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10% of TSA airport screeners skipped work Sunday

Transportation Security Administration officers work at O'Hare airport in Chicago on Jan. 5. They're not getting paid during the partial government shutdown.
Transportation Security Administration officers work at O’Hare airport in Chicago on Jan. 5. They’re not getting paid during the partial government shutdown.
(Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press)
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The percentage of TSA airport screeners missing work has hit 10% as the partial shutdown of the federal government stretches into its fifth week.

The Transportation Security Administration said Monday that Sunday’s absence rate was up from 3.1% on the comparable Sunday last year.

The workers who screen passengers and their bags face another missed paycheck if the shutdown doesn’t end early this week. According to the TSA, many say the financial hardship is preventing them from reporting to work.

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The TSA says the national average waiting time in airport checkpoint lines is within the normal limit of 30 minutes, but some airports have longer lines.

The agency has dispatched extra screeners to airports in Atlanta and Newark, N.J., and to LaGuardia Airport in New York. A TSA spokesman said other airports might also be getting additional help.

Sunday’s 10% absence rate indicates that more than 3,000 airport screeners missed work. The TSA has 51,000 screeners, and a spokesman said about 33,000 work on any given day. The 10% absence rate topped the previous high of 8%, set Saturday.

With fewer screeners, the TSA closed one of its security checkpoints at the Baltimore/Washington airport over the weekend. The checkpoint was open again Monday but then closed again Monday afternoon, according to an airport spokeswoman.

A checkpoint at Houston’s Bush Intercontinental Airport remained closed. An airport spokesman said lines were relatively short at the other six checkpoints.

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The TSA appeared to be managing the high sick-out rate as well as could be expected. The agency said that on Sunday it screened 1.78 million passengers, and that only 6.9% — roughly 120,000 people — had to wait 15 minutes or longer to get through security.

No figures were yet available for Monday, but websites or spokespeople for several major airports including Dallas-Fort Worth and Chicago’s O’Hare reported normal security lines and few problems. Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, which had some of the longest lines in the country last week, reported waits of 15 to 30 minutes at domestic-travel checkpoints Monday. Los Angeles International Airport showed most lines under 20 minutes.

Bad weather gave the TSA a break: Storms in the Midwest and Northeast led airlines to cancel more than 4,400 flights over the three-day weekend, which reduced the number of passengers to screen.

A few airports — San Francisco’s being the largest — conduct screening with government-approved private contractors, not TSA workers. A long government shutdown and more TSA sick-outs could lead other airports to consider going private, although that hasn’t happened yet.

The holiday honoring the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. is not as busy for travel as many other three-day weekends. However, inconvenience could become a crisis for the travel industry the longer the shutdown lasts — and there are few signs of movement by President Trump or congressional Democrats to break the stalemate over border-wall spending that is causing the shutdown.

“Presidents Day weekend is much bigger, and then spring break and Easter — those are really important,” said Savanthi Syth, an airline analyst for Raymond James. Presidents Day is Feb. 18, and Syth said if the shutdown drags into next month it could cause some passengers to cancel travel plans.

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