SACRAMENTO, California — In this deep blue state where Republicans rarely back Democratic colleagues in the Capitol, one issue is overcoming the partisan divide: line skipping at airports.
The bill would ban Clear from operating in California airports with the criticism that it allows wealthier passengers to skip the line at Transportation Security Administration (TSA) screening lanes.
California lawmakers are looking to crack down on airport line-jumpers with a proposed bill that would ban security screening company Clear from general security lines across the state. The bill ...
A new bill, the first of its kind in the U.S., would ban security screening company Clear from operating at California airports as lawmakers take aim at companies that let consumers pay to pass ...
A California bill that would target the airport security screening company CLEAR passed its first legislative hurdle on Tuesday, though it was watered down amid steep industry opposition to avoid ...
The bill, SB-1372, the first of its kind in the U.S., would require third-party vendors like Clear to get their own dedicated security lane or lose the ability to operate in California airports.
Say goodbye to shorter lines at California airports, at least for those willing to pay for it, if Senator Josh Newman has his way. The California Democrat is sponsoring a bill that would ban Clear ...
LATEST April 24, 1 p.m. A bill that sought to limit line-cutting services at airports passed out of the state Senate Transportation Committee along an 8-4 vote Tuesday, but not without ...
Two California lawmakers have proposed bipartisan legislation that would ban Clear, a biometric travel document verification system, from airports across the state. State Sen. Josh Newman, a ...