The largest airline at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport is so worried about long lines at security checkpoints that it has offered up workers at no cost to the federal government.
Delta Air Lines is willing to assign some staffers at its major hubs to help the U.S. Transportation Security Administration fulfill any airport tasks that don't require a badged agent in an effort to shorten lines, airline Chief Executive Ed Bastian says.
The offer from Delta comes as airlines and airports fear that long lines seen earlier this year will return with rising passenger volumes during the summer months.
"The customers don't distinguish security when coming through the airport between Delta and TSA," Bastian said during a recent media event at Delta's Atlanta headquarters. "Security is something that, in our opinion, is a joint responsibility of both TSA and the airline, and we will do our share to help."
Delta has also provided the agency with engineers who are "looking at queuing design and giving recommendations" to speed them up, Bastian said.
Airports around the U.S. are facing abnormally long lines as the number of TSA agents drops and the number of air travelers rises.
Minneapolis/St. Paul International Airport has about 650 screeners, or about 75 fewer officers than three years ago, according to airport executives. Over the same time, passenger volume jumped 7 percent, or by about 2.8 million passengers annually. Delta and its affiliates dominate the airport, carrying more than 70 percent of those passengers.
With peak summer travel just around the corner, U.S. airports and airlines are bracing for the worst.