February 7, 2011
Support Grows for Tiered Risk System at Airports

By SUSAN STELLIN

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/08/business/08security.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print

One reason airport security measures frustrate travelers is that screening 
procedures tend to treat all passengers the same: as potential terrorists.

But in the wake of the furor last fall over pat-downs and body scanners, 
several industry organizations are working on proposals to overhaul security 
checkpoints to provide more or less scrutiny based on the risk profile of each 
traveler.

While the proposals are in the early stages, they represent a growing consensus 
around a concept that has the support of John S. Pistole, the head of the 
Transportation Security Administration: divide travelers into three groups — 
trusted, regular or risky — and  apply different screening techniques based on 
what is known about the passengers.

“Today we have T.S.A. agents looking at TV screens, but they don’t know 
anything about the person going through the system,” said Steve Lott, a 
spokesman for the International Air Transport Association. “The idea is to take 
data that the government and the airlines are already collecting about 
passengers and bring it to the checkpoint.”

A crucial part of the group’s “checkpoint of the future” proposal, and similar 
plans under discussion by other industry organizations, is creating a trusted 
traveler program that would allow passengers to undergo a background check to 
gain access to an expedited security lane at the airport.

These trusted travelers would probably pay a fee for the vetting, much like the 
$100 application fee for the Global Entry program operated by United States 
Customs and Border Protection. After submitting to an interview, a background 
check and a fingerprint scan to join Global Entry, members can clear customs 
using a kiosk instead of waiting to speak with an agent.

“Our security apparatus has already acknowledged that we can create trusted 
traveler programs,” said Geoff Freeman, executive vice president of the U.S. 
Travel Association. “Let’s expand on that.”

The association, a trade group, plans to release its own proposal for ways to 
improve security checkpoints next month, but many of its core concepts overlap 
with ideas presented by the International Air Transport Association at an 
industry conference last year.

Both groups envision three screening lanes with different security procedures 
based on varying levels of risk. Trusted travelers would undergo lighter 
screening, perhaps passing through a metal detector with their shoes on and 
laptops in their bags, whereas anyone flagged as potentially risky would 
receive more intensive scrutiny, using technology like the body scanners and 
interviews with officers trained in behavioral analysis.

Although many of the procedural details are still just proposals, the idea is 
to determine who may present a risk based on better use of government 
intelligence and watch lists as well as suspicious behaviors like checking in 
for a one-way international flight with no luggage.

Travelers in the middle group — neither vetted nor risky — would receive an 
intermediate level of screening, but ideally the process would be quicker than 
current procedures because suspicious passengers would be diverted to a 
separate lane.

Making the screening process more efficient is the major goal of both trade 
associations, based on concerns that as the economy improves and passenger 
traffic increases, security lines will slow down, deterring people from 
traveling. Whether more invasive procedures like pat-downs and body scanners 
are discouraging air travel is open to debate, but there is a growing consensus 
that 10 years after the Transportation Security Administration was created, it 
is time to re-evaluate the agency’s strategy.

In remarks to the American Bar Association in January, Mr. Pistole expressed a 
need to formulate a vision for transportation security, mentioning a trusted 
traveler program as an option under consideration and expressing an openness to 
other suggestions.

“If people have ideas, he wants to hear them because he’s looking at ways to 
make changes,” a T.S.A. spokesman, Nicholas Kimball, said.

In response to concerns about the body scanners, the agency last week 
demonstrated software it was testing at Las Vegas McCarran International 
Airport that allowed the machines to display a generic outline of a human 
figure rather than the graphic images some passengers view as a privacy 
invasion.

The agency has also responded to pilots’ concerns about escalating security 
measures by expediting the screening process for crew members, based on their 
trusted status and the background checks they undergo as a condition of their 
employment. The Air Line Pilots Association is also calling for a more 
risk-based approach to screening, not just for the crew but also for passengers.

There is growing support for this type of approach, even on a global level. The 
International Civil Aviation Organization, a United Nations body that helps 
establish aviation policies for 190 member countries, has convened a working 
group to make recommendations about security screening procedures. A trusted 
traveler program is one idea on the table, said Jim Marriott, head of the 
organization’s aviation security branch.

While there is support for more standardized practices around the world — 
rather than a hodgepodge of rules about liquids and laptops — Mr. Marriott 
cautioned that countries had different security needs, capabilities and 
resources.

“There are also some hard realities that we have to recognize in the security 
world about the protection of personal information and sensitivities to 
individual rights,” he said.

Another issue is the cost of escalating security measures, and how much 
taxpayers and travelers are willing to spend to feel safe in the air.

“We need strong high-level leadership that levels with the public and says, 
‘Look, you cannot expect perfection out of any security system,’ ” said Robert 
Poole, director of transportation policy at the Reason Foundation.

For years, Mr. Poole has advocated for a more risk-based approach to aviation 
security, including some type of trusted traveler program. Now there finally 
seems to be more support to make it happen, he said.

“For the first time since 9/11, I think we have the conditions where it might 
be politically possible to have a serious debate about it,” he said.
_______________________________________________
Infowarrior mailing list
[email protected]
https://attrition.org/mailman/listinfo/infowarrior

Reply via email to