SFGate: Reports: Airport Security Hasn't Improved

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Saturday, April 16, 2005 (AP)
Reports: Airport Security Hasn't Improved
By LESLIE MILLER, Associated Press Writer


   (04-16) 08:52 PDT WASHINGTON (AP) --

   Security at U.S. airports is no better under federal control than it was
before the Sept. 11 attacks, a key House member says two government
reports will conclude. The Government Accountability Office — the
investigative arm of Congress — and the Homeland Security
Department's inspector general are expected to soon release their findings
on the performance of Transportation Security Administration screeners.

   "A lot of people will be shocked at the billions of dollars we've spent
and the results they're going to see, which confirm previous examinations
of the Soviet-style screening system we've put in place," Rep. John Mica,
R-Fla., told The Associated Press on Friday.

   Mica chairs the House aviation subcommittee and was briefed on the
reports.

   The TSA won't comment on the specifics of the reports until they are
released, spokesman Mark Hatfield Jr. said.

   But, he said: "When the political posturing is over, rational people will
see that American screeners today are the best we have ever had and that
they are limited only by current technology and security procedures that
are significantly influenced by privacy demands."

   Improving the ability of screeners to find dangerous items has been the
goal since the government took over the task at about 450 airports in
early 2002 and hired more than 45,000 workers. Earlier investigations also
showed problems persisting.

   On Jan. 26, Homeland Security's acting inspector general, Richard Skinne=
r,
testified that "the ability of TSA screeners to stop prohibited items from
being carried through the sterile areas of the airports fared no better
than the performance of screeners prior to Sept. 11, 2001."

   Skinner told the Senate Homeland Security Committee that the reasons the
screeners failed undercover audits had to do with training, equipment,
management and policy.

   A year ago, Clark Kent Ervin, then-inspector general of Homeland Securit=
y,
told lawmakers the TSA screeners and privately contracted airport workers
"performed about the same, which is to say, equally poorly."

   When Congress created the TSA it stipulated that privately employed
screeners be used at five airports to serve as a measuring stick for the
federal screeners.

   Screeners are tested by the inspector general's undercover agents, who t=
ry
to smuggle fake weapons and bombs past security checkpoints. Their
performance also is measured by the Threat Image Projection system, which
puts images of threat objects on X-ray screens while the screeners are
working and identifies whether they identify the threats.

   Oregon Rep. Peter DeFazio, the ranking Democrat on Mica's subcommittee,
also was briefed on the two upcoming reports. He said they draw different
conclusions about the relative performance of government screeners and
those who work for private companies.

   "The common finding is that no set of screeners, private nor public, is
performing anywhere near the level I think we need," DeFazio said.

   Screener performance won't be acceptable "until these people have
state-of-the-art technology," he said.

   DeFazio is especially critical of the X-ray machines used to screen
passengers' baggage in most airports. Much better equipment is already
available and in use on Capitol Hill and in the White House, he said.

   The TSA has said the tests used to measure screener performance are much
more rigorous than they were before the Sept. 11 hijackings.

   Before the attacks, the Threat Image Projection system only used images =
of
about 200 items. Now the TSA uses more than 5,000 images, Hatfield said.

   Screeners have been much more aggressive about seizing prohibited items
than their predecessors, the private screeners who worked for companies
employed by airlines. Each month, screeners take from passengers about a
half-million things, including 160,000 knives, 2,000 box cutters and 70
guns.

   ___

   On the Net:

   Transportation Security Administration:

   www.tsa.gov

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Copyright 2005 AP

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