Flying Without a Photo ID

By ANN CARRNS | New York Times – Thu, Oct 11, 2012 2:36 PM EDT
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Getty Images - PORTLAND, OR - MARCH 19: Passengers line up to a Transportation 
Security Administration (TSA) officer to go through airport security at 
Portland International Airport (PDX) March 19, 2012 in …more 
Not only are extra fees for checked bags annoying, but they nearly caused me to 
miss a flight.
Last Friday, while my family gulped down breakfast before leaving for a weekend 
trip, I dealt with a last-minute, work-related technology snafu and went 
through a mental travel check list. Cancel delivery of the newspapers? Yes. 
Stop mail? Yes. All that was left was to check in online and print out the 
boarding passes. I grabbed my wallet to pay the $50 in advance for two checked 
bags to save time at the airport.
We then piled into the minivan, dropped our dog off at the kennel and headed to 
the airport, congratulating ourselves that, for once, we were on schedule.
Our self-satisfaction -- or at least, mine -- evaporated, though, when we 
arrived at the airport, I opened my purse and discovered that my wallet was 
missing. I quickly realized that after using my credit card to pay for the 
checked bags, I had left my wallet on my desk. At home. With my driver's 
license (photo identification) in it.
There wasn't time to go home and get my wallet. I would have missed the flight. 
And my family didn't want to go ahead without me. So we approached an agent at 
the security checkpoint, handed him our boarding passes and explained the 
situation.
He wasn't amused. (Are security agents, ever?) But, after asking my husband and 
children to step aside, he summoned a colleague -- some sort of "no photo 
identification" specialist -- to deal with me.
According to the Transportation Security Administration's Web site, a federal- 
or state-issued photo identification is required to fly. But, the site adds: 
"We understand passengers occasionally arrive at the airport without an ID due 
to lost items or inadvertently leaving them at home. Not having an ID does not 
necessarily mean a passenger won't be allowed to fly. If passengers are willing 
to provide additional information, we have other means of substantiating 
someone's identity, like using publicly available databases."
The special T.S.A. agent had me sign a form, allowing the agency to verify my 
identity. He asked me if I had any other form of identification (I didn't), or 
if my husband had anything in his wallet that had my name on it. (Again, no.) I 
did have a checkbook, bearing checks that had both my name and my husband's, so 
I handed that over for him to examine. Then, he called someone else on his 
phone, and asked me some questions -- things like my previous addresses and my 
date of birth. It reminded me of the online verification process you go through 
when opening a bank account or obtaining your credit report.
Apparently I answered satisfactorily, because the agent was finally given a 
number that he jotted on my boarding pass, before waving me on to be screened. 
The process took about 15 to 20 minutes. I asked if I could have some sort of 
documentation of the screening process for my return flight, but he shook his 
head. "Make sure you get to the airport early," he advised, in case the 
screening process took longer on the trip home. (It didn't. The process was 
much the same, although I was asked slightly different versions of the 
screening questions, and had my hands swabbed before being sent on my way.)
We made our outgoing flight with a few minutes to spare, but the whole process 
was very stressful. I know that it's ultimately my fault that I left my wallet 
behind in the rush to get out of the house. But I can't help but blame the 
airline's extra baggage fees. If I hadn't had to grab my credit card from 
wallet to pay for them, my wallet wouldn't have been out of my purse in the 
first place.
Have you ever flown without your photo identification? What happened?

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