News

The TSA may ease restrictions on liquids and other screening rules as Homeland Security signals a shift in post-9/11 airport ...
Meanwhile, airport security experts would like to know with more certainty what led the TSA to determine that removing shoes ...
Now that the TSA is doing away with its shoes-removal policy at security checkpoints, might a rule change regarding liquid ...
The TSA's much-maligned shoe removal rules have been in place since 2006. Here's what we know about the updated policy so far ...
The shift comes after nearly 20 years of mandatory shoe removal, a rule put in place after the 2001 "shoe bomber" reshaped ...
DHS announced the end of the shoe removal policy at TSA checkpoints in airports. Changing a policy requires a risk analysis ...
The Transportation Security Administration is rolling back its long-standing policy requiring passengers to remove shoes at checkpoints.
The US Department of Homeland Security is ending its ‘shoes off’ policy for passengers passing through Transportation Security Administration (TSA) checkpoints at domestic airports. Secretary for Home ...
The TSA began requiring travelers to remove their shoes for X-ray screenings in 2006, after Richard Reid, known as the "Shoe ...
The widely resented and ridiculed policy, which the U.S. was nearly alone in enforcing, never made much sense.
The potential changes to liquid rules come after the DHS ended a requirement for travelers to take their shoes off while ...