Well, here it comes! PA Disneymania was right on, and it seems Napolitano is taking the pain to the Nth degree:
You know, I have a couple of thoughts.
First, it is funny how fast the government can move when they really want to, yet extremely slow at other times.
Second, the security check points are running super slow without overtime? So in essence, this is the speed the line should be going? Did it
really take this much overtime to get us through the lines in 20-45 minutes, or is this a game being played to cause the US flying public pain?
Third, according to their
budget (page 36), the TSA has requested about $5.1B for FY13 from the Federal general fund (actual
budget is $7.6B with $2.5B coming from our airline fees (page 54)), which means they need to cut about $1B to meet the 20% sequester over the course of year. Fully loaded labor costs are listed as ($3.1B) for just the screeners, which is about $67,000 per person (reasonable) based on the Congress' cap of 46,000 full time screeners. However, I bet they could outsource the screening for less.
Fourth, in their defense, the TSA should request a raise in the 9-11 Security Fee to compensate, which would likely pass under the circumstances, and place the burden in dollars vice time.
That said, I can not believe that we will experience massive slow downs if the established shifts can not process people in an effective manner during their eight hour work day, which is a management issue. I'm curious to see what the overtime costs are, in this case, since they recently unionized (if I recall correctly). Probably a bit of waste in there.
Finally, I don't think this had to move so quickly, but I'm personally glad it did, as it shows weaknesses in the current system of screening as well as the real costs of doing business at the TSA. Not hating, just intrigued that such a significant impact is made simply by cutting overtime (within any organization)...