Chicago airport staffing to increase
after long security lines
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[May 21, 2016]
By Suzannah Gonzales
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The U.S. government is
accelerating plans to add security staff and bomb-sniffing dogs at
Chicago's two major airports after a "breakdown" earlier this week
frustrated travelers and caused some to miss flights, a senior
transportation official said.
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Passengers make their way through a terminal at O'Hare International
Airport in Chicago, Illinois,
September 26, 2014. REUTERS/Jim Young |
"Earlier this week we had a breakdown here in Chicago," Peter
Neffenger, U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA)
administrator, told a news conference on Friday. "We are working
hard to make sure that does not happen again."
Chicago's O'Hare International Airport is the second-busiest U.S.
airport, with 77 million people traveling through it in 2015,
according to trade group the Airports Council International.
Chicago is the only city in North America where American Airlines,
United Airlines and Southwest Airlines all have major operations,
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel told the same news conference.
Long security lines at airports across the United States recently
have frayed tempers and led to calls for the government to fix the
problem.
Passenger screening has slowed since TSA canceled a program last
year in which behavior detection officers would pull travelers
randomly into faster but less rigorous "PreCheck" lanes, after
reports of screening lapses.
However, TSA budget and staffing levels had been set assuming that
the program would be in effect, and that more people would
self-enroll in PreCheck. As a result, the agency found itself
without the resources to handle rising passenger traffic on U.S.
airlines, expected to be at an all-time high this summer.
In Chicago, TSA has added thousands of hours in overtime for
security workers in order to meet demands, and officials received
funding sooner than they had expected it to be available, Neffenger
said.
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Emanuel said that 58 extra full-time TSA staff would be in place in
the next couple of weeks, 100 part-time workers will go full-time,
and 250 more agents will work in the city by August.
Chicago experienced a big-volume day earlier this week, but it was
not unpredicted, Neffenger said. Travelers followed recommendations
to arrive early.
"We, quite frankly, simply put, did not have enough checkpoint lanes
open when they arrived. And once behind, it takes a long time to
catch up," Neffenger said.
Chicago inherited financial problems, which led to staffing,
technology and canine issues, and those responsible failed to fund
and staff positions, Emanuel said.
"Now we have a situation that is totally not tolerable for the
flying public," Emanuel said.
(Additional reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in New York; Editing by
Matthew Lewis)
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