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DHS pays 50,000 airport workers in the US as part of emergency measures

The U.S. Homeland Security Department of the United States announced on Friday that it would take emergency measures to pay 50,000 airport security officers who had not been paid since mid-February. Work absences caused chaos and long security lines at?U.S. airports.

"(The Transportation Security Administration has) immediately begun?the process?of paying its workforce. DHS stated that TSA officers could start receiving their paychecks as soon as Monday.

On Thursday, President Donald Trump announced that he would pay TSA employees. He then issued a memorandum directing payments to be made on Friday.

TSA announced earlier Friday that nearly 14% of airport security agents did not show up to work on Thursday. This is the highest number since mid-February.

On Thursday and Friday, major disruptions were reported, including long airport security lines. The TSA reported that more than 3,450 agents did not report to work on Thursday. This included more than a third of the officers at JFK in New York, and airports located in Baltimore, Houston, and Atlanta.

TSA reported that airports in all parts of the country had lines of four hours or longer - the longest lines it has ever seen.

Airlines warned that lines and absences could increase this weekend without concrete information on the payment of TSA officers. Since February, nearly 500 airport security personnel have quit their jobs.

It's unclear how long funding will last, or if Trump would use the funds for Homeland Security Department that were approved last year in a massive tax-and-spending bill.

Democrats in Congress are refusing to fund the?DHS and demanding changes in its immigration rules after agents in Minneapolis "shot and killed" U.S. citizens Renee Good, Alex Pretti. Citizens Renee Good, and Alex Pretti.

The Republican leadership in the U.S. House of Representatives rejected on Friday a bipartisan compromise from the Senate to end the six-week funding deadlock for DHS.

The Congressional Democrats proposed funding TSA separately, while negotiating reforms to the way Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents work.

The TSA reiterated Wednesday that it could be forced to close smaller airports, if staffing problems worsened.

The airports are dealing with an increase in school-break travel volume of about 5% compared to last year.

On Monday, hundreds of U.S. Immigration agents and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) officers were deployed at 14 U.S. Airports to assist with security screening. (Reporting and editing by Chris Reese, Edmund Klamann, and David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)