Airport wait times plummet from hours to minutes as TSA workers start getting back pay

Abysmal wait times at airports dwindled Monday as Transportation Security Administration workers got their first paychecks in more than a month — apparently prompting fewer agents to call out.
Four-hour wait times that plagued some airports last week dropped to mere minutes as some TSA employees saw weeks of back pay pop up in their bank accounts.
One TSA worker in Houston said he’ll finally be able to buy the food, gas and medication he needs. Others hope to pay their missed rent before they get evicted.
But one TSA employee in Chicago said she still hadn’t been paid Monday morning, and others say they’re missing partial paychecks.
About 61,000 TSA employees have been working without pay since a partial government shutdown started February 14. Collectively, they’ve missed more than $1 billion in pay, leaving some unable to afford basic necessities. Some have been forced to take other jobs.
By Monday afternoon, even the longest wait times at many major airports were less than 30 minutes.
Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport, an epicenter of last week’s misery, saw 75-minute security lines before dawn Monday. Several hours later, that number plunged to as low as 9 minutes.
At Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, the world’s busiest airport based on passenger traffic, travelers waited as little as 3 minutes.
The number of TSA officers calling out from work has improved in recent days. After 3,450 workers didn’t show up to work Thursday and 3,560 called out on Friday, the number dropped to about 2,800 Saturday, according to DHS data. Monday’s data will not be available until Tuesday.
But even with long-delayed back pay, the TSA workforce will not be the same. More than 500 workers, or about 0.82% of total personnel, have quit since the partial government shutdown started.
And those remaining still face financial turmoil and uncertainty.
TSA agents make an average of $35,000 a year, according to the American Federation of Government Employees.
Aaron Barker, an Atlanta TSA officer, said he thinks the number of agents will keep dropping as workers grapple with fallout from missed payments.
“I do think that there’s going to be a mass exodus of officers,” said Barker, the president of the AFGE Local 554.
“Officers have gone into debt. Credit has been shot,” he said. “Officers have been evicted. Cars have been repossessed.”
It could take a week or so for TSA officers to get their lives back in order and be able to return to work, a spokesperson for the AFGE, which represents about 47,000 TSA officers, told CNN on Sunday. Some staffers have canceled child care for their kids because they couldn’t afford the payments, he said.
Other TSA workers have paid for basic needs by maxing out their credit cards — and incurring late fees they also can’t afford.
The TSA agent in Houston, who requested anonymity to protect his job, said he’ll be able to buy groceries and pay back the loans he took out. But he’s only received two full paychecks and not a third, partial paycheck he was expecting.
Most TSA employees received a retroactive paycheck that covered at least two full paychecks they missed in March, DHS acting assistant secretary Lauren Bis told CNN in a statement. But she said a small number of workers might see a “slight delay” due to several reasons, such as their banks’ processing times.
DHS is “working aggressively” to finish processing the partial paychecks staffers are owed from the end of February, she said.
Still, workers have some concerns, including missing overtime payments and having an improper amount of taxes withheld, AFGE TSA Council 100 President Hydrick Thomas said in a statement Monday afternoon. DHS has not responded to CNN’s question about whether TSA agents were taxed at a higher rate than normal in their back pay.
DHS said it would start sending employees their back pay Monday after President Donald Trump ordered the agency Friday to immediately resume compensating them. But some workers question the president’s directive, including whether they can expect to get their next paycheck in two weeks.
TSA agents have long been perceived as political pawns when lawmakers can’t agree on funding packages and parts of the government shut down.
“This is a natural disaster that was caused by Congress,” said Johnny Jones, secretary-treasurer of AFGE’s TSA Council 100, which represents TSA workers.
“Back pay is not going to address (the) systemic issues,” he said. In the past five months, “We have been shut down 50% of the time.”
Jones said it will be difficult for TSA agents to recover from the impact of this shutdown.
“The vast majority are devastated,” he said. “My colleagues, they’re like, ‘Our finances are ruined.’”
CNN’s Aaron Cooper, Pete Muntean, Steve Williams and Toni Odejimi contributed to this report.




