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Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced July 8 that the Transportation Security Administration has eliminated its ...
We can keep our shoes on at TSA, but we still have to keep our liquids to 3.4 ounces. Here's why the agency is keeping that ...
The Transportation Security Administration will now allow passengers to leave their shoes on, but security screening is still ...
The shoe removal process was implemented in 2006 "in response to an attempt by an airline passenger to conceal a bomb in his ...
Now that the TSA is doing away with its shoes-removal policy at security checkpoints, might a rule change regarding liquid allowances be next?
With an end to removing your shoes at the airport, an irritant of modern life is done with. That doesn’t happen very often.
The widely resented and ridiculed policy, which the U.S. was nearly alone in enforcing, never made much sense.
As of Tuesday, passengers at U.S. airports are no longer required to remove their shoes during the TSA screening process.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in a July 8 statement that TSA expects the policy change "will drastically ...
Secretary Kristi Noem teased Wednesday that changes could be coming to the size of liquid containers allowed for passengers ...
Travelers are no longer required to remove their shoes during TSA security screenings, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi ...
The TSA will no longer require passengers to remove their shoes during airport security screenings. Kristi Noem, secretary of ...