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As of Tuesday, passengers at U.S. airports are no longer required to remove their shoes during the TSA screening process.
The Transportation Security Administration will now allow passengers to leave their shoes on, but security screening is still in place at airports.
Citing unnamed sources, several outlets report that TSA is no longer requiring the general public to remove shoes for screening at some airports.
The Transportation Security Administration is rolling out new procedures to allow passengers to keep shoes on while passing through standard airport screening checkpoints, according to people ...
Most passengers had been required to remove their footwear at checkpoints since 2006, a policy later eased only for members of trusted traveler programs.
TSA will allow passengers to keep their shoes on when they go through the general security line at many major airports across the country.
The shoes-off/shoes-on dance at TSA checkpoints will end soon. But there's a catch you need to know about. Here's what we know.
For the first time since 2006, passengers at US airports are allowed to keep their shoes on at security.
Travelers rejoice: The TSA is finally nixing its stupid shoe rule. After forcing us all to remove roughly 100 million pieces of footwear these past 19 years. To no real point, except security theater.
Kristi Noem, Secretary of Homeland Security, speaks at Ronald Reagan Airport to announce the termination of the shoe removal requirement at TSA security checkpoints.
Shoes can stay on through CVG TSA, airports nationwide following policy reversal Homeland Security says technology has improved to no longer need shoe removal but the policy was 'necessary' for ...
TSA to allow travelers to keep shoes on during airport screening, easing passenger experience and reducing wait times. Here's what still needs to come off.