The number of absent screeners had held around 6 percent much of last week, but the TSA reported the number of screeners not showing up for work as planned hit 7 percent on Friday, 8 percent on Saturday, and then 10 percent on Sunday.
But on Saturday, excessive sick calls by TSA airport screeners forced officials at Baltimore-Washington International Airport to use emergency plans to deal with the lack of airport screeners, closing a major security checkpoint early at the airport.
That major checkpoint for Southwest Airlines flights wasn't closed for just a few hours - but remained shut down on Sunday and Monday as well, because of a lack of security screeners.
"It is important to clarify that it is not unusual for TSA and BWI Marshall to open or close one of our security checkpoints," the airport said in a written statement.
"This will have minimal, if any, impact on passengers and no impact on airport operations," the BWI statement read.
Earlier this month, press reports of airport screeners calling in sick because of the government shutdown - and the lack of pay for screeners - was denounced as 'fake news' by a top Department of Homeland Security spokesman, as well as the White House.
Like other federal workers, TSA screeners have been coming to work since the partial government shutdown started on December 22; they were paid as scheduled on December 29, but missed a check on January 11, and a second check may not be paid on January 25.
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