Shoes removing shoes at American airports may soon be a matter of past

Passengers at some airports including Lagardia in New York city may no longer need to pass through one of the most disgusting requirements of safety screening. For the first time in about 20 years, Transport Safety Administration (TSA) is allowing people to keep their shoes.In recent times, TSA began to reduce its needs to remove shoes for passengers, according to a source familiar with the case, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The agency has not officially announced this change and has not confirmed the new policy, which is effective at airports across the country.“TSA and DHS are always looking for new and innovative ways to increase passenger experiences and our strong security currency,” said TSA spokesman. “Any possible update for our safety process will be released through official channels.”This change was first reported by Gate Access, a travel newsletter written by Kaleb Hormone-Marile, which says that he is a former TSA officer. He said that he had seen an internal memo briefing officers with a new policy at an airport as well as a soft launch about it. The new policy is good for the passengers and is over-over-overdose, Hormon-Marile said in an email statement. He said that officers will now be able to screen passengers more fast. TSA needs passengers to remove their shoes since 2006, nearly five years later a terrorist tried to explode an explosive in his shoes while riding on a US airline flight from Paris to Miami. Passengers pay for privilege to keep their shoes, a hallmark of TSA’s prechecked program, which costs around $ 80 for five years and has accelerated the screening. Harmon-Marshal said that he believes a “huge change” was going on with the Prechec program.