US airline CEOs urge Congress to end stand-off, pay airport security officers
The partial government shutdown comes amid an expected record-breaking spring travel period
Published Sun, Mar 15, 2026 · 06:17 PM
[WASHINGTON] The CEOs of major US airlines urged Congress on Sunday (Mar 15) to move quickly to end a 29-day partial government shutdown that has forced 50,000 airport security officers to work without pay, warning it could further disrupt US air travel.
Absences by Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers have already disrupted travel at some major airports over the last week, causing alarm as the busy spring break travel season continues.
“Too many travellers are having to wait in extraordinarily long – and painfully slow – lines at checkpoints,” the CEOs of American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, JetBlue Airways, Alaska Air and others wrote in an open letter to Congress.
“First, leaders should immediately come together to reach an agreement to fund the Department of Homeland Security. Then they need to act so this problem never happens again,” they added.
In 2025, a 43-day government shutdown led to widespread flight disruptions; the Federal Aviation Administration ordered a 10 per cent flight cut at major airports.
“Once again, air travel is the political football amid another government shutdown,” the CEOs wrote.
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The group of airline executives, which also includes senior executives at cargo carriers FedEx, UPS and Atlas Air, called for legislation to ensure that all critical government aviation personnel are paid during future government shutdowns.
Senators from both parties failed on Mar 5 in competing efforts to fund the TSA, which said last week that more than 300 officers have quit since the shutdown began.
The Homeland Security Department’s funding lapsed on Feb 13 after Congress failed to reach a deal on immigration enforcement reforms demanded by Democrats.
Airlines are expecting a record-breaking spring travel period, with 171 million passengers expected to fly – up 4 per cent from the same two-month period in 2025.
Last week, some airports such as Houston Hobby and New Orleans reported security lines exceeding two hours as TSA absences rose. On Saturday, Newark said it was experiencing higher-than-normal delays.
“Americans – who live in your districts and home states – are tired of long lines at airports, travel delays and flight cancellations caused by shutdown after shutdown,” the CEOs wrote.
Some airports have closed some security checkpoints; others are working to raise money to help TSA workers buy food or other essentials as they go without pay. REUTERS
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