Over 1,000 US TSA officers have left since start of shutdown, DHS says
The departures come as the shutdown has forced 50,000 TSA workers to go unpaid for six weeks and triggered airport delays of four hours or more.
- On Monday, the Department of Homeland Security reported that over 1,000 Transportation Security Administration officers have resigned since the agency's shutdown began in mid-February.
- Forced to go without pay for six weeks, 50,000 TSA workers drove the exodus, causing security waits exceeding four hours at some locations where TSA employees handle screening at nearly all U.S. airports.
- DHS data shows the departure rate accelerated sharply, with officers leaving standing at 460 in the last week of March and rising to more than 780 as of last week.
- Staffing losses are straining airport screening capacity and threatening travel reliability, forcing policymakers to address critical gaps in security operations to prevent further disruptions for air travelers nationwide.
- Earlier this month, Republican President Donald Trump proposed privatizing much of TSA's operations and cutting nearly 10,000 employees, a plan Democrats oppose amid broader standoff over Immigration and Customs Enforcement policies.
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35 Articles
More airport disruptions could be coming as White House warns pay for TSA workers will 'soon run out'
More than 1,000 TSA officers have quit since the shutdown began, according to Airlines for America, the U.S. airlines trade group that called Wednesday on Congress to fully fund the agency.
DHS Warns TSA Staffing Crisis Deepening as Shutdown Fallout Threatens Air Travel
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has revealed that more than 1,000 Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers have left the agency since the partial government shutdown began on Feb. 14, raising serious concerns about the stability of the nation’s air travel system. The post DHS Warns TSA Staffing Crisis Deepening as Shutdown Fallout Threatens Air Travel appeared first on Slay News.
As Shutdown Drags On, DHS Warns Over 1,000 TSA Officers Have Left Jobs—and Staffers Are Set to Go Unpaid Again
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers check luggages passing through a x-ray scanner as passengers go through security in Terminal 7 of Los Angeles International Airport, in Los Angeles, on March 23, 2026. —Etienne Laurent—Los Angeles Times/Getty ImagesAs the partial government shutdown continues to drag on, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is warning that more than 1,000 Transportation Security Administration (TSA) offi…
Fears of long TSA lines return as partial shutdown drags on
Well, here we go again ... maybe. There is growing concern that the long airport security lines that plagued travelers in March could be back within the next few weeks.Transportation Security Administration officers are at risk of again going without pay by the middle of May, the Trump administration has warned.Last time that happened, we saw hourslong TSA backups at some of the nation's busiest airports, as officers resigned and many called off…
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