Politics & Government
25 TSA Officers Have Resigned From Jobs At Boston's Logan Airport Amid Partial Government Shutdown
Passengers at Logan have experienced minimal impacts to TSA wait times during this shutdown, thanks to TSA officers' willingness to work.

March 28, 2026 / 12:40 AM EDT
Despite having low levels of sick calls during the partial government shutdown, the unpaid work appears to have taken a toll on Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers at Boston's Logan Airport. On Friday, the local union representing those officers reported that 25 of them had resigned from their jobs at Logan during the course of the partial shutdown.
Find out what's happening in Bostonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Earlier in the day, Congress failed for a seventh time to pass a spending bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security, of which the TSA is a part of. By late afternoon, President Donald Trump signed an executive order to grant TSA employees back pay using money from last year's GOP spending bill. However, the president of the TSA Officers Union (AFGE 2617) New England told WBZ it appeared officers would be paid only for the period of February 14 to March 12.
Passengers at Logan have experienced minimal impacts to TSA wait times during this shutdown thanks in large part to TSA officers' willingness to work without a paycheck. The airport reported minimal sick calls over the last month.
Find out what's happening in Bostonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
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