As the end of July approaches, longtime flight attendant Shannon Thein is filled with dread.
When air traffic was decimated by the COVID-19 pandemic, Thein and other employees at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport could park at Terminal 1 where there was plenty of room following the outbreak.
Now, as Americans make up for lost time and pack planes during the summer of "revenge travel," the Metropolitan Airports Commission (MAC) plans to move employee parking back to Terminal 2 by Aug. 1 to make room for air travelers at the main terminal.
For Thein, a flight attendant for 31 years, that's an ominous development. Parking at the smaller terminal means that she and other employees must take a short ride to Terminal 1 on the light-rail Blue Line, confronting unsettling situations often late at night and in the wee hours of the morning.
The last time Thein took the Blue Line between terminals, she said, she had to step over people sleeping in a vestibule. When the train arrived, it reeked of urine and marijuana, and several passengers appeared to be homeless, she said. A man on the train watched her closely.
"I am basically trapped in there," said Thein, of Minnetonka. "I have nothing to protect me. I'm an easy mark."
Others feel the same way about light-rail safety at the airport.
Sun Country Airlines began sending out advisories about two years ago after crew members were "verbally harassed" on light-rail trains connecting MSP's terminals, said company spokeswoman Wendy Burt.