How the Government Shutdown is Affecting Airports and Airlines

How the Government Shutdown is Affecting Airports and Airlines

Updated: 1/17/2019

The Federal Government shutdown began back in December, screwing over about 2 million workers and everyone who depends on them. This includes 51 thousand TSA Agents that keep our airlines moving. Here’s a running list of how the shutdown is impacting airports and airlines.

The Machinists Non-Partisan Political League has a plan to end the shutdown – find out more at GoIAM.org. Speak Out Here >>

1. Food courts and gift shops are losing business.

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When TSA security checkpoints close, they dramatically rearrange the flow of foot traffic around them. Airport restaurants and shops that depend on passengers with plenty of wait times walking past and patronizing their establishments are struggling to attract customers who now have little time or are not even in that part of the airport.

2. TSA agents are starting to depend on food pantries.

AMY MATTHEWS/ST. MARY’S FOOD BANK via AZCentral.com

A Phoenix-based charity recently attracted some 300 TSA agents to their food distribution operation. Jerry Brown, a spokesman with St. Mary’s Mobile Food Pantry, helped deliver about 10,000 pounds of staples such as canned goods, bread, and eggs to the women and men that work to keep our airports safe.

The sheer number of needy TSA families left him stunned. “I didn’t expect that from missing just one paycheck,” Brown said, adding that he saw “everything from smiles and thank you’s to tears” from thankful TSA agents.

More details from AZ Central:

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3. Dulles is closing security checkpoints.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images. Via Fox5 DC

The airport is also blaming recent snowstorms, but TSA related staffing shortages are the leading cause for reduced security checkpoints. Story from Fox5 DC.

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4. Houston’s Bush Intercontinental is closing security checkpoints.

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The massive United Airlines hub is also a key station for Spirit Airlines and an estimated 4,000 IAM members. Closures have caused work area disruptions for airline workers.

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5. MIA has had to cut back on hours of operation.

Pedro Portal, via MiamiHerald.com

From the Miami Herald: Concourse G closes at Miami International Airport as federal government shutdown drags on.

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6. TSA agents need money to come to work, because gas, toll roads, and work lunches aren’t free.

Win McNamee/Getty via Vox

But, since they haven’t been paid a dime since before Christmas, hundreds of them can simply no longer afford to report for duty. This won’t change simply because the government re-opens. They need a paycheck.

7. Air Traffic Controllers are federal employees mandated to work and not getting paid.

Chalabala via IAM141 Media

Although better able to sustain a missing paycheck in the short term than other federal employees, Air Traffic Controllers have an incredibly stressful and critical job.

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8. Many FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) Officers are furloughed.

Acc.af.mil

This makes it impossible for airlines to get new routes approved and accomplish other critical housekeeping tasks, such as creating new pilot licenses and approving plans to expand and improve airport facilities.

Without FAA inspectors, an aircraft training facility in Oklahoma City has been forced to suspend operations.

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9. Delta’s CEO Says that the airline has lost $25 million because of the shutdown so far.

Flickr

Delta CEO Ed Bastian says that the shutdown is holding up new aircraft certifications and preventing federal employees and contractors from flying. All the slowdowns have cost the nation’s largest airline $25 million in the first month of the shutdown, according to Bastian.

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10. Security Lines at Atlanta’s Hartsfield airport stretched for more than THREE HOURS as a result of staffing shortages.

Photos: Twitter/Omar Jimenez via Business Insider

What does it take for long lines and unendurable waits at airports to become newsworthy? At the busiest airport in America, travelers now also have the longest lines. Business Insider has all the details.

Read More >>

11. At least three unions representing federal workers are suing the Trump administration to end the shutdown.

Photo Credit: J. Scott Applewhite/AP via Washington Post

On Tuesday, a federal judge denied a request from the unions to force the government to pay workers during the shutdown, but the legal fight is far from over. More hearings are scheduled for next week, if the federal courts have not run out of money and are still operating.

Read More >>

12. Several airport and airline unions are marching, protesting, and lobbying lawmakers to bring an end to the shutdown.

GoIAM.org/IAM141 Media

The largest airline and aerospace union in the world, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, is confronting federal decision makers over the shutdown. And they’re not alone. Thousands of union members from a range of industries are holding marches, rallies, and lobbying efforts… all aimed at ending the shutdown as soon as possible.

Read More >>

13. Several airlines are posting record profits, and really don’t need all this right now.

Chalabala via IAM141 Media

Airlines in the US have had a tough time since 9/11. The long, painful (but ultimately successful) recovery has largely been an inspiring tale for the US Commercial Aviation Industry. But, CEOs and market insiders are warning that the creeping impacts of a prolonged shutdown will be impossible to predict and prepare for, placing the current stairline prosperity in grave peril.

Read More >>

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Government Shutdown Spreads to More Airports

Government Shutdown Spreads to More Airports

Houston’s Terminal B Security Checkpoint was closed indefinitely as of Monday.

Houston’s largest airport, Bush Intercontinental (IAH), is closing a primary security checkpoint as they deal with staffing shortages caused by increasing numbers of TSA agents who can no longer afford to come to work without pay. The announcement follows a similar decision by officials at Miami International Airport (MIA) to reduce hours at TSA checkpoints at its Concourse G, and record-shattering security lines at other airports, such as Atlanta’s ATL, which had wait times in excess of two hours.

About 4,000 IAM members work at IAH. The station is home to both Locals 811 and 2198.

Although flights will still be leaving from Terminal B, where the closure is taking place, passengers will need to check in at other terminals. Businesses at Terminal B will remain open, but can expect less customer traffic as passengers will be arriving in the concourse closer to flight departure times.

11:00 AM, and some businesses at IAH Terminal B had yet to make a single sale.

Airport administrators have not said how long the closures will last. IAM141 AGC Victor Hernandez (IAH Ramp, DFW, SJU) issued a statement to Machinists Union members at the airport, reassuring the membership that the expected impact to operations at United Airlines was minimal. “As of right now we are not losing any days of work,” he said in the statement, adding that some people may be expected to move from some work areas to others. He promised more updates if any changes happen that could impact union members at IAH.

Houston’s Mayor Sylvester Turner blamed the closure on a lack of TSA agents available to work.

IAH is already one of the busiest airports in the world.

More than 100,000 people travel daily through IAH, making it one of the busiest airports in the world. Airport parking can range as high as $30 per day, and there are limited public transportation options to the airport, making it an expensive place for TSA agents to commute to every day. Once additional costs such as daycare, lunches, and tolls are also factored in, a typical TSA agent in Houston will spend a sizable chunk of their income each month just getting to work.

A TSA Agent looks on as passengers line up at Terminal C, which was fully staffed.

TSA Agents have not received a paycheck since before Christmas, amid the most extended government shutdown in US history. Since the average TSA agent earns about $35k a year, going without pay means going without rent. “Thankfully, I have two jobs because I’m not getting paid at TSA,” said one agent on Twitter (#ShutDownStories). “But I still have to show up. Which means I have to work both jobs every day, sleeping two to three hours at night, just to not even break even on bills.”

The government shutdown began on December 22, after President Trump and lawmakers failed to agree on a spending bill. There are few indications that the shutdown will end any time soon, which means that more disruptions are certain.

Get involved! Contact IAM141 MNPL Legislative Director Dave Roderick for information about what you can do to help end the shutdown, and get 800,000 Federal Employees back to work.

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IAM141 Airmail: Winter 2018

IAM141 Airmail: Winter 2018

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IAM141 Airmail: Safety Conference 2018

IAM141 Airmail: Safety Conference 2018

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