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This Article is From Jan 15, 2019

Security Waits Top an Hour at Atlanta Airport Amid Shutdown

(Bloomberg) -- Some airport security lanes in Atlanta, Washington and Houston were closed as the Transportation Security Administration continued to grapple with more absenteeism during the partial government shutdown.

The TSA will begin relocating airport screening officers “on a national basis to meet staffing shortages that cannot be addressed locally,” the federal agency said in a tweet Monday. The TSA will also join airports and airlines in announcing when security lane closures occur so travelers can plan accordingly.

Wait times to pass through security were “over an hour” at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International's main checkpoint for domestic flights, the airport said on its website. Screening times were as much as 45 minutes at the two other domestic-flight checkpoints at the nation's busiest hub. The airport is adding more “live music at all of our checkpoints to help ease tensions for passengers,” spokeswoman Elise Durham said in an email.

The TSA on Monday experienced more than twice the normal rate of security officers calling in sick, agency spokesman Michael Bilello said in a tweet. The rate of 7.6 percent unscheduled absences compared with 3.2 percent on Monday, Jan. 15, 2018, he said.

“Not only will continuing the shutdown increase airport delays and hinder commerce, it could have a negative impact on aviation security if a resolution does not come quickly,” Congressman Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat and chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security, said in a statement.

George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston closed the sole security checkpoint and ticketing counter in Terminal B “due to staffing issues” related to the shutdown, according to its website. Passengers flying in or out of Terminal B were routed to one of two other facilities. The checkpoint was first closed Sunday.

TSA screeners weren't paid on Jan. 11, their first full paycheck due since the government mostly shuttered more than a dozen major departments and agencies on Dec. 22 in a dispute over whether to fund a wall at the Mexico border.

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