
This is about more than missed paychecks. It's about the strain on our airport security and the ripple effect on travelers. Worth forwarding if you know someone planning a spring break trip.
Short-term beneficiaries may include passengers with expedited screening options and private security contractors who fill gaps; long-term systemic benefits depend on legislative resolution restoring DHS funding.
TSA frontline employees, unpaid federal workers, travelers facing delays, airport operations experiencing strain, and local businesses relying on timely passenger flows suffered immediate negative effects.
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TSA Missed Paychecks Cause Long Airport Security Lines
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