Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Airport security screeners calling off work

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The federal agency tasked with guaranteei­ng U. S. airport security acknowledg­ed an increase in the number of its employees calling off work during the partial government shutdown.

Employees of the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion are expected to work without pay during the shutdown because their jobs are considered essential.

The TSA said in a statement Friday that callouts that began over the holiday period have increased. The agency did not say how many of its employees have called out, but it said the call outs have had “minimal impact given that there are 51,739 employees supporting the screening process.” The statement said wait times “may be affected” but so far “remain well within TSA standards.”

“TSA is closely monitoring the situation,” the agency statement said. “Security effectiven­ess will not be compromise­d.”

The Department of Homeland Security and President Donald Trump pushed back Saturday on suggestion­s that the absences represente­d a “sickout” that was having significan­t consequenc­es on U. S. air travel. White House officials and congressio­nal aides were in talks Saturday to end the shutdown, which entered its 15th day. Negotiatio­ns are at an impasse over Trump’s demands for $ 5.6 billion to fund a wall at the U. S.- Mexico border.

TSA spokesman Michael Bilello tweeted that 5.5 percent of the TSA workforce at Dallas/ Fort Worth Internatio­nal Airport called out Friday, compared with 3.5 percent on a normal day. He said wait times “may be affected” but that all passengers would be screened as normal.

Hydrick Thomas, president of the national TSA employee union, told CNN that up to 170 TSA employees at New York’s John F. Kennedy Airport have called out each day this week.

Airport officials said there no screening delays at JFK, Chicago’s O’Hare and Midway airports, or Miami Internatio­nal Airport.

Union officials did not return requests for comment.

 ?? Pedro Portal / TNS ?? Robert Guevara, an FAA safety inspector who has been furloughed for the last 13 days was among a group of inspectors picketing at Miami Internatio­nal Airport.
Pedro Portal / TNS Robert Guevara, an FAA safety inspector who has been furloughed for the last 13 days was among a group of inspectors picketing at Miami Internatio­nal Airport.

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