If you flew anywhere last weekend, you already know. And if you're planning to fly this week — during peak spring break season — you should probably pad your airport arrival time by a couple of hours. Maybe three.
The partial government shutdown that began on February 14th when funding for the Department of Homeland Security lapsed has now dragged past its 35th day, and the consequences at airports across the country have gone from annoying to genuinely alarming. More than 400 TSA officers have left their jobs since the shutdown began. The ones who remain are working without pay for the third time in six months, following last year's 43-day shutdown and a brief funding lapse in January.
Callout rates have spiked nationwide. Houston Hobby hit a 55% single-day callout rate on March 14th — meaning more than half the TSA workforce simply didn't show up. Bush Intercontinental has closed multiple checkpoints. Smaller regional airports are facing the possibility of shutting down entirely if staffing drops further.
“Houston Hobby hit a 55% single-day callout rate on March 14th — meaning more than half the TSA workforce simply didn't show up.”
The timing is brutal. This is spring break. Families have had these trips booked for months. And the security infrastructure that's supposed to process them is running on fumes.
Key Takeaways
- →Government Shutdown: The DHS shutdown has caused over 400 TSA officers to quit, leading to checkpoint closures, callout rates as high as 55%, and significantly longer wait times at airports nationwide during peak spring break travel.
- →TSA: The DHS shutdown has caused over 400 TSA officers to quit, leading to checkpoint closures, callout rates as high as 55%, and significantly longer wait times at airports nationwide during peak spring break travel.
- →Travel: The DHS shutdown has caused over 400 TSA officers to quit, leading to checkpoint closures, callout rates as high as 55%, and significantly longer wait times at airports nationwide during peak spring break travel.
- →DHS Shutdown: The DHS shutdown has caused over 400 TSA officers to quit, leading to checkpoint closures, callout rates as high as 55%, and significantly longer wait times at airports nationwide during peak spring break travel.
Washington is doing what Washington does — blaming the other side. The White House frames it as a Democratic obstruction of DHS funding. Democrats point to riders in the spending bill they find unacceptable. The result is the same: TSA agents are picking up second jobs to cover rent while still reporting to their unpaid shifts at the airport.
President Trump announced Saturday that he would deploy ICE agents to airports by Monday if Congress doesn't agree to a deal. Whether that actually helps move travelers through security faster is a separate question — and one that a lot of aviation security professionals have strong opinions about.
For now, the practical reality for travelers is simple: get to the airport early, check your airline's app for gate changes, and prepare for the possibility that your regional airport might not have full security coverage. This is not a drill. It's the third funding lapse in six months, and the system is bending.