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"TSA will no longer require travelers to remove their shoes when they go through our security checkpoints," said Dept. of Homeland Security Secretary Krisit Noem.
Homeland Security said that it is now focused on evaluating the rules surrounding liquids and the policy on removing belts and coats."We will be piloting several different security checkpoints across ...
Five years after that, in 2011, then-Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said the no shoes policy would eventually be phased out due to advances in security screening technologies.
A Massachusetts law enforcement and homeland security consultant who helped draft some of the first rules requiring passengers to remove their shoes at airport security checkpoints says the ...
Kristi Noem, Secretary of Homeland Security, speaks at Ronald Reagan Airport to announce the termination of the shoe removal requirement at TSA security checkpoints.
TSA will no longer require travelers to remove their shoes at security checkpoints. This policy change was confirmed by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.
TSA to end shoe removal policy at airport security checkpoints The policy change is nationwide and goes into effect immediately, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said.
Passengers are no longer required to remove their shoes at TSA checkpoints. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced the immediate policy change on Tuesday. The shoe removal policy was ...
TSA will allow passengers to keep their shoes on when they go through the general security line at many major airports across the country.
(RNS) — A Department of Homeland Security social media post leaned on the sentimentalism of the Kinkade painting.
Effective immediately, the TSA will allow passengers traveling through domestic airports to keep their shoes on at TSA checkpoints.
Cyberattacks, anti-Semitic threats and violence are possible, Homeland Security says in nationwide bulletin.