TSA insider faults agency's response to coronavirus

TSA insider faults agency's response to coronavirus

SeattlePI.com

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A Transportation Security Administration official is accusing the agency of failing to adequately protect airport screeners from the new coronavirus, endangering both the officers and the traveling public.

The top TSA official in Kansas, Jay Brainard, says the TSA’s actions amount to “gross mismanagement."

“TSA staff at airports both became a significant carrier to spread the pandemic and were themselves improperly protected from the pandemic,” Brainard's lawyer, Tom Devine, said in a complaint filed with the Office of Special Counsel, which handles whistleblower complaints.

The special counsel has ordered TSA's parent agency, the Homeland Security Department, to conduct an investigation.

The special counsel’s office declined to comment.

The TSA said in a statement Friday that it has followed guidelines set by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in deciding protection standards for workers.

Spokeswoman Lisa Farbstein said that at the start of the virus outbreak, TSA told employees that masks were optional, then made them mandatory at airport checkpoints in the first week of May.

Airport officers are required to wear nitrile gloves when they screen passengers. They must change gloves after every pat-down, and travelers can request the use of new gloves at any time, Farbstein said. Eye protection has remained optional for screeners.

The agency added that plastic barriers have been installed at security checkpoints and areas where checked bags are dropped off for screening.

Brainard believes those procedures still have gaps, however, including no procedure for how to handle travelers who appear to be sick.

Brainard's complaint and the special counsel's demand for an investigation were earlier reported by the Washington Post and National Public...

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