TSA mulls a plan to eliminate security checkpoints at 150 smaller airports

The following article by Ashley Halsey III was posted on the Washington Post website August 2, 2018:

In this June 29, 2018, file photo, people wait in line to check in at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas. Credit: John Locher, AP, File

Security checkpoints would be eliminated at more than 150 smaller U.S. airports under a plan being considered by the Transportation Security Administration. Passengers would instead be screened when they arrived at larger airports after their initial flight.

The idea was first floated by the TSA two years ago and was seen then by critics as a transparent effort to get Congress to spend additional money on the agency.

“This is completely nuts,” said Mary Schiavo, former inspector general of the U.S. Department of Transportation and an aviation expert. “Perhaps they want an outcry from the public to say ‘Oh, no, no, no, Congress, give them the additional $115 million that they say this would save.’ ”

View the complete article here.