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US airlines oppose Trump's plan to force small airports to use security private

A group representing major U.S. According to written testimony obtained by the.

Chris Sununu, CEO of Airlines for 'America?, will testify before a U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Wednesday. He will say that the U.S. Aviation Industry is concerned that private security remains an option and not a mandatory program.

Last month, Donald Trump proposed that the TSA (which handles airport security operations) cut more than 9,400 employees and $1.5 billion annually from its budget.

This proposal is a step in the direction of privatizing the agency that was created following the attacks on September 11, 2001. Some Republican lawmakers have proposed that TSA be privatized completely.

The White House stated that the change in private security for small airports will 'cut the TSA payroll more than 4,500 positions. TSA wants to 'cut another 4,800 jobs by improving efficiency, eliminating redundant staffing and reducing redundancies.

Sununu added in his testimony: "We support innovative solutions to accelerate the deployment and adoption of checkpoint technology and checked baggage as well as algorithms which increase efficiency."

The proposed budget cuts would reduce the $7.8 billion agency budget by around 20%. This comes after TSA lost over 1,600 employees during funding disruptions in the fall of last year and spring.

Trump nominated David Cummins last week, a senior Vice President?of Serco North America, who oversees the company's federal, state, and local government civil customer portfolio.

The Biden administration expanded the TSA to screen a record 906 million passengers by 2025.

The American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), the union representing TSA security agents, opposes privatization. They say it will make air travel unsafe.

Trump has criticised the TSA. On his first day in office, in 2025, he fired David Pekoske as its director, whom he had appointed to lead the agency during his first term. Pekoske was nominated by Joe Biden for a second term in 2022. (Reporting and editing by Tom Hogue, Jamie Freed, and David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)