- June 30, 2026
- Updated 7:33 pm
TSA’s New Approach to Airport Security: Increasing Private Contractor Use
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is significantly shifting its approach by enhancing efforts to privatize airport security across the United States. Recent government shutdowns, which left TSA agents without pay and resulted in lengthy queues at airports, have propelled the push to expand the Screening Partnership Program. This program employs private contractors for security tasks.
Currently, twenty airports, such as San Francisco International, participate in this program. In contrast to airports like Houston’s Hobby, where TSA staff manned checkpoints and lines stretched beyond terminals during shutdowns, passengers at non-TSA airports waited ten minutes or less.
The TSA aims to allot an additional $477 million to incorporate smaller airports into the Screening Partnership Program according to its proposed budget. This budget also suggests cutting over 4,300 jobs from their roughly 50,000-agent workforce. The TSA has also rolled out an initiative allowing private contractors to manage and operate screening equipment at these checkpoints.
During the recent government shutdown in late March, San Francisco International Airport experienced minimal lines, demonstrating the efficiency of the private-security initiative. The program, Gold+, was announced to staff through a mass email. The email mentioned it would promote closer collaboration with the private sector and be implemented in stages. Details remain limited, with a document noting the transition to Gold+ could take seven to eleven months.
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