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After US airport security workers get paid, absences drop sharply

Transportation Security Administration said absences among the nation’s 50,000 security agents fell'sharply' on Monday, as workers received their paychecks after six weeks of working without a paycheque. Major?airports which had experienced multi-hour lines reported that operations were largely back to normal.

Homeland Security Department reported that the absence rate dropped to 8.6% from 12.4% on Friday. Atlanta had the highest number of absenteeism reported on Monday, with 29%. Other airports with high absence rates include Baltimore, New Orleans and John F. Kennedy in New York, Philadelphia, Houston's two airports, Baltimore, New Orleans and Houston.

The TSA experienced a surge in security lines as a result of the weeks-long congressional standoff. In some cases, these lines topped four-hours long. This is the longest TSA line in 25 years.

Last week, hundreds of U.S. Immigration agents and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) officers were deployed at 14 U.S. Airports to help with security screening. The White House said that they would stay in place until normal operations were resumed. The President Donald Trump signed a memo on Friday ordering TSA workers to get paid even though Congress still hasn't ended the 46-day partial government shutdown. U.S. Department of Homeland Security confirmed that workers began receiving their pay on Monday. DHS reported that most TSA agents received retroactive pay on Monday, which included at least two?two-week checks. It plans to give workers the rest of a partially missed paycheck since the shutdown began as soon as possible.

Since mid-February, more than 500 airport security guards have quit. Tens of thousands?other DHS employees are still unpaid.

The airports are coping with an increase in school spring break travel, which is about 5% higher than last year. Democrats in Congress halted funding for DHS, demanding that immigration rules be changed after agents in Minneapolis killed U.S. Citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti.

After weeks of squabbling, the Senate finally passed a bipartisan compromise bill that would pay TSA employees. The Republican leadership in the U.S. House rejected this legislation on Friday, passing a measure to fund DHS as a whole. David Shepardson is the reporter.

(source: Reuters)