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http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/20011119/ts/bush_93.html

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Bush Signs Aviation Security Bill

By SCOTT LINDLAW, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush (news - web sites) signed legislation Monday
to put the nation's airport baggage screeners on the federal payroll, part of
an effort to enhance airline safety and reassure passengers the skies are
safe 10 weeks after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

``For our airways there is one supreme priority, security,'' Bush said in a
ceremony at Reagan National Airport that coincided with the beginning of the
busy holiday travel season. ``For the first time, airport security will
become a direct federal responsibility.''

The legislation - the subject of political wrangling - was the latest in a
series of steps the government has taken to tighten safety in the skies.
Additional air marshals have been assigned to flights in greater numbers;
airline companies have strengthened cockpit doors and members of the National
Guard now patrol many of the nation's airports.

The measure requires airports to expand inspections of checked baggage, and
explosive detection systems are to be in place by the end of next year. The
Transportation Department may authorize pilots to have weapons in the cockpit
of their planes.

To finance the security improvements, passengers will be charged a $2.50 fee
each time they board a plane for a flight, up to $5 per trip.

Even as Congress voted to strengthen airline security, fewer Americans were
planning to travel by air this Thanksgiving, according to the AAA. The travel
and advocacy group, formerly known as the American Automobile Association,
forecast 4.6 million people traveling by air, a 27 percent decline from last
year's 6.3 million.

Congress began work on the measure not long after the Sept. 11 suicide
hijackings that killed thousands in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania.

Final passage was delayed for weeks, though, in a partisan struggle over the
status of baggage screeners. The Senate voted 100-0 for legislation putting
them on the federal payrolls, but House Republicans opposed to an expansion
of the government work force dug in their heels and won passage of a bill
that would have left them in private companies.

Bush voiced support for the House alternative, but also signaled his
willingness to sign any bill Congress sent him.

The compromise bill he signed requires all 28,000 baggage screeners to become
federal employees, with the exception of five facilities that will take part
in a pilot program testing alternatives. After three years, airports may seek
permission form the government to return to a private system of monitoring.

In his remarks, Bush noted the differences of opinion, but said passage of
the measure was a fresh sign of the nation's unity after the terrorist
attacks.

``Security comes first. The federal government will set high standards. And
we will enforce them,'' he said.

The measure was the fifth bill related to the terrorist attacks that Congress
has passed and the president signed. Others included an explicit
authorization of the use of military force; a bailout of the airline
industry; a $40 billion spending measure; and provisions to strengthen the
hand of federal investigators going after terrorism.

Congress is still working on two other related measures, one to stimulate the
economy and another to fight bioterrorism.

Later Monday, Bush planned to address an Iftaar dinner for Muslims,
traditionally held at the end of daylong fasts through the month of Ramadan,
in the State Dining Room at the White House.

He also was to meet with his Cabinet.

On Sunday, Bush fished with his father, the former president before leaving
his central Texas ranch for Washington.



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