Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

TSA officers fear illness as cases rise

‘Our guys can’t stay 6 feet away from anybody’

- Ben Fox and David Koenig

WASHINGTON – At least six Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion officers have tested positive for the new coronaviru­s and dozens were in selfquaran­tine Monday as the disease takes an increasing toll on an agency crucial to the safety of U.S. aviation.

TSA said it was providing safety training to employees and operations were running smoothly. It stood by its decision to not provide officers with respirator­s as their union requested last week.

Union leaders said they were still concerned, even as a major drop in traffic at the nation’s airports seemed to reduce the potential for exposure. Officers screen 2 million passengers across the country on a typical day.

Joe Shuker, a vice president for the union representi­ng workers in the region that includes Philadelph­ia and Washington, said he was surprised the government hadn’t shut down air traffic.

“Our guys can’t stay 6 feet away from anybody, we’re patting people down,” Shuker said. ‘We’re putting people at risk for no reason.”

TSA over the weekend announced the positive test of an officer at Orlando Internatio­nal Airport who had last been at work March 10. The officer was being treated and all employees who came into contact with the person over the previous two weeks were in self-quarantine at home.

There was an earlier positive test by an officer at the Fort Lauderdale­Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport and four at the airport in San Jose, California.

The TSA did not disclose the total number of employees in isolation because of the exposure but the American Federation of Government Employees, which represents the nearly 46,000 officers, said about 40 workers at just the San Jose airport were told to self-quarantine.

Around the globe, airline bookings are plummeting and cancellati­ons soaring as government­s restrict travel and people fear being enclosed in an airplane for several hours during a pandemic that has sickened more than 180,000 people and killed more than 7,100.

TSA said checkpoint­s remain open though some lanes might be closed. Shuker said the Philadelph­ia airport was unusually quiet.

“There are enough people because nobody is flying,” he said. “This place should be packed right now on a Monday.”

AFGE sent a letter last week to the TSA director asking that he provide respirator­s because surgical masks they were given are insufficient for officers who “are uniquely susceptibl­e to this outbreak.” The request was denied.

The agency said that neither the CDC nor the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion recommends respirator­s for the officers and said the equipment should be reserved for workers in the riskiest situations, such as medical personnel.

“TSA follows OSHA and CDC guidance related to personnel protection,” it said in a written statement.

The agency said it was requiring officers to wear nitrile gloves while checking people and baggage to add an extra layer of protection and instructin­g them not to reuse swabs used in screening, among other measures.

Gary Holdsworth, a union vice president for the local in Northern California, said there has not been any mass sickout in response to the outbreak despite the increasing stress of potential exposure.

“You don’t want to panic and you don’t want to be paranoid, but when you are in a spot where you are seeing the public every day you have no idea,” he said.

Greg Biel, a union regional vice president in Portland, Oregon, said workers were frustrated about what they see as a poor job planning for the outbreak but weren’t letting that interfere with their work.

“From what I can see, everybody is coming to work and doing the job they were brought on board to do,” he said.

 ?? KATHY WILLENS/AP ?? A Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion employee adjusts her face mask while screening passengers entering through a checkpoint at John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York.
KATHY WILLENS/AP A Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion employee adjusts her face mask while screening passengers entering through a checkpoint at John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York.

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