USA TODAY US Edition

One in 10 airport security workers calling in sick

- John Bacon

The slowly growing wave of sickouts among TSA workers reached 10 percent as the agency that provides security at the nation’s airports acknowledg­ed that “many employees are reporting that they are not able to report to work due to financial limitation­s.”

The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion said Monday that the rate of unschedule­d absences Sunday compared with a 3.1 percent rate on the same day one year ago.

About 800,000 of the nation’s federal employees will miss their second paycheck this week as the government shutdown extends into its second month. About half of those employees, including about 50,000 airport security workers, are considered “essential” and are working anyway.

“While national average wait times are within normal TSA times of 30 minutes for standard lanes and 10 minutes for TSA Precheck, some airports experience­d longer than usual wait times,” the TSA said in a statement.

Without pay, some federal employees have resorted to picking up temporary jobs to make ends meet.

The TSA said it is “optimizing resources” to ensure that screening lanes

are properly staffed, but it warned that airports may exercise contingenc­y plans because of call-outs and traveler volume.

TSA employees screened 1.78 million passengers Sunday. Of those, “99.9 percent” of passengers waited less than 30 minutes, the agency said, and 93.1 percent waited less than 15 minutes. Saturday, the sickout rate was 8 percent.

Baltimore-Washington Internatio­nal Thurgood Marshall Airport said it closed a checkpoint Sunday to “efficientl­y use staffing.” The airport tweeted that such closures were common before the shutdown and have “minimal, if any, impact on passengers.”

The TSA said it tapped members of its National Deployment Force, usually called in to help with staffing shortages when major events or national disasters descend on a city. The added staff helps bulk up security at a handful of larger airports, including New York’s LaGuardia and Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal, the agency said.

“Came early to @LGAairport assuming long waits and lines,” traveler Shelly Maddox tweeted Monday from LaGuardia. “We have never had a better experience. Absolutely no wait and the @TSA workers had a smile on their face. Profession­als.”

The Atlanta airport and Seattle’s Sea-Tac Internatio­nal Airport were among those where security wait times reached 60 minutes at some checkpoint­s last week. A Sea-Tac airport spokesman blamed the high volume of passengers heading out for the holiday weekend.

The shutdown began three days before Christmas when President Donald Trump and the Democratic Congress reached a stalemate over Trump’s demand for $5.7 billion for a wall along the Mexican border.

Historical­ly, federal employees who drew no pay during government shutdowns have ultimately been paid whether they worked or not.

This shutdown has been the longest in U.S. history.

The TSA workers’ plight has drawn support.

Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley of the band KISS announced they will provide free food at their Rock & Brews Restaurant­s nationwide.

At Miami Internatio­nal Airport, Chef Creole gives TSA workers free lunch and dinner every day they work without pay.

Sunday, Trump tweeted his thanks to federal employees.

“To all of the great people who are working so hard for your Country and not getting paid I say, THANK YOU - YOU ARE GREAT PATRIOTS!” he tweeted. “We must now work together, after decades of abuse, to finally fix the Humanitari­an, Criminal & Drug Crisis at our Border. WE WILL WIN BIG!”

 ?? RICK BOWMER/AP ?? TSA employee Gary Vetterli grabs lunch at Salt Lake City Internatio­nal Airport last week.
RICK BOWMER/AP TSA employee Gary Vetterli grabs lunch at Salt Lake City Internatio­nal Airport last week.
 ?? TERRY TANG/AP ?? Volunteers outside Phoenix Indian Medical Center sign in federal workers who want to pick up food bank donations Friday in Phoenix. Employees of the hospital accept food from St. Mary’s Food Bank.
TERRY TANG/AP Volunteers outside Phoenix Indian Medical Center sign in federal workers who want to pick up food bank donations Friday in Phoenix. Employees of the hospital accept food from St. Mary’s Food Bank.

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