News

The shoe removal rule was first implemented in 2006, but its origin dates back to a 2001 “shoe bomber” plot aboard an ...
The Transportation Security Administration will now allow passengers to leave their shoes on, but security screening is still ...
The days of taking your shoes off during security screenings at U.S. airports is reportedly coming to a close.
The TSA has eliminated the 19-year-old policy, effective immediately. Policies on liquids will remain in place.
Passengers at airports in Connecticut and the rest of New England are no longer required to remove their shoes during ...
You can leave your shoes on, a new TSA directive states. It probably won’t, as an over-the-top news release stated, help ...
The TSA will no longer require passengers to remove their shoes during airport security screenings. Kristi Noem, secretary of ...
For the first time in almost 20 years, travelers no longer have to take off their shoes during security screenings at certain ...
The new policy aims to increase hospitality for travelers and streamline the TSA security checkpoint process, leading to ...
The widely resented and ridiculed policy, which the U.S. was nearly alone in enforcing, never made much sense.
Now that the TSA is doing away with its shoes-removal policy at security checkpoints, might a rule change regarding liquid allowances be next?
Many in the MAGA movement are in a state of anger and disbelief over the Justice Department and FBI’s memo disclosing that ...