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As ICE agents prepare for screening travelers, staff absences at US airports are on the rise

The Department of Homeland Security reported that the absences of transportation security workers reached their highest level since the partial government shutdown began in mid-January. Meanwhile, immigration enforcement agents were preparing to replace them at the busiest U.S. Airports. DHS reported that more than a third of the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) staff at?airports like Houston, New York, and Atlanta were absent or calling in sick. The shutdown has left tens and thousands of workers without pay, while Democrats and Republicans fight over DHS' budget. Government officials announced that hundreds of Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers will be deployed to airports beginning Monday in order to help fill staffing gaps.

DHS announced on Sunday that it would not share any details regarding the ICE deployment in order to maintain operational security. However, sources informed on the issue said that the current plan calls on deploying ICE agents at 14 locations. This number may change. Sources said that ICE personnel won't be placed behind airport security checkpoints for the time being because they don't have the clearance needed.

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens announced in a press release that his office had been informed by ICE that agents would be dispatched to Hartsfield-Jackson on Monday, the busiest U.S. Airport in terms of passenger numbers. Dickens stated that federal officials said the ICE deployment would help TSA manage security lines and crowd control in domestic terminals. Dickens also noted that it was not intended to carry out immigration enforcement. This contradicts a Saturday social media post from Trump, who said that ICE agents would be responsible for "arresting all 'Illegal immigrants' who entered our country," especially Somalis. His administration has falsely accused this group of fraud and corruption.

Workers without pay for weeks Democrats have blocked funding to DHS, demanding that the rules governing immigration operations be changed. These operations?have resulted in deaths of U.S. citizens causing public outrage.

DHS reports that more than 9% TSA employees were absent over the last seven days. This has led to long lines of passengers waiting to reach their gates.

A DHS spokesperson stated on Sunday that "many TSA officers are unable to pay their rent, purchase food or afford gas for their cars, forcing them to take sick leave from work." According to the TSA and their union, hundreds of TSA agents who were forced to work for free have also resigned.

Tom Homan, the border czar, said that sending immigration agents to boost short-staffed TSA team will speed up the airport lines. However the union of TSA workers says that this does not solve the problem they perceive as the root cause: low pay.

Homan, on CNN's State of the Union program, said: "When we deploy tomorrow we'll have an executed plan that's well-thought out."

"ICE will perform the task far better than before!" Trump posted a social media message on Sunday morning.

Homan, a CNN reporter, said that he would have a plan in place "to move the lines along" by the end the day.

Homan and Transportation secretary Sean Duffy had different opinions about the deployment of ICE agents in separate interviews. Homan stated that he did not believe ICE agents would be able to operate X-ray machines for baggage or passenger screening because they lack experience. Duffy, on the other hand, claimed that ICE agents are "aware of how to pat down people and how to run X-ray machines."

TSA WORKERS UNION OBJECTS?TO REPLACEMENT PLANN

The union that represents TSA workers has criticized Trump's move, saying that their members train for months to learn how to detect explosives and other weapons.

Everett Kelley said, "Our TSA members have been working every day without pay because they believe that their mission is to keep the flying public safe." "They should be paid and not replaced by untrained armed agents that have shown how dangerous they are."

Unlike TSA agents, ICE employees have continued to be paid by the federal government through a funding provision separate from TSA. Meanwhile, lawmakers are debating whether ICE funding needs to be tied to rules and procedures.

Democrats say new rules are required after masked ICE agents shot and killed two U.S. Citizens in the streets of Minneapolis earlier this year. Both men were out in the streets to protest Trump's unprecedented immigration?surge.

Hakeem Jeffreys, a New York Democrat who is the minority leader of the U.S. House of Representatives told CNN that the caucus of his party was open to a separate agreement to fund TSA workers while lawmakers discuss measures to "get ICE in check." There hasn't been much movement in finding a deal, particularly in the Senate. (Reporting from Jonathan Allen in New York and David Shepardson and Rishabh in Bengaluru. Additional writing by Kristina in San Francisco. Editing by Elaine Hardcastle and Aurora Ellis; Sergio Non, Edmund Klamann, and Edmund Klamann.

(source: Reuters)