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"TSA Dragnet Aims to Block Potential Threats"
Thursday, March 29, 2007
TSA Dragnet Aims to Block Potential Threats
By Dan Schlossberg
ConsumerAffairs.Com
Like Eliot Ness and the Untouchables, squads of special security agents are
fanning out across the country in an effort to stop potential security
threats posed by airport and airline employees.
The Transportation Security Administration's dragnet follows the arrest in
San Juan of a Florida-based worker who allegedly smuggled drugs and guns
onto a Comair flight.
More than 800,000 airline and airport employees have had unrestricted access
to planes -- even though the nationwide alert system for aviation has been
stuck on orange, or high, since British authorities broke up a plot last
August to bomb planes bound for the U.S.
Because of recent problems in the region, the TSA targeted Florida and
Puerto Rico airports first, sending out 160 special officers to screen the
screeners, as well as others with previously-free access. The list includes
mechanics, baggage handlers, and fuel workers, among others.
Although all airport and airline employees must submit to TSA background
checks, random screening of such workers started only last year -- five
years after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
Such employees need electronic photo ID cards to enter secured areas but
have not been required to submit to regular screening. That void is about to
close.
In fact, Congress will soon consider a bill that requires the TSA to conduct
a six-month test of total screening for employees at five selected airports.
Passage is probable, since the absence of screening for workers is a
bipartisan issue with strong Congressional support.
Under the TSA's latest action, squads of security officers -- including air
marshals, screeners, and special inspectors -- will hone in on particular
airports and spend days examining security procedures, screening workers,
and even examining passenger cabins of parked planes.
Their presence is expected to have a deterrent effect on potential problems.
Critics of the new plan contend that checking employees as well as
passengers will clog screening lines and create massive delays. But the TSA
insists that screening of airline and airport workers will be conducted
separately and apart from the passenger security areas.
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