Skip to navigation Skip to content
click here to view our 'Why' videos

TSA Gears Up for Holiday Season Air Travel

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY

Transportation Security Administration

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE  - December 21, 2004

TSA Press Office: (571) 227-2829

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is moving to duplicate, over the upcoming Holiday Season, the short wait times at security checkpoints that air travelers experienced over Thanksgiving.  Data collected by TSA over the Thanksgiving Holiday showed an average passenger wait time of 12 minutes during peak travel periods, with overall wait times averaging less than four minutes.  Year-end holiday travel typically is not as concentrated as Thanksgiving, but offers other challenges including families traveling together and the need to move gifts through security systems.  

Rear Adm. David M. Stone, USN (Ret.), Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security for TSA, emphasized the need for travelers and families to be prepared for security screening, and requested that passengers not go to the airport with wrapped packages.  He also reminded passengers not to take firearms and ammunition through the checkpoint in their carry-on luggage.  

“TSA’s success this Holiday Season depends upon our continued partnership with the traveling public and aviation stakeholders,” he said. “TSA pledges to do all it can to ensure security and provide excellent customer service.  Passengers need to prepare themselves and their families ahead of time for the airport security process, and not bring any prohibited items like firearms and ammunition to the checkpoint.”

When traveling with children, being ready to go through the checkpoint can be a huge timesaver.  If alarms are set off, additional screening takes approximately three minutes per person, on average.  A conversation with children in advance of airport security may also be helpful.  At the checkpoint, children will need to temporarily part with such things as blankets and stuffed animals, and older children need to know that any comment suggesting a threat to an aircraft or its passengers is taken seriously by TSA screeners.

TSA encourages all travelers to visit its Travelers and Consumers section prior to traveling this holiday season.  The Web site has lists of Permitted and Prohibited Items as well as good seasonal advice, and information for families traveling with children.

The security environment essentially remains unchanged since September 2004 when TSA announced it was increasing the use of explosives trace detectors, expanding the use of manual pat-down searches, and referring more passengers for additional screening based on visual observations by screeners, even if an alarm has not gone off.  As always, passengers have the right to a private screening.

TSA’s checkpoint protocols now require all passengers to remove outer coats and jackets for X-ray before proceeding through the metal detectors.  That includes suit and sport coats, athletic warm-up jackets and blazers.  If a sports coat or blazer is being worn as the innermost garment – not over a blouse or sweater, for example – it does not have to come off.

Other important TSA travel tips to help travelers and their families be prepared for the security process include:

# # #