SF Gate: Random checks should be phased out at airports, TSA director says

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This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SF Gate.
The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
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Tuesday, September 24, 2002 (AP)
Random checks should be phased out at airports, TSA director says
LESLIE MILLER, Associated Press Writer


   (09-24) 00:14 PDT WASHINGTON (AP) --
   Random security screening of people about to board planes could be phased
out next year as Transportation Security Administration chief James Loy
tries to make air travel less burdensome.
   As better-paid, better-trained federal workers take over at airport
security checkpoints, there is less need for an additional layer of
security at the gate, TSA officials say. The deadline for all commercial
airports to have federal screeners is Nov. 19.
   Once all the federal screeners are in place, Loy wants to start phasing
out the random searches on an airport-by-airport basis, TSA spokesman
Robert Johnson said Monday.
   Paul Hudson, executive director of the advocacy group Aviation Consumer
Action Project, said he's alarmed by what Loy is proposing.
   "The best security involves multiple layers, where you have backups and
backups to backups," Hudson said. If the random gate screening is
eliminated, "you're saying there's only one check and that's at the main
security gate."
   A spokesman for the Air Transport Association, which represents major
airlines, said the random checks are unnecessary.
   "Random gate screening doesn't really add any additional measure of
security," Michael Wascom said via cell phone from Tampa International
Airport, where he was about to be screened at the gate. He said more
sophisticated passenger and baggage screening makes random gate screening
unnecessary.
   Loy, who became head of the TSA after his predecessor was accused of
ignoring passenger convenience, said he wants to balance security with
customer service. He has already gotten rid of the requirement that
passengers be asked questions about whether they have kept a close eye on
their baggage. He has also decided to allow passengers to carry drinks
through security checkpoints. He calls the random gate screenings "hassle
checks."
   The TSA won't say how passengers are singled out for the random checks,
citing security concerns. Hudson, a member of the Federal Aviation
Administration's Aviation Security Advisory Committee, said 5 percent to
10 percent of an aircraft's passengers are screened through profiling and
random checks.

On the Net:
   Transportation Security Administration: www.tsa.dot.gov

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Copyright 2002 AP

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