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Podcast: The Leap
Episode:

Alameda County Food Bank Delivers to TSA Employees Working Without Pay at Oakland Airport

Category: Society & Culture
Duration: 00:00:00
Publish Date: 2025-10-16 23:16:40
Description:

As the government shutdown continues into its third week, Transportation and Security Administration officials reached out to the Alameda County Community Food Bank, asking for support for employees who continue to work without pay.

They responded by hand-delivering food packages on Thursday to Oakland TSA employees.

“One of the big challenges for a number of federal employees throughout this time frame is that if their dollars are cut, well, then they do not have the ability to just recover from that really quickly, right?” said Regi Young, the food bank’s executive director. “So a lot of it is really just an emergency need, and we’re happy to fill that need.”

The packages, brought to Oakland San Francisco Bay International Airport, contained enough food for more than 300 employees. Each package includes a dozen eggs, a box of mixed produce, coffee and dry goods including pasta, rice and beans.

To greet the food bank staff, TSA workers formed a human chain, passing the boxes from one person to the next until they formed neat stacks in a nearby breakroom for employees to collect at the end of their shifts.

Regi Young, executive director of the Alameda County Community Food Bank, stands outside a terminal building at Oakland International Airport on Oct. 16, 2025. The food bank partnered with TSA to support federal employees during the shutdown. (Gustavo Hernandez/KQED)

“We appreciate Alameda County Community Food Bank for their generous contribution to our TSA officers here at OAK. They provide a very essential service to us here at the OAK, and we’re glad that they’re able to receive some relief from the food bank,” said Kaley Skantz, the airport’s public information officer.

The food bank also said it supported around 1,200 federal employees — including TSA officers, Coast Guard, Federal Bureau of Prisons and IRS employees — with groceries during a lapse in federal funding in 2018. Young said the food bank is also prepared for the possibility that the current deadlock could drag on.

“One of the things that we saw back in 2018 is that when something continues to go on, the need increases dramatically,” Young said. “So we are absolutely prepared for what we may need to do in the future.”

TSA officials did not respond to a request for comment.

Along with TSA officers, Skantz said air traffic controllers with the Federal Aviation Administration and some employees with Customs and Border Protection are also currently working at the airport without pay.

“So far, we’ve been fortunate in that we have not had any significant impacts to airport operations as a result of the shutdown,” Skantz said. “Obviously, we are continuing to monitor the situation closely just to ensure that passengers and cargo are able to pass through OAK safely throughout the shutdown.”

OAK is one of several airports in the Bay Area that is not playing a video from Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem blaming congressional Democrats for the lapse in federal funding, Skantz said earlier this week.

“Democrats in Congress refuse to fund the federal government, and because of this, many of our operations are impacted, and most of our TSA employees are working without pay,” Noem said in the video.

Airport leaders around the country have declined to show the video, fearing it violates state or federal laws prohibiting the use of public resources for political messages.

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