WASHINGTON, D.C. – In a major shift to airport security protocol, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has ended the long-standing requirement for most passengers to remove their shoes at ...
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TSA shoe removal policy may finally change. Why did we have to remove our footwear at airports anyway?
Fliers may have been annoyed earlier this year with the Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) implementation of the new Real ID requirements, but they’ll likely be much happier with the ...
TSA may eliminate the shoe removal rule at security checkpoints. Change follows decades-old policy prompted by 2001’s “shoe bomber.” Policy already waived for TSA PreCheck, seniors and young children.
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 ...
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The Shoes Stay on: TSA Updated Shoe Removal Policy
It’s official: The TSA no longer requires you to bare your past-due pedicures for all the world to see. Shoe removal is not needed to pass through airport security. Shoes, for now, get to remain on.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced that U.S. air travelers no longer need to remove their shoes at airport security, citing advanced screening technology. U.S. air travelers can now ...
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