As travelers experience chaos, lines trailing around terminals and federal immigration agents in major airports across the country, San Jose Mineta International Airport remains calm and void of agents.

Travelers breezed through security lines in San Jose Monday as President Donald Trump ordered U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to more than a dozen major airports, including Houston’s William P. Hobby Airport and New York City’s John F. Kennedy International Airport. Trump claims ICE agents — who were unmasked — were there to alleviate long lines amid Transportation Security Administration (TSA) staffing shortages due to the Department of Homeland Security budget standoff that has led to a partial shutdown.

A spokesperson for the San Jose airport said they have not received any notification of ICE personnel coming.

“Thus far, operations and wait times have remained normal here at SJC during the partial government shutdown,” airport spokesperson Julie Jarratt told San Jose Spotlight.

Natalia Yamkovaya, 39, arrived at San Jose’s airport hours before her flight, worried it might be impacted by long TSA lines. To her surprise, the airport was relatively empty.

“It’s not what I expected,” Yamkovaya told San Jose Spotlight.

While TSA agent have gone without pay during the partial shutdown, ICE agents continue to be funded by the $75 billion it received through Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” passed last summer.

Santa Clara County resident Jane Winkler flew into San Jose Mineta International Airport on Monday from Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. She encountered no issues at either airport, she said.

“It makes me feel great that ICE isn’t in this airport,” Winkler told San Jose Spotlight. “ICE is too intrusive now. I am of Hispanic heritage and I would like it if they don’t stop me. I don’t think they have a place here.”

Traveler Dustin Jolley, 47, said his experience at SJC was drastically different from his family members’ experience in the Houston airport. He received text messages from them about three-hour long waits and ICE agents fanning the airport. Wait times at some airports like Houston were up to six hours, according to news reports.

Jolley said he’s not opposed to ICE agents helping alleviate the crowding at airports, but he’s unsure if that’s what they are actually doing.

“With some of the controversy with ICE lately, it leaves you questioning some of their modus operandi,” he told San Jose Spotlight.

Yamkovaya said it’s upsetting to know ICE agents are being deployed to airports.

“(You) feel like you can’t leave your house because they can be anywhere, and it’s unfair,” she said. “The country of the free is no longer free because people have to hide.”

Copyright © 2026 Bay City News, Inc. All rights reserved. Republication, rebroadcast or redistribution without the express written consent of Bay City News, Inc. is prohibited. Bay City News is a 24/7 news service covering the greater Bay Area.