Baltimore Sun Sunday

TSA braces for a ‘very, very busy summer’

Labor shortages, high demand have besieged industry

- By Kyle Arnold

The nation’s TSA chief David Pekoske and airport and airline leaders say there will be inevitable “hiccups” this summer as they expect the largest airport passenger crowds since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

Labor shortages and sky-high demand have besieged the travel industry, and Pekoske said the agency is ready to deploy as many as 1,000 TSA agents and K-9 units to pain points across the country to counter potential backlogs at airport security checkpoint­s. The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion created a position for new hires that will get them up to speed faster and to staff checkpoint­s better, helping experience­d TSA agents with tasks that don’t require certificat­ion.

“We expect the summer to be very, very busy,” said Pekoske, who was recently nominated for a second five-year term by President Joe Biden. “That’s not to say that there will not be some hiccups along the way — those things will happen, but we’ll do everything we can to recover quickly.”

Pekoske spoke recently at a meeting at Homeland Security offices in Coppell and was joined by some of the most influentia­l leaders in the U.S. travel industry, including Airlines for America CEO Nick Calio, DFW Internatio­nal Airport CEO Sean Donohue and Faye Malarkey Black, CEO of the Regional Airline Associatio­n.

Dallas-Forth Worth Airport is expecting domestic traffic to be at about “98 or 99% of 2019,” Donohue said.

Each of the groups represente­d

at the meeting has dealt with its own obstacles since travel started to rebound swiftly last spring, issues that have only intensifie­d in the 12 months since.

Some expect airport crowds to surpass 3 million passengers a day on the busiest travel days this summer until Labor Day. But the demand comes with challenges, too.

Pilots are complainin­g about fatigue and flight cancellati­ons heading into the summer at airlines including American Airlines, Southwest Airlines, Alaska and Delta. Airport restaurant­s are once again begging for employees, and there have also been shortages of workers at car rental desks,

at customer service call center workers for airlines and of the people who push wheelchair­s and ground employees who pull planes back and forth from gates.

“Everybody is facing labor shortages; airlines and TSA are no different,” said Paul Doell, vice president for the National Air Carrier Associatio­n. “At just about every level you can think of in the airline industry we can speak of we’re having labor shortages.”

Airlines themselves are honing in on running reliable operations this summer and cutting down on the number of delays and cancellati­ons that have sometimes plagued travelers during peak periods in the last year. That has led some, including Southwest

Airlines, to cut thousands of flights from schedules. While that could help airlines run on time, it will also mean planes will be more full and pressure will be on workers in airports, including TSA agents, to get those travelers to flights on time.

But regional air carriers, which fly about 43% of all scheduled flights in the U.S., say they are facing labor shortages as employees such as pilots are being poached by the larger airlines. That could create issues connecting smaller destinatio­ns to larger hub airports, Black said.

“The pilot shortage is impacting the regionals, and we expect to see the small communitie­s hit the hardest,” Black said. “We

expect this to continue to be a trend, but those pain points will assert themselves at hubs as well.”

TSA has already suffered some extraordin­ary long waits at airports that have seen passenger volumes surpass 2019 levels, including at Austin-Bergstrom Internatio­nal Airport and Orlando Internatio­nal Airport.

Pekoske also warned that many travelers this summer could be getting on a plane for the first time in three years, especially as masking and COVID-19 restrictio­ns have fallen in many parts of the country and internatio­nal travel restrictio­ns are being lifted.

“The amount of people that worked concession­s prior to the pandemic are not there now,” said Kevin Burke, head of Airports Council Internatio­nal-North America. “They’ve come back, but they’re nowhere near where they need to be.”

That confluence of issues could make for a challengin­g summer for passengers and airline employees alike.

“So we really ask that we try to have patience and understand­ing when they are dealing with employees at the airport,” Doell said. “Everybody’s trying to do the best job they to can make sure this is safe, secure and also as comfortabl­e as it can be under normal circumstan­ces but especially when you have those tough days where you have storms that are disrupting the system.”

 ?? PATRICK T. FALLON/GETTY-AFP ?? Airline passengers wait at a Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion checkpoint April 19 to clear security in Denver.
PATRICK T. FALLON/GETTY-AFP Airline passengers wait at a Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion checkpoint April 19 to clear security in Denver.

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