TSA, Noem and Liquid Limit
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TSA, Homeland Security Secretary
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WWLP Springfield on MSN2d
New TSA guidelines may change experience for travelersAnother change could be coming to TSA, with new liquid and gel requirements. A 15-year-old boy with no criminal history ended up at Alligator Alcatraz after rush to fill facility
Even the most dubious safeguards stick around because eliminating them looks like a compromise that might endanger public safety.
4don MSNOpinion
The Transportation Security Administration did not officially start requiring travelers to take off their shoes at the airport until August 2006. That was nearly five years after Richard Reid unsuccessfully tried to ignite explosives in his sneakers on an American Airlines flight from Paris to Miami.
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TravelPulse on MSNWhat TSA Should Change Next, According to Expert TravelersExpert travelers suggest TSA should eliminate the 3-1-1 liquid rule and permit non-removal of laptops due to advanced CT scanners, urge broader use of biometric IDs, and foresee a tech-driven, efficient future for air travel.
DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said ending the shoes-off policy would trim wait times and “modernize and enhance traveler experience.”
Facial recognition technology rolled out by the Transport Security Administration has sparked a frank warning from an expert - but there is a way around the controversial technology
A travel expert discusses possible TSA changes.
8don MSNOpinion
What began this week as scattered reports and observations trickling in from across the nation became official Tuesday when Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced that, effectively immediately,
TSA's facial scanning technology poses privacy concerns, according to experts. Here's how to opt out of them before your next flight.