TSA boss warns of airport shutdowns, but no deal yet on day 40 of
Homeland Security funding fight
[March 26, 2026]
By LISA MASCARO and KEVIN FREKING
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Transportation Security Administration may have to
shut down operations at some airports if the budget impasse drags on,
the agency's acting head said Wednesday, even as record wait time for
travelers did little to end the standoff over the funding fight in
Congress.
The TSA's Ha Nguyen McNeill described the mounting hardships facing
unpaid airport workers — piling up bills and eviction notices, even
plasma donations to make ends meet — and warned that lawmakers must
ensure "this never happens again."
“This is a dire situation,” she testified at a House hearing, warning of
potential airport closures. “At this point, we have to look at all
options on the table. And that does require us to, at some point, make
very difficult choices as to which airports we might try to keep open
and which ones we might have to shut down as our callout rates
increase.”
Yet on the 40th day of the standoff involving the Department of Homeland
Security, there was no easy way out in sight. Neither Republican
senators, who made the latest offer, nor Democrats, who countered by
reiterating their demands for changes to President Donald Trump 's
immigration enforcement operations, appeared closer to a compromise.
Trump, who initially appeared to have given his nod to the deal, has
declined to lend it his full support or put his political weight behind
making sure it is approved.
Top officials at agencies under the DHS umbrella spoke for more than
three-hours before the House Homeland Security Committee about the
potential risks of security lapses unless the partial government
shutdown comes to an end.

A deal teeters on collapse
DHS has gone without routine funding since mid-February. Democrats are
insisting on changes to the Trump administration’s immigration
enforcement and mass deportation operations after the killings of two
U.S. citizens in Minneapolis by federal officers during protests.
The latest GOP proposal would fund most of DHS except for the
enforcement and removal operations of U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement that have been central to the debate. The plan would provide
money for other aspects of ICE as well as Customs and Border Protection.
While the offer added some new restraints on immigration officers,
including the use of body cameras, it excluded other policies that
Democrats have demanded, such as requirements that federal agents wear
identification and refrain from conducting raids around schools,
churches or other sensitive places.
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York said they needed to
see real changes. “We’ve been talking about ICE reforms from day one,”
he said.
Republican leaders said Democrats are putting the country at risk.
“They know this is crazy," said House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La.
But conservative Republicans also panned the proposal, demanding full
funding for immigration operations and skeptical of the promise from GOP
leaders that they would address Trump's proof-of-citizenship voting bill
in a subsequent legislative package.
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Passengers wait in a security checkpoint line at George Bush
Intercontinental Airport, Wednesday, March 25, 2026, in Houston. (AP
Photo/David J. Phillip)

Senate Majority Leader John Thune said late Wednesday that if
Democrats put a “more realistic offer on the table, we'll be back in
business.”
Airport lines grow as TSA workers endure hardships
McNeill, the acting TSA administrator, told lawmakers that multiple
airports are experiencing greater than 40% callout rates and more
than 480 transportation security officers have now quit during the
shutdown.
She cited the growing financial strain on the TSA workforce.
“Some are sleeping in their cars, selling their blood and plasma,
and taking on second jobs to make ends meet, all while being
expected to perform at the highest level when in uniform to protect
the traveling public,” she said.
McNeil also said TSA officers working at the nation’s airports have
experienced a more than 500% increase in the frequency of assaults
since the shutdown began.
“This is unacceptable and it will not be tolerated,” McNeill said.
The top executive overseeing Houston’s airport said security lines
that have travelers waiting four hours or more could get longer if
the political impasse was not soon settled.
Lines that twist and turn across multiple floors at George Bush
Intercontinental Airport have been the result of TSA only being able
to staff one-third to one-half the usual number of checkpoint lines,
said Jim Szczesniak, aviation director for Houston’s airport system.
Trump’s decision to send ICE agents to the airports risks inflaming
the situation, lawmakers have said. Video footage of federal
officers detaining a crying woman at San Francisco International
Airport drew outrage Monday from local officials, although it was
unrelated to Trump's order to deploy immigration officers.
FEMA also at risk
The Federal Emergency Management Agency's Disaster Relief Fund is
“rapidly depleting,” Victoria Barton, a FEMA external affairs
official, told lawmakers.

FEMA is able to continue its disaster response and recovery work as
long as that fund has money, and about 10,000 of its disaster
workers continue being paid through it.
___
Associated Press writers Wyatte Grantham-Philips in New York, Rio
Yamat in Las Vegas, Russ Bynum in Houston and Gabriela Aoun Angueira
in San Diego contributed to this report.
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