TSA agents are working without pay at US airports due to another shutdown

Delta Air Lines is facing a class action lawsuit, which claims the Atlanta-based airline refused to give refunds following a global technology outage.
A Delta Air Lines flight information display shows delayed and cancelled flights at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport on Friday, July 19, 2024. (Matthew Pearson/WABE)

A shutdown of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security that took effect early Saturday impacts the agency responsible for screening passengers and bags at airports across the country. Travelers with airline reservations may be nervously recalling a 43-day government shutdown that led to historic flight cancellations and long delays last year.

Transportation Security Administration officers are expected to work without pay while lawmakers remain without an agreement on DHS’ annual funding. TSA officers also worked through the record shutdown that ended Nov. 12, but aviation experts say this one may play out differently.

Trade groups for the U.S. travel industry and major airlines nonetheless warned that the longer DHS appropriations are lapsed, the longer security lines at the nation’s commercial airports could get.