News

Travelers are no longer required to remove their shoes during TSA security screenings, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi ...
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said July 8 that TSA will no longer make travelers remove their shoes at security checkpoints.
For nearly 20 years, millions of bare feet have marched through security checkpoints at airports around the country, a motley ...
Kristi Noem, secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the Transportation Security Administration, ...
After two decades, travelers can finally keep their shoes on during TSA screenings. What does this mean for your next getaway ...
TSA Secretary Kristi Noem announced the change to a security step that has for years bedeviled anyone passing through U.S ...
Secretary Kristi Noem responded to a CNN report alleging she has slowed response efforts following the catastrophic Texas floods, calling the claims 'absolutely trash.' ...
TSA began making passengers remove their shoes to screen for explosives in August 2006. The policy was implemented nearly ...
For nearly twenty years, most air travelers in the U.S. have been required to remove their shoes when going through security.
Since at least 2011, officials at DHS have promised a shoes-on future, and the department’s own science arm developed and licensed a “high definition–advanced imaging technology shoe scanner.” In ...
U.S. travelers can now keep their shoes on at airport security, thanks to a new policy announced by Homeland Security ...
The Transportation Security Administration will now allow passengers to leave their shoes on, but security screening is still in place at airports.