US airports see long delays due to shutdown-linked staff shortages

A critical breakdown in airport security operations unfolded across the United States on Sunday, with security queues exceeding three hours at major hubs as the ongoing partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) triggered severe staffing shortages. The political impasse over federal immigration reform, which caused DHS funding to lapse in mid-February, has now directly impacted spring break travel, creating unprecedented delays for passengers nationwide.

Houston’s William P. Hobby Airport experienced some of the most extreme disruptions, with TSA lines stretching beyond three hours and prompting official advisories for travelers to arrive four to five hours before scheduled departures. The airport administration issued a statement acknowledging the volatile situation, noting that ‘security operations may impact from one day – and even one shift to the next’ as federal workers grapple with uncertain pay and working conditions.

The crisis extended to Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport, where security lines overflowed into parking structures, requiring seven circular queues before reaching screening areas. CNN affiliate WWL captured footage of the extensive delays, with passenger Gal Jurick describing the labyrinthine waiting process. Airport authorities confirmed the disruptions stemmed directly from ‘a shortage of workers at the security checkpoint’ caused by the partial federal shutdown.

Similar scenes emerged at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International, Charlotte Douglas International, and George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, where photographs documented security queues extending beyond terminal buildings onto exterior pavements. The staffing crisis intensified as TSA employees received only partial compensation on February 28 and face their first completely missed paycheck on March 14.

The political blame game escalated as DHS spokesperson Lauren Bis attributed the ‘chaos’ to Democratic lawmakers ‘holding spring break travel hostage for political points.’ Meanwhile, the department faces leadership transition following President Trump’s dismissal of Secretary Kristi Noem and the nomination of Oklahoma Senator Markwayne Mullin as replacement effective March 31.