(8 Jul 2025)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Philadelphia – 8 July 2025
1. People load their belongings onto a conveyor at a TSA security checkpoint
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York – 8 July 2025
2. SOUNDBITE (English) Charles Sheehan, The Associated Press:
++PARTIALLY COVERED++
“About three months after September 11th, a man named Richard Reid boarded a Paris-to-Mammy flight with explosives in his shoes and tried to ignite them. And by 2006, that policy was official. Everybody had to remove shoes when going through airport security checkpoints unless you were younger than 12 and older than 75.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Philadelphia – 8 July 2025
3. Various of shoe tight shots
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York – 8 July 2025
++PARTIALLY COVERED++
4. SOUNDBITE (English) Charles Sheehan, The Associated Press:
“It is expected that the Transportation Security Administration is going to do away with the requirements that have been in place for about 20 years of having travelers remove their shoes when they pass through security checkpoints."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Philadelphia – 8 July 2025
5. People load their belongings onto a conveyor at a TSA security checkpoint
6. People, with shoes on, go through a TSA security checkpoint
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York – 8 July 2025
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Charles Sheehan, The Associated Press:
++PARTIALLY COVERED++
“Some airports have already put this new policy into place, unannounced, where they’re not requiring shoe removal. On Sunday, that’s expected to go into effect for most U.S. airports and shortly after that at all U.S. airports.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Philadelphia – 8 July 2025
8. Jennifer Winegardner goes through a TSA security checkpoint
9. A TSA PreCheck sign
10. People load their belongings onto a conveyor at a TSA security checkpoint
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Jennifer Winegardner, traveler:
++PARTIALLY COVERED++
"I think it’s an interesting change because I know TSA [PreCheck] hasn’t had that requirement for sometime so I wondered if eventually it would trickle down to… I don’t have TSA PreCheck because I only travel maybe once a year. So, the fee didn’t really make much sense for me. So, it’s a nice change because I know sometimes that’s the big holdup in the line is having to take off shoes and then people wanting to stop right there at the end and put their shoes back on. So, I’m hopeful that maybe it will help with the flow of—of people through the security check points."
12. People load their belongings onto a conveyor at a TSA security checkpoint
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Jennifer Winegardner, traveler:
++PARTIALLY COVERED++
“But I’ve had issues with traveling with my family when there’s four or five of us if my in-laws are with us. Where, you know, we have to wait for, you know, my elderly father-in-law to put on his shoes. Which, you know, it’s hard for somebody who isn’t very mobile — doesn’t have that great mobility. So, when we travel with him, I think it will be a great help, yes.”
14. Jennifer Winegardner gestures a goodbye to family
STORYLINE:
For the first time in almost 20 years, travelers may no longer be required to take off their shoes during security screenings at U.S. airports.
The Transportation Security Administration is looking to abandon the additional security step that has for years bedeviled anyone passing through U.S airports, according to media reports.
If implemented, it would put an end to a security screening mandate put in place almost 20 years ago, several years after “shoe bomber” Richard Reid’s failed attempt to take down a flight from Paris to Miami in late 2001.
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