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Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said all passengers going through airport security will no longer have to take off their shoes.
A 20-year rule requiring airline passengers to take off their shoes before going through TSA security checks has been removed, according to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.
For the first time since 2006, passengers at U.S. airports are allowed to keep their shoes on at security. “I like that rule,” said Mark Galimberti, who was flying from Pittsburgh to Seattle.
Homeland Security says technology has improved to no longer need shoe removal but the policy was 'necessary' for the last 20 ...
Noem said new screening technology is allowing them to get rid of the shoe removal policy that was introduced in 2006 over bombing concerns. The TSA will now use “multiple layers of screening,” ...
Taking off your shoes and placing them in a bin has been the norm for flyers for nearly 20 years, but it won't be much longer.
Passengers who are members of the TSA's PreCheck program are already able to bypass the nuisance and get expedited screening.
Deep in one of America’s darkest hours, President George W. Bush warned that while the war on terror was started by others on ...
TSA first implemented the no-shoes policy in 2006 after a passenger tried and failed to ignite a homemade shoe explosive on ...
It's now OK to keep your shoes on through airport security, a change almost 20 years in the making. At Logan Airport, some passengers say it's about time while others question why now? "I think taking ...
Fox 4’s Austin Schargorodski reports on the TSA’s decision to give the boot to its shoe removal rule at airport security, and ...
The Department of Homeland Security on Tuesday announced an end to a nearly 20-year-old policy that required passengers to remove their shoes while going through airport security checkpoints.
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