The Maui News

Number of no-show security screeners soars in shutdown

- By JEFF MARTIN and DAVID KOENIG The Associated Press

ATLANTA — The number of airport security screeners failing to show up for work around the country is soaring as the partial government shutdown goes into its fourth week.

No-shows among screeners jumped Sunday and again Monday, when the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion reported a national absence rate of 7.6 percent compared with 3.2 percent on a comparable day a year ago. Monday marked the first business day after screeners did not receive a paycheck for the first time since the shutdown began.

At Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport, the world’s busiest, some passengers waited more than an hour to get through checkpoint­s. The airport reported the long lines on its website Monday morning, showing the hourplus waits at all three checkpoint­s in the domestic terminal.

“It’s chaos out here,” passenger Vincent Smith said as he stood in a line that snaked through the Atlanta airport’s atrium and baggage claim areas. “This line, I’ve been here about 15 minutes and it has moved 2 feet.”

TSA is working with the Atlanta airport and airlines “to maximize all available operationa­l resources at the airport,” TSA spokesman Jim Gregory said.

The agency is working with airports and airlines nationwide to consolidat­e operations and get the most out of resources, Gregory added. He declined to provide absentee figures for Atlanta or other airports, saying that would compromise security by exposing possible vulnerabil­ities.

“Screeners will not do anything to compromise or change their security procedures,” he said.

But Smith said he could relate to government workers who don’t show up so they can find other ways to make ends meet.

“If I was a government worker, yes, I would probably call in and try to do something else because creditors don’t care if you’re furloughed or not,” Smith said. “They just want to get paid and with a family of six, you have to do what you have to.”

Atlanta’s wait times stretched well beyond what the TSA says most passengers have encountere­d since the shutdown began.

Delta Air Lines, the dominant carrier in Atlanta, and other airlines said they were advising passengers to get to the airport at least two hours before domestic flights and three hours before internatio­nal trips. A Delta spokeswoma­n said airline employees were pitching in by helping manage TSA lines.

TSA said that it screened 1.97 million people on Sunday and that 99.1 percent waited less than 30 minutes, and 93.1 percent less than 15 minutes. Precheck lines for people who pay a fee for expedited screening averaged less than five minutes, TSA said.

A combinatio­n of a busy Monday travel day combined with some security lines being closed led to the long lines, airport spokesman Andrew Gobeil said. He said he didn’t know how many security lines were down.

A statement from TSA attributed the long waits in Atlanta to “anticipate­d high volume.”

Meanwhile, TSA said it would move officers around the country to deal with local shortages. A few airports are making changes to deal with the shortage of screeners.

An official with the union representi­ng TSA workers said TSA canceled employees’ vacation requests about a week ago.

“Since nobody is getting paid, (TSA officials) don’t want them to take annual leave,” said Cairo D’Almeida, president of a government workers’ union local in Seattle. He said he was asking local food banks if they can help the workers.

Gregory, the TSA spokesman said that was not a TSA decision. Under guidelines from the federal Office of Personnel Management, paid time off is canceled for employees, including the airport screeners, who are exempt from certain federal labor laws.

 ?? Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on / JOHN SPINK photo via AP ?? Security lines at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport in Atlanta stretch more than an hour long amid the partial federal shutdown, causing some travelers to miss flights Monday. No-shows among screeners across the nation soared recently, as TSA officers have been working without pay since the federal shutdown began Dec. 22.
Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on / JOHN SPINK photo via AP Security lines at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport in Atlanta stretch more than an hour long amid the partial federal shutdown, causing some travelers to miss flights Monday. No-shows among screeners across the nation soared recently, as TSA officers have been working without pay since the federal shutdown began Dec. 22.

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