Re: LAS security

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YVR's had these for over a year already. No biggie.

Have an interline/code-share e-ticket and they barf your frequent flier
or VISA card back in your hand and tell you to go away.

But they do work.

Matthew

On Tuesday, May 20, 2003, at 02:17  PM, lafrance@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote:

> I thought the TSA mandates that only tickets pax can pass thru
> security. How can they pass without in LAS as the article says?
>
>
>
>
> Las Vegas airport tries souped-up check-in kiosks
> By Ben Mutzabaugh, USA TODAY
> The Las Vegas airport is set to unveil a new type of self-service
> kiosk that some industry insiders say will do for airport lines what
> ATMs did for the bank teller queues — shorten them.
> The machines making their debut next month will be the first at any
> airport in the world to issue passenger boarding passes for multiple
> airlines, industry officials say. Many airlines now use similar
> kiosks, but they're only equipped to handle that airline's customers.
> (More stories: Travel front page)
>
> Las Vegas' SpeedCheck machines initially will be accessible to America
> West, Continental and Delta passengers. Up to a dozen airlines could
> be online by summer's end, including Southwest, the airport's largest
> carrier. Eventually, McCarran International will have as many as 42
> kiosks accessible to passengers on all 28 airlines there, officials
> say.
>
> Other airports are expected to roll out similar kiosks, says Colin
> Temple, manager of airport services for the International Air
> Transport Association (IATA), the global airline trade group.
>
> IATA is helping to develop a standard operating platform for the
> common-use kiosks, which Temple says will let other airports easily
> adopt the system.
>
> But for Las Vegas, SpeedCheck's advantages hit closer to home.
>
> The Transportation Security Administration will soon require Las Vegas
> travelers to obtain their boarding passes before passing through
> security, a mandate already in place at many airports.
>
> That threatens to put a huge strain on McCarran, which has one of the
> highest volumes of travelers flying directly to or from the airport
> because of Las Vegas' popularity as a day-trip destination.
>
> Requiring all of those passengers to have boarding passes in hand
> would likely create huge lines at both ticket counters and individual
> airline kiosks. That's a problem airport officials hope the
> multi-airline kiosks can help them avoid.
>
> SpeedCheck kiosks will be installed in traditional check-in areas and
> clustered at locations throughout the airport — such as the
> parking garage — which will eliminate bottlenecks and increase
> the check-in capacity of the airport.
>
> Even the city's convention center is expected to get SpeedCheck
> kiosks, allowing business travelers to have their boarding passes in
> hand even before hailing a cab to the airport.
>
> Unlike the airline-owned kiosks, the SpeedCheck system will be set up
> and maintained almost exclusively by McCarran airport. That helps
> minimize costs for airlines already struggling financially.
>
> Even with the maintenance costs, the kiosks could save the airport
> tens of millions of dollars by avoiding the need to expand ticketing
> areas, says McCarran official Samuel Ingalls, who's been working on
> the project.
>
> "Those savings extend to the airlines as well because, in the process,
> we're lowering their cost of doing business here," he says.
>
>
> Roger
> EWROPS
>

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