NYTimes.com Article: Safety Rules Are Adjusted at Airports

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Safety Rules Are Adjusted at Airports

March 22, 2003
By EDWARD WONG






American travelers debating whether to fly during the war
with Iraq are asking themselves not only whether airport
security is tight enough, but also whether it is relatively
trouble-free.

The Transportation Security Administration, the federal
agency that took control of airport security after the
attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, is trying to iron out complaints
about security while making sure terrorists do not have
access to commercial jetliners. The agency is introducing
what it calls a "tailored" security system for airports. It
has ranked 429 airports nationwide according to factors
like size, location and, ultimately, the risk of attack.

Then it issues orders to the airports according to those
rankings. Some airports are asked to increase the presence
of law enforcement officers, randomly search moving cars
and conduct patrols with bomb-sniffing dogs. Others do not
have to take such precautions.

"If you've seen one airport, you've seen one airport, and
there's a real need to put in place security enhancements
appropriate to the individual facilities," said Brian
Turmail, a spokesman for the security agency.

The agency employs 33,000 passenger screeners and 23,000
baggage screeners at the 429 airports.

It began bolstering airport security on Monday night after
Tom Ridge, the homeland security secretary, raised the
alert status of the country to orange from yellow. By the
time the United States military launched the first missiles
at Baghdad on Wednesday night, most security measures were
already in place. Now, individual airports are fine-tuning
their procedures.

"I'm not that worried," said Yeung Kwan Chow, a 31-year-old
resident of Canada who was riding a tram through O'Hare
International Airport in Chicago before a flight to visit
his family in Hong Kong. "Once there is a war, they usually
have more security so you feel safer and more comfortable.
I don't think terrorists would choose today to strike."

In February, the last time the country went on orange
alert, the security administration did not allow its
airport directors much leeway and issued uniform
requirements for everyone.

Mr. Turmail declined to give details about the ranking
system because, as he put it, "we don't want someone
watching this on TV and assembling a notebook and gaming
the system."

Steve Van Beek, senior vice president for policy at the
Airports Council International-North America, said the
airports considered at highest risk were the obvious ones.
Mr. Van Beek pointed to those in the New York and
Washington areas, as well as Boston - the takeoff point for
two of the planes in the Sept. 11 attacks - and Los
Angeles, a target of a foiled terrorist plot in 2000.

Mr. Van Beek said his organization, whose membership
includes 167 airport operating authorities, had received
complaints of the costs of security.

"On the cost side, with the security measures, the
elevation of threat level to orange requires a lot of extra
law enforcement officers, both uniformed and nonuniformed,"
he said. "It's costing airports millions of dollars. It's
putting a cost burden on airports at a time when revenues
are going down."

The most visible change since Monday are the random
searches of cars driving through airports. At New Orleans
International Airport, officers with the Jefferson Parish
Sheriff's Department were flagging down vehicles. Most
drivers quietly obeyed, but there were those who found the
searches annoying.

"I have dark windows," said Julie Brady, a 42-year-old
traveler whose car was inspected by an officer before her
flight to New Orleans from Dallas. "What can he know? If I
have this bag, what's in it?"

At Hartsfield Atlanta International, the world's busiest
airport, officials have set up one checkpoint each on
northern and southern access roads. There are signs before
the checkpoints telling drivers to turn around if they do
not want their cars inspected. About 60,000 vehicles use
the roads near the main terminal each day, and the searches
are done by private security screeners and are overseen by
Atlanta police officers, said Lanii Thomas, an airport
spokeswoman.

There are cheaper ways of maintaining vigilance. In the New
Orleans airport, signs tell people to watch out for any
"possible threat or unusual activity." Wilfred Isadore, who
was working at a shoeshine stand near a Southwest Airlines
ticket counter, seemed to be taking that to heart.

"I don't let nobody leave no bags around here," he said as
he scrubbed a businessman's black loafers. "But that's not
nervous, just cautious."

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/03/22/international/worldspecial/22SECU.html?ex=1049350996&ei=1&en=c53adb848930b1e5



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