Trump formally directs TSA agents to be paid during shutdown
Published in Political News
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump signed a memo directing Transportation Security Administration personnel to be paid, a bid to alleviate disruptions at U.S. airports amid the ongoing shutdown of its parent agency.
Trump’s Friday memo stated that 50,000 transportation officers who work security at airports are not being paid due to the funding lapse at the Department of Homeland Security, prompting almost 500 to leave their positions, with thousands more calling in sick.
“As President of the United States, I have determined that these circumstances constitute an emergency situation compromising the Nation’s security,” Trump said, adding that the absences “unacceptably heighten the risk of security vulnerabilities within our domestic travel system” and have “negatively impacted countless Americans.”
A DHS spokesperson said that TSA has immediately begun the process of paying the workforce and that officers should begin seeing paychecks as early as Monday.
Still, it’s unclear how the system will work. The memo does not cite the specific source of funding. The president may also lack the legal authority to unilaterally authorize pay; federal law gives Congress the power of the purse.
Trump’s memo directed DHS and the White House budget office to use funds that have a “reasonable and logical nexus” to agency operations to provide employees who have worked without pay “with the compensation and benefits that would have accrued to them if not for” the shutdown. The funding lapse continues to snarl lines at airports across the country.
“Once regular funding for TSA has been restored, every effort should be made, as authorized by law, to adjust applicable funding accounts within DHS to ensure the continuation of DHS operations and activities consistent with planned expenditures prior to the lapse,” Trump wrote in the memo.
Trump said Thursday he would sign the directive.
The move comes as Congress continues to fight over DHS funding. The Senate passed a bill to restore funding to much of DHS, but it was met with opposition in the House, which is expected to extend the shutdown into another week.
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(With assistance from Myles Miller.)
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