Security Agency Mulls Emergency Number

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Security Agency Mulls Emergency Number

By JONATHAN D. SALANT
.c The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (May 19) - Federal officials reviewing airline security are
considering setting up toll-free telephone numbers that passengers in the air
could use during emergencies.

Also being examined is a system that would allow frequent fliers to have
background checks before they travel, making it easier for them to pass
through airport security checkpoints.

The ideas are in a Transportation Security Administration report expected to
go to Congress on Monday. An agency official speaking on condition of
anonymity outlined the suggestions under discussion.

The new emergency number would mean that passengers would not need a credit
card to call from an airplane, as is now required for in-flight phones.
Regional centers would handle the calls and contact the appropriate law
enforcement agencies, the official said.

Travelers on one of the four planes hijacked on Sept. 11, United Airlines
Flight 93, are believed to have fought back against the terrorists and
prevented the plane from reaching its destination, believed to be Washington.

The plane crashed in a field in rural western Pennsylvania and was the only
one of the four that did not take lives on the ground. Some of the passengers
called relatives from cell phones or the in-flight phones after the plane was
hijacked.

Air Travelers Association President David Stempler said an emergency system
is needed.

``With the pilots being locked up in the cockpit, now it's really the flight
attendants and the passengers by themselves to manage those situations,''
Stempler said. ``Any assistance would be helpful.''

Other security measures under consideration, the official said, include:

A uniform identification card for federal, state and local law enforcement
officers. These officers would carry guns on board airplanes, providing
protection on flights that do not have armed air marshals.

The trusted traveler program, which has been discussed since Sept. 11. But
some officials worry that a sleeper terrorist cell could spend years in the
United States, obtain one of the frequent flier cards, bypass stringent
security procedures at airports and then launch an attack.

The use of biometrics - face recognition or retinal scanning technology, for
example - along with voice analyses and other new technologies to help screen
airline passengers before they board.

The federal security agency also said it would hire part-time security
screeners at airports in addition to full-time employees. The agency is now
hiring screeners to work at airports in Baltimore; Mobile, Ala.; Grand
Rapids, Mich.; Louisville, Ky.; and Spokane, Wash.

The decision to seek part-time employees follows criticism from some
lawmakers upset over the agency's request for money to hire 67,000 employees
instead of the 30,000 originally envisioned.

Transportation Department Inspector General Kenneth Mead suggested last month
that the agency look to hire some part-time workers to staff airport
checkpoints during peak travel times, thus reducing the need to hire more
full-time employees.

On the Net:

Transportation Security Administration: http://www.tsa.dot.gov



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