the united states department of homeland security dhs logo appears

Airport chaos is hitting spring break

Spring break travel is already busy, but this year the pressure is worse for a very specific reason. A partial DHS shutdown has left TSA staffing strained just as a record number of travelers head to airports.

U.S. airlines expect 171 million passengers between March 1 and April 30, up about 4% from last year. That is a huge wave of travelers to manage while thousands of security workers are going without pay.

dhs officer in riot gear outside the white house

The shutdown is dragging on

This is no longer a short disruption. Reuters reported on March 18 that the shutdown had reached day 33 and that lawmakers remained deadlocked over DHS funding and immigration-related demands.

That matters because DHS is not a small agency. AP reported that the department has more than 260,000 employees, and the large majority are still working even though paychecks have been disrupted.

security checkpoint in airport terminal female tsa worker inspecting baggage

TSA callouts jumped sharply

The most visible problem is at airport checkpoints. Reuters said about 10% of TSA officers were absent on recent days, which is roughly five times the normal rate.

At some airports, the problem has been much worse. At some airports, the problem has been much worse. Reuters reported airport-specific absenteeism ranging from 25% at JFK on one day to 38% at Houston and Atlanta on another, creating staffing gaps travelers can feel almost immediately.

20 september 2021 houston tx usa passengers walking in airport

Houston became the clearest warning

Houston turned into one of the strongest signs of how fragile the system has become. Reuters and local reporting showed severe disruption there, with long lines and unusually high employee absence rates.

At one point, travelers in Houston faced waits of up to four hours, showing how quickly staffing problems can turn into major bottlenecks.

atlanta airport atl international terminal

The pain is spreading nationwide

Houston is not the only trouble spot. Reuters and AP both identified long waits in airports such as New Orleans, Atlanta, and New York-area hubs as spring break traffic builds.

That spread matters because once lines back up at several major airports at the same time, missed flights and rebooking problems start piling up. Travelers may feel the effect even if their own airport is running fairly well.

Little-known fact: The STEP program is free and sends email alerts from U.S. embassies and consulates while Americans are abroad.

Hundreds of officers have quit

The shutdown is not just causing temporary callouts. Reuters later reported that 460 TSA officers had quit since the shutdown began, a sign that the strain is deepening and becoming harder to reverse quickly.

That number matters because airport security is built around steady staffing. When trained workers leave altogether, replacing them is much harder than simply covering a bad weekend with overtime.

Little-known fact: Mobile Passport Control can be used up to four hours before landing or immediately after landing at supported U.S. entry points.

airport security check at gate

Smaller airports may be next

Major hubs are getting the attention, but smaller airports may face the bigger long-term risk. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warned that if staffing keeps slipping, some small airports could be forced to shut down security operations.

That would push this story beyond long lines and into real network disruption. A closure at a smaller airport can cut off local travel options and push more passengers into already crowded regional hubs.

washington dc capitol in the fall season  usa

Congress is stuck on immigration fights

The shutdown is continuing because the fight is not really about airport lines alone. AP reported that Democrats want changes tied to DHS operations, while Republicans say they will not accept terms they believe weaken ICE or border enforcement.

That means travelers are feeling the effects of a larger policy clash. In Washington, the argument is about enforcement and oversight, but in places like Dallas, Atlanta, and New Orleans, the result is a slower trip to the gate.

Little-known fact: Airlines for America says U.S. airlines expect to carry about 2.8 million passengers per day during the March-to-April spring travel period.

The sales department is holding a monthly summary meeting.

Airline leaders are sounding worried

This has become serious enough that airline executives are publicly pushing Congress to act. AP reported that leaders from major airlines and cargo carriers urged lawmakers to restore funding and protect aviation workers from future shutdowns.

Their concern is not just political theater. Airlines know a checkpoint slowdown can ripple through boarding, connections, customer service lines, and aircraft schedules in a matter of hours.

A confused young Asian female solo traveler is reading her flight information on her phone with a serious, doubtful face, facing a problem with self-check-in or missing

Travelers are nervous for other reasons too

Airport delays are landing at a bad moment for travelers already on edge. USA TODAY reporting described rising concern tied to the Iran war and earlier unrest in parts of Mexico, even among people who are still keeping their travel plans.

Travel agents told USA TODAY that most clients have not canceled, but anxiety has clearly increased. That means the shutdown is hitting during a moment when many Americans already feel less certain about travel abroad.

Airport Security Checkpoint: Multiethnic TSA Officers in Headset Using Laptop Computer and Talking. Transportation Security Administration for Travel Safety. In the Background, Airport Staff Working.

Essential workers are going unpaid

One of the most serious effects of the shutdown is falling on the people who still show up every day. About 50,000 TSA agents and 42,000 Coast Guard members are continuing to work without pay because their jobs are classified as essential.

That creates real pressure on the system behind the scenes. When thousands of workers are asked to keep airports and transport security running without paychecks, stress rises fast, morale can drop, and the risk of deeper staffing problems becomes harder to ignore.

TSA worker controlling x-ray metal detector scanning process.

The smartest moves are practical

Experts are giving travelers fairly simple advice. AAA says travelers going abroad should enroll in the free Smart Traveler Enrollment Program, or STEP, and leave extra time for airport security because delays remain possible.

AAA also recommends working with a trusted travel advisor and thinking carefully about insurance coverage. That matters because many policies do not cover acts of war, which can surprise travelers who assume they are fully protected.

A new TSA screening upgrade is promising a quicker airport experience for travelers at some of the nation’s busiest hubs. Check out TSA rolls out faster security screening at major airports.

silhouette of hand of passenger while using mobile phone during

A few tools can still save time

Not every fix is big, but some are useful. U.S. Customs and Border Protection says the Mobile Passport Control app lets eligible travelers submit information up to four hours before landing or right after arrival, which can speed the customs process.

That will not solve TSA staffing problems on the outbound side. Still, in a season where small delays are stacking up everywhere, saving time on the return trip can make a stressful travel day feel a little more manageable.

The Orlando airport tower evacuation raised fresh questions about how quickly a disruption can affect flights and operations. Check out what really happened during the Orlando airport tower evacuation.

Do you think Congress should pass a quick funding fix before spring travel gets even more chaotic? Share your thoughts in the comments.

This slideshow was made with AI assistance and human editing.

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Nauris Pukis
Somewhere between tourist and local. I've always been remote-first. Home is my anchor, but the world is my creative fuel. I love to spend months absorbing each destination, absorbing local inspiration into my work, proving that the best ideas often have foreign accents.

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