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Travelers giddy about being able to keep their shoes on while walking through TSA checkpoints at the airport again may have ...
Tiny toiletries stuffed into one-quart plastic bags have long been a way of life for frequent flyers who carry their suitcases onboard. That could be the next security screening measure to change, ...
Just days ago, the Department of Homeland Security announced that passengers traveling through domestic airports will no longer have to take off their shoes while passing through security screenings ...
Compared to the relentless bustle of JFK or Newark, Boston Logan offers a noticeably calmer airport experience. Even during peak summer months, BOS handles approximately 74,000 passengers per day, ...
A Massachusetts law enforcement and homeland security consultant who helped draft some of the first rules requiring ...
TSA agents may still ask certain individuals to take off their shoes, but that is now the exception not the rule. The “hands down” full-body scanner is now sufficient. Let us relish these small ...
But Noem said that TSA’s security technology’s changed over almost 20 years, and streamlining the process will “continue to ...
The shoe removal rule was first implemented in 2006, but its origin dates back to a 2001 “shoe bomber” plot aboard an ...
The TSA has eliminated the 19-year-old policy, effective immediately. Policies on liquids will remain in place.
The days of taking your shoes off during security screenings at U.S. airports is reportedly coming to a close.
Security lines were largely nonexistent at Boston’s Logan Airport on Wednesday after the TSA dropped its longstanding “shoes off” requirement for pre-flight screenings.
At Logan Airport, some passengers say it's about time while others ... Now passengers traveling through domestic airports don't have to take their shoes off while going through TSA security screening.