WASHINGTON -- A new passenger screening program to make check-in more
convenient for certain travelers is being expanded to 28 more major
U.S. airports, the government said Wednesday. There will be no cost to
eligible passengers, who would no longer have to remove their shoes and
belts before they board flights.
The airports include the three used by hijackers to launch the terror
attacks in September 2001: Washington Dulles International Airport,
Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey and Boston's Logan
International Airport.
The Transportation Security Administration's program,
already in a test phase in seven other airports, is the Obama
administration's first attempt at a passenger screening program
responsive to frequent complaints that the government is not using
common sense when it screens all passengers at airports in the same way.
Under the new program, eligible travelers have the option to volunteer
more personal information about themselves so that the government can
vet them for security purposes before they arrive at airport
checkpoints.
"Good, thoughtful, sensible security by its very nature facilitates
lawful travel and legitimate commerce," Homeland Security Secretary
Janet Napolitano said.
The program works this way: Participating travelers will walk through
a dedicated lane at airport security checkpoints. They will provide the
TSA officer with a specially marked boarding pass. A machine will read
the barcode, and travelers deemed "low-risk," will likely be allowed to
keep on belts, shoes and jackets and leave laptops and liquids in bags
when being screened.
Not everyone is eligible to participate in the program, which is
already being tested at airports in Atlanta, Dallas, Detroit, Miami, Las
Vegas, Los Angeles and Minneapolis-St. Paul. Eligible travelers are
some of those who participate in American and Delta airlines' frequent
flier programs, as well as travelers in three other trusted traveler
programs, which do charge fees to participate. About 336,000 passengers
have been screened through the program since the testing began last
year, according to the Transportation Security Administration.
By the end of 2012, the government expects select passengers in
frequent flier programs for US Airways, United and Alaska Airlines to be
eligible to participate. The program is expected to be operating in
Reagan National Airport near Washington, Salt Lake City International
Airport, John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York and Chicago's
O'Hare International Airport by the end of March.
"We are pleased to expand this important effort, in collaboration
with our airline and airport partners, as we move away from a
one-size-fits-all approach to a more intelligence-driven, risk-based
transportation security system," said TSA chief John Pistole.
Pistole has said he hopes to eventually test the program at all
airports and with all airlines around the country, but that might take
years.
The
program is expected to be operating in these airports by the end of
2012: Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport,
Charlotte Douglas International Airport, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky
International Airport, Denver International Airport, Fort
Lauderdale-Hollywood International
Airport, Houston's George Bush
Intercontinental Airport, Honolulu International Airport, New York's
LaGuardia Airport, Lambert-St. Louis International Airport, Louis
Armstrong New Orleans International Airport, Puerto Rico's Luis Munoz
Marin International Airport, Orlando International Airport,
Philadelphia
International Airport, Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport,
Pittsburgh International Airport, Oregon's Portland International
Airport, San Francisco International Airport, Seattle-Tacoma
International Airport, Florida's Tampa International Airport and
Alaska's Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport.
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