Advertisement

What to do with the loose change left at TSA checkpoints?

Share

That loose change that you dump into the plastic bins at the airport security checkpoints may not seem like much but it adds up.

And now Washington is wrestling with the question of what to do with the change you leave behind.

In fiscal 2012, the change collected at airports across the country added up to about $531,000, with about $32,000 of that coming in foreign currency, according to the Transportation Security Administration. At Los Angeles International Airport, the nation’s third busiest airport, passenger change added up to nearly $22,000 in the last fiscal year, according to the TSA.

Advertisement

The TSA has been putting the money into its “aviation security fund” to translate airport signs into different languages, among other overhead costs.

Rep. Jeff Miller (R-Florida) put forward a bill recently to set aside the loose change for use by nonprofit groups that run airport facilities where members of the military and their families can rest while traveling.

“Travelers’ lost change is unappropriated dollars that should be put to good use,” he said during a Homeland Security Committee meeting in October.

The bill was amended and approved in committee last week and sent to the House of Representatives for consideration.

ALSO:

Airport food getting healthier, study finds

Advertisement

Southwest Airlines offers Wi-Fi from takeoff to landing

Air travelers may soon see holiday-like congestion every week

Advertisement