'Inexcusable' delay on TSA body-scanner safety reports
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By Alison Young, USA TODAY

http://www.usatoday.com/travel/flights/2011-02-09-tsa09_ST_N.htm

The Transportation Security Administration has told members of Congress that 
more than 15 million passengers received full-body scans at airports without 
any malfunctions that put travelers at risk of an excessive radiation dose.
Despite the reassurance, however, the TSA has yet to release radiation 
inspection reports for its X-ray equipment — two months after lawmakers called 
for them to be made public following USA TODAY's requests to review the reports.

TSA spokesman Kristin Lee says that the agency is still trying to ensure that 
the reports don't contain any "sensitive security or privacy-protected 
information" and that she expects they will be released "within the next few 
weeks."

TSA: Agency unveils 'generic' body scans
The chairman of a House oversight committee on homeland defense calls the 
delays "inexcusable."

"The public has a right to know, and there isn't something so sensitive that 
requires holding it back," said Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah. Chaffetz has 
sponsored legislation to limit the use of full-body scans.

The TSA's increased use of full-body X-ray scanners sparked traveler concerns 
last fall about radiation safety. The TSA says the radiation dose is tiny — 
equivalent to what a person receives during two minutes inside an airplane at 
cruising altitude.

Fueling concerns about the potential for scanner malfunctions and the TSA's 
ability to identify problems: a 2008 report by the Centers for Disease Control 
and Prevention that found the TSA and its contractors had failed in the past to 
detect when some baggage X-ray machines were emitting excessive levels of 
radiation or had safety features that were missing or disabled. The TSA says 
that it has made improvements since then and that all of its X-ray scanners — 
for people and luggage — have passed recent inspections by contractors. The 
agency in January asked the CDC to repeat its luggage X-ray study "to confirm 
the progress TSA has made," Lee says.

The Department of Homeland Security's inspector general is investigating the 
adequacy of the TSA's X-ray inspection program at the request of Rep. Ed 
Markey, D-Mass., Markey spokeswoman Giselle Barry says. TSA Administrator John 
Pistole told Markey in a January letter that there have been no full-body 
scanner malfunctions that resulted in "an actual or potential additional 
radiation exposure."

The agency has more than 400 full-body scanners at airports. About half use 
X-rays. The others use electromagnetic waves. The TSA, in a recent letter 
responding to questions by Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., didn't say how many of 
the 15 million passengers went through each type of machine. The passengers 
were screened between Oct. 1, 2009, and Sept. 30, 2010.

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