Federal News
Congress Debates DHS Funding and TSA Pay
March 20, 2026
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is experiencing a partial government shutdown as of March 2026, resulting in Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents working without pay. Congressional disagreements, particularly between Senate Republicans and Democrats, have blocked funding bills intended to provide paychecks to TSA workers through the fiscal year. This impasse has led to significant staffing shortages, with over 300 TSA officers leaving their posts, causing increased airport security delays and threatening the closure of smaller airports nationwide. Key legislative efforts, including bills S.4073 and S.4127 introduced by Senator Jacky Rosen, aim to immediately fund TSA payroll but have been blocked in the Senate. The ongoing shutdown and funding disputes are impacting national security operations, air travel efficiency, and TSA workforce stability during a critical travel period.
- Why this matters: Procurement and contracting professionals should be aware that DHS operational disruptions may affect contract performance timelines and security service requirements at airports nationwide.
- The staffing shortages and potential airport closures could lead to urgent demand for temporary security staffing solutions or contract modifications.
- Organizations involved in airport security, logistics, and related services should evaluate risks related to funding uncertainties and prepare for possible operational impacts.
- Legislative developments on DHS funding and TSA paychecks remain fluid; procurement planning should consider potential shifts in agency priorities and resource allocations.
If we cannot move forward with funding the entire department, sitting down and negotiating in good faith, we should be able to come together to pay the hardworking staff of one of its most essential components: TSA.
— Senator Jacky Rosen
The Democratsโ reckless DHS shutdown is causing TSA officers to go without pay for the third time in nearly six months. These political stunts are causing unneeded financial hardship for our TSA officers and their families. Now, 366 TSA officers have left the force. Because of this DHS shutdown, Americans are facing HOURS long waits at airports across the country. Democrats must reopen DHS now.
— Lauren Bis, Acting Assistant Secretary
To hold an entire department hostage, particularly over policy concerns, is, frankly, reckless, and itโs, I really think itโs, it threatens, really the foundational, you know, job of Congress at large to fund the appropriations process, to fund the executive branch.
— Adam Stahl, Acting Deputy TSA Administrator
Agencies
Transportation Security Administration, Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Senate, U.S. House of Representatives, Immigration and Customs Enforcement
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Locations
Sources
- Scalise: Democratsโ Dangerous Games Hurt Workers, Families, and National Security | Congressman Steve Scalise · Scalise House · Mar 17
- [2026-03-19] Reed Blasts Senate GOP for Denying Paychecks for TSA... · REED · Mar 20
- TSA official says continued shutdown could lead to airport closures · The Hill · Mar 17
- VIDEO: Senate Republicans Block Rosenโs Attempt to Pay TSA Agents - Jacky Rosen · Rosen Senate · Mar 12
- Democrats Are โVery Sereneโ About Keeping DHS Shutdown, Leaving TSA Agents Unpaid as They Secure Our Skies · whitehouse-news · Mar 12