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![TSA security officer Giselle Charles screens an airport worker as he moves from the commercial cargo area of Jacksonville International Airport to the passenger terminal. TSA is using the airport in Jacksonville, Fla., for a trial program to test the feasibility of screening all employees each time they move from the public areas of the airport into secured areas.]()
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TSA security officer Giselle Charles screens an airport
worker as he moves from the commercial cargo area of Jacksonville
International Airport to the passenger terminal. TSA is using the
airport in Jacksonville, Fla., for a trial program to test the
feasibility of screening all employees each time they move from the
public areas of the airport into secured areas.
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CAUSES
FOR ALARM
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Recent arrests of airport workers:
November:
More than 20 temporary workers at Chicago's O'Hare Airport are charged
with getting into secured areas using fraudulent airport ID cards.
October:
Ten workers at New York's Kennedy Airport are charged with smuggling
heroin and cocaine through the airport.
July:
Hiram Rivera Ortiz, a JetBlue worker at Orlando International Airport,
is charged with agreeing to bring six guns to Puerto Rico on a
commercial flight for $4,500. He pleads guilty and is sentenced in
January to 70 months in prison.
March
2007: Thomas Anthony Munoz, a Comair worker at Orlando, carries
14 guns into the passenger cabin of an Orlandoto- Puerto Rico flight.
He pleads guilty in October.
Source: USA TODAY research
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JACKSONVILLE
— Joseph Tyre empties the cellphones and keys from his pockets and
prepares to be searched with a metal detector — for the fourth time
today.
It's 11 a.m. at Jacksonville International Airport, and Tyre
isn't a terrorism suspect. He's an airport maintenance worker. He and other
workers at airports are part of a test ordered by Congress that aims to find
out whether aviation security can be improved by screening employees every
time they enter a restricted zone.
The test could lead to hundreds of thousands of airport workers
facing the same screening as passengers — a prospect that Congress says
could close a security loophole but which opponents call a logistical
nightmare.
"It ain't worth a darn, and it's aggravating for us,"
said Tyre, who was checked by a screener near a luggage carousel in the
airport's ground floor. Tyre, his hands blackened by grime, had been upstairs
trying to fix a squeaky belt at an airline counter and was going to the
secured area to get a grease gun.
In Jacksonville, Transportation Security Administration
screeners are checking 4,300 workers a day, sometimes 10 times a day, before
they go through doors leading to ticket counters, luggage belts and
airplanes. Four of the eight employee checkpoints are near the airport
perimeter to screen people driving onto the airfield.
Three-month test
Even the TSA opposes screening all airport workers — a
point that Administrator Kip Hawley made to Congress last year when lawmakers
were considering 100% employee screening.
"Airports are waiting to see what comes out of this,"
TSA Assistant Administrator John Sammon said.
The problem is that even after screening, airport workers can
get heavy tools, jet fuel and possibly weapons that someone may toss over an
airport fence, Sammon said. A better solution is to train workers to spot
suspicious activity, such as a worker in an area where he shouldn't be or
carrying something odd, Sammon said.
Congress ordered the three-month test last year after a series
of incidents. In March 2007, a Comair baggage handler at Orlando
International Airport was charged with using his airline ID to carry a duffel
bag with 14 guns and 8 pounds of marijuana into the cabin of a Puerto Rico-bound
flight. In July, a JetBlue worker at Orlando was charged after agreeing to
smuggle two machine guns and four handguns onto a flight to Puerto Rico.
In April, the Government Accountability Office, Congress'
investigative arm, said checking airport workers is a top issue in aviation
security.
In all, about 900,000 workers are employed at the nation's 450
airports. As the Jacksonville test is showing, some workers resent being
screened — and resentment can be a problem itself.
"Every time you annoy one of these guys by delaying them
and pointing to them as a bad guy, they are not going to be your eyes and
ears that can help spot something wrong," said aviation-security
consultant Rich Roth.
"There are better ways than 100% physical screening,"
said Charles Chambers, head of security for the Airports Council
International. The council and other aviation trade groups estimate that
screening airport workers nationwide would cost up to $6.5 billion a year,
the same as the TSA's annual budget.
'Unnecessary' or 'workable'?
Some in Jacksonville call the screening unnecessary because
airport workers are checked for terrorist links, criminal records and
immigration violations before receiving ID cards that allow them into secured
areas. The TSA already screens workers at random places and times in secured
airport areas.
In the main terminal at an employee checkpoint behind a
Cinnabon, AirTran customer service representative Tiffany Turner said she's
screened nine or 10 times a day. "It's overrated, unnecessary and too
time consuming," Turner said after taking a couple of minutes to have a
screener run a wand over her and look through her shoulder bag.
Other workers said they're rarely delayed, and one month into
the test are used to being screened. Some like it. "We're in an airport.
We expect our passengers to be screened. Why should we be different?"
airport advertising manager Robin Camputaro said.
That reasoning is "seemingly logical," the TSA's
Sammon said. And the short lines show that employee screening "is workable,"
he added.
The TSA is testing awareness training and additional random
screening at tests in six other airports. The Homeland Security Institute of
Arlington, Va., is being paid $640,000 to evaluate the tests when they end in
July.
Two U.S. airports screen all workers. Miami International began
doing so in the 1990s to combat smuggling problems. Orlando started last year
after the two arrests. "I do think it gives a sense to employees and
passengers of better security," Orlando security director Brigitte
Goersch said.
Jacksonville may continue screening workers after the TSA test
ends. "It's very, very important to security, not just here but
everyplace else," airport spokesman Michael Stewart said. "That is
the weak point where restricted items can move into the secure area."
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