The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

As airpprts brace for busy time, TSA heads for border

Shift of some workers south raises concerns for summer travelers.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion employees are being asked to volunteer to deploy to the southern border, causing airport and travel officials to raise concerns about a loss of staff just as the busy summer travel season begins.

What happened

The developmen­t comes after concerns about U.S. Customs and Border Protection employees being sent from airports and the northern border to the southwest border to help handle the flow of migrants, and the effects on wait times at airports.

Now, the call for more staff to be sent to the border is reaching the TSA, which like Customs and Border Protection is under the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

“TSA, like all DHS components, is supporting the DHS effort to address the humanitari­an and security crisis at the southwest border,” the agency said in a written statement.

TSA has requested volunteers across its workforce, and says it will impact a few hundred employees out of its workforce of 60,000 nationally. Those volunteers will help with transporta­tion, legal support, distributi­on of meals and managing personal property — but will not be handling immigratio­n duties at ports of entry, the agency said.

TSA said its security operations will continue uninterrup­ted.

Why it matters

During busy periods, Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport can add its own staff to help direct travelers waiting in line for security checkpoint­s. Delta Air Lines has also had its employees supplement TSA staff at airports.

“Our goal is to provide the best customer service experience we can. Part of the experience is going through the checkpoint,” said Hartsfield-Jackson general manager John Selden. “Full staffing is critical to ensuring that experience is a positive one.”

An industry group, the U.S. Travel Associatio­n, said it would closely watch the effects and any disruption to the economy.

“Further stretching CBP and TSA resources — especially headed into the busiest time of year at our nation’s airports and points of entry — clearly could result in turmoil for business and leisure travel that supports millions of livelihood­s all across the country,” U.S. Travel Associatio­n executive vice president of public affairs and policy Tori Barnes said in a written statement.

What it means

Hydrick Thomas, the president of the union for TSA officers, the American Federation of Government Employees, issued a statement saying the deployment “means fewer resources will be available for aviation security.”

“The timing of this deployment could not be worse, as we are preparing for yet another busy summer travel season,” Thomas said in the statement. He urged TSA to reconsider its decision.

 ?? KARSTEN MORAN / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The TSA is asking for volunteers among its staff to deploy to the U.S. southern border with Mexico, raising fears of backups at airport security checkpoint­s across the nation.
KARSTEN MORAN / THE NEW YORK TIMES The TSA is asking for volunteers among its staff to deploy to the U.S. southern border with Mexico, raising fears of backups at airport security checkpoint­s across the nation.

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