Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
International

Removing shoes at US airports may soon be a thing of the past

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jul, 2025 09:34 AM
  • Removing shoes at US airports may soon be a thing of the past

For the first time in almost 20 years, travelers may no longer be required to take off their shoes during security screenings at U.S. airports.


The Transportation Security Administration is looking to abandon the additional security step that has for years bedeviled anyone passing through U.S airports, according to media reports.


If implemented, it would put an end to a security screening mandate put in place almost 20 years ago, several years after “shoe bomber” Richard Reid’s failed attempt to take down a flight from Paris to Miami in late 2001.


The travel newsletter Gate Access was first to report that the security screening change is coming. ABC News reported on an internal memo sent to TSA officers last week that states the new policy allows travelers to keep their shoes on during standard screenings at many U.S. airports, beginning Sunday. That would expand to all airports shortly.


The plan is for the change to occur at all U.S. airports soon, the memo said. 


Travelers have previously been able to skirt the extra security requirement if they participate in the TSA PreCheck program, which costs around $80 for five years. The program allows airline passengers to get through the screening process without removing shoes, belts or light jackets. 


Travelers who are 75 years old or older and those 12 or younger do not have to remove shoes at security checkpoints. 


The TSA has not officially confirmed the reported security screening change yet. 


“TSA and DHS are always exploring new and innovative ways to enhance passenger experience and our strong security posture,” a TSA spokesperson said in a statement Tuesday. “Any potential updates to our security process will be issued through official channels.” 


The TSA began in 2001 when President George W. Bush signed legislation for its creation two months after the 9/11 attacks. The agency included federal airport screeners that replaced the private companies airlines had used to handle security. 


Over the years the TSA has continued to look for ways to enhance its security measures, including testing facial recognition technology and implementing Real ID requirements. 
One of the most prominent friction points for travelers is the TSA at screening checkpoints. Trump's Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy asked the public in an April social media post what would make travel more seamless. 


The following day, Duffy posted on X that, “It’s very clear that TSA is the #1 travel complaint. That falls under the Department of Homeland Security. I’ll discuss this with @Sec_Noem.” 
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem will host a press conference Tuesday evening at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport to announce a new TSA policy “that will make screening easier for passengers, improve traveler satisfaction, and reduce wait times,” her agency said.


Trump fired TSA Administrator David Pekoske in January in the middle of a second five-year term, though he was appointed by Trump during his first term in the White House. Pekoske was reappointed by President Joe Biden.


No reason was given for Pekoske’s departure. The administrator position remains vacant, according to the TSA website. 

Picture Courtesy: Kent D. Johnson/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP, File

MORE International ARTICLES

Indian doctoral student killed in shooting incident in US

Indian doctoral student killed in shooting incident in US
A 26-year-old Indian doctoral student at the University of Cincinnati was found dead inside his car after a shooting incident in the US state of Ohio. Aaditya Adlakha was driving on the Western Hills Viaduct, Cincinnati, when his vehicle was hit multiple times in a gunfire, which erupted earlier this month, Ohio-based WLWT news channel reported.  

Indian doctoral student killed in shooting incident in US

Indians form 3rd largest illegal immigrant population in US: Pew

Indians form 3rd largest illegal immigrant population in US: Pew
Numbering around 725,000, Indians form the third largest population of illegal immigrants in the US after Mexico and El Salvador, according to new Pew Research Center estimates. As of 2021, the country's 10.5 million unauthorised immigrants represented about three per cent of the total US population and 22 per cent of the foreign-born population, the research said.

Indians form 3rd largest illegal immigrant population in US: Pew

Cops yet to decide on charges against driver in crash that left 5 Australian-Indians dead

Cops yet to decide on charges against driver in crash that left 5 Australian-Indians dead
Police said they are yet to decide whether charges will be laid against the driver involved in a car crash that left five Indian-origin people dead in Australia, as the coroner’s office began its probe into the tragedy. The 66-year-old man ploughed his SUV into the beer garden of Royal Daylesford Hotel in Victoria striking 10 people from three families who had gathered on November 5 to celebrate their weekend.

Cops yet to decide on charges against driver in crash that left 5 Australian-Indians dead

Explosion at Canada-U.S. Rainbow Bridge crossing in New York kills two, border closed

Explosion at Canada-U.S. Rainbow Bridge crossing in New York kills two, border closed
Four separate entry points between Canada and New York state were shut down as a precaution while law enforcement officials flooded the complex on the U.S. side of the Rainbow Bridge, which spans the Niagara River. Videos posted to social media showed smoke and flames and the wreckage of at least one vehicle at the secondary checkpoint complex. 

Explosion at Canada-U.S. Rainbow Bridge crossing in New York kills two, border closed

Washington asks India about alleged assassination plot against US-Canadian activist

Washington asks India about alleged assassination plot against US-Canadian activist
India's High Commission in Ottawa did not immediately return messages seeking comment. Pannun was in British Columbia as recently as late October, when a Sikh gurdwara hosted the second round of a non-binding vote on the establishment of Khalistan — an independent Sikh state within India.

Washington asks India about alleged assassination plot against US-Canadian activist

Israel doesn’t want to rule Gaza after war, says Netanyahu’s advisor

Israel doesn’t want to rule Gaza after war, says Netanyahu’s advisor
Israel is not looking to occupy Gaza after its ongoing war with the Palestinian militant group Hamas ends, an Israeli government official said on Tuesday. The war started after Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, killing 1,200 people in massacres across towns and villages in the country’s south, and firing rockets into Israel.  

Israel doesn’t want to rule Gaza after war, says Netanyahu’s advisor