For years, travelers have been forced to awkwardly remove their shoes in the airport security line, a policy that dates back to a failed, decades-old terrorism plot. The rule just changed with a big ...
Passengers are no longer required to remove their shoes at TSA checkpoints. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced the immediate policy change on Tuesday. The shoe removal policy was ...
Fliers may have been annoyed earlier this year with the Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) implementation of the new Real ID requirements, but they’ll likely be much happier with the ...
Kristi Noem announced on July 8 shoes are no longer required to be removed at airport security. No longer requiring shoe removal went into effect immediately. TSA began requiring travelers to remove ...
It’s official: The TSA no longer requires you to bare your past-due pedicures for all the world to see. Shoe removal is not needed to pass through airport security. Shoes, for now, get to remain on.
U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem made it official Tuesday — passengers at U.S. airports will no longer have to take off their shoes upon going through airport security checkpoints, even if ...
GULFPORT, Miss. (WLOX) - Taking off our shoes at airports is coming to an end. RELATED: TSA to allow people to keep shoes on at checkpoints for first time in 20 years Taking off your shoes and placing ...
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 ...
Talk about a small mercy: The Transportation Security Administration announced this week that you can leave your shoes on at domestic airports. For everyone who has struggled to grab their carry-on ...
CASCADE TOWNSHIP, Mich. (WOOD) — Travelers can now keep their shoes on at U.S. airport security checkpoints. The Transportation Security Administration has ended its nearly two-decade-old shoe removal ...
Traveling out of U.S. airports just got a little bit easier. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced on July 8 that travelers no longer will need to remove their shoes when ...