World

Travelers fume in long lines at Miami’s airport over shutdown

January 14, 2019
Passengers flying from Miami International Airport wait in line to enter the checkpoint at Concourse F, where some of the flights of a closed terminal were diverted, in Miami, Florida, on Sunday. — AFP
Passengers flying from Miami International Airport wait in line to enter the checkpoint at Concourse F, where some of the flights of a closed terminal were diverted, in Miami, Florida, on Sunday. — AFP

MIAMI, Florida —Passengers departing Miami International Airport endured unusually long waits at security checkpoints Sunday, an indirect consequence of the partial US federal government shutdown.

Since Dec. 22, some 800,000 US federal employees have been on mandatory leave or working without pay because President Donald Trump and Congress have been at an impasse over $5.7 billion the president wants to build a wall on Mexico border.

Some employees, including the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents that staff airport security checkpoints, are considered “essential” and must work without pay.

Many however are apparently protesting by reporting sick at an abnormally high rate.

“We almost missed our flight. I wanted to eat a sandwich and now I can’t. We’re furious, this makes no sense,” Italian Rocco Vincenzo, who was heading to the Cayman Islands before returning to his country, said.

Vincenzo stood in a line of cranky travelers waiting to get through security to catch their flights that stretched the length of two city blocks.

“You want to travel? I’m going to stay in Italy and he (Trump) can stay in America,” joked the 52-year-old laborer.

With about 40 TSA agents out, Miami International Airport officials decided on Friday to close one of the airport’s six terminals. “Traveling in general is difficult, it’s not pleasant, and this adds to the frustration,” said Paul Reynolds, a 52-year-old Jamaican traveling to Kingston also waiting in line.

According to spokesman Greg Chin, the wait times at Miami International remain normal and the closed terminal will reopen on Monday, staffed by TSA agents.

TSA chief David Pekoske wrote on Friday that he had approved a $500 bonus for officers at checkpoints who have worked without pay in what is now the longest government shutdown in US history.

“While I realize this is not what you are owed for your hard work,” Pekoske tweeted, “I hope these actions alleviate some of the financial hardship many of you are facing.” — AFP


January 14, 2019
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