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Reports: Airport Screeners Still Do Poorly
AP ^ | 4/15/5 | LESLIE MILLER

Posted on 04/15/2005 7:35:27 PM PDT by SmithL

WASHINGTON - Two upcoming government reports will say the quality of screening at airports is no better now than before the Sept. 11 attacks, according to a House member who has been briefed on the contents.

The Government Accountability Office — the investigative arm of Congress — and the Homeland Security Department's inspector general are expected to soon release their findings on the performance of Transportation Security Administration screeners.

"A lot of people will be shocked at the billions of dollars we've spent and the results they're going to see, which confirm previous examinations of the Soviet-style screening system we've put in place," Rep. John Mica (news, bio, voting record), R-Fla., told The Associated Press on Friday.

Mica chairs the House aviation subcommittee and was briefed on the reports.

The TSA won't comment on the specifics of the reports until they are released, said spokesman Mark Hatfield Jr.

"When the political posturing is over, rational people will see that American screeners today are the best we have ever had and that they are limited only by current technology and security procedures that are significantly influenced by privacy demands," Hatfield said.

Improving the ability of screeners to find dangerous items has been the goal since the government took over the task at about 450 airports in early 2002 and hired more than 45,000 workers. But earlier investigations showed problems persist.

On Jan. 26, Homeland Security's acting inspector general, Richard Skinner, testified that "the ability of TSA screeners to stop prohibited items from being carried through the sterile areas of the airports fared no better than the performance of screeners prior to Sept. 11, 2001."

Skinner told the Senate Homeland Security Committee that the reasons the screeners failed undercover audits had to do with training, equipment, management and policy.

A year ago, Clark Kent Ervin, then-inspector general of Homeland Security, told lawmakers the TSA screeners and privately contracted airport workers "performed about the same, which is to say, equally poorly."

When Congress created the TSA it stipulated that privately employed screeners be used at five airports to serve as a measuring stick for the federal screeners.

Screeners are tested by the inspector general's undercover agents, who try to smuggle fake weapons and bombs past security checkpoints. Their performance also is measured by the Threat Image Projection system, which puts images of threat objects on X-ray screens while the screeners are working and identifies whether they identify the threats.

Oregon Rep. Peter DeFazio (news, bio, voting record), the ranking Democrat on Mica's subcommittee, also was briefed on the two upcoming reports. He said they draw different conclusions about the relative performance of government screeners and those who work for private companies.

"The common finding is that no set of screeners, private nor public, is performing anywhere near the level I think we need," DeFazio said.

Screener performance won't be acceptable "until these people have state-of-the-art technology," he said.

DeFazio is especially critical of the X-ray machines used to screen passengers' baggage in most airports. Much better equipment is already available and in use on Capitol Hill and in the White House, he said.

The TSA, which did not immediately return telephone calls seeking comment, has said in the past that the tests used to measure screener performance are much more rigorous than they were before the Sept. 11 hijackings.

Before the attacks, the Threat Image Projection system only used images of about 200 items. Now the TSA uses more than 5,000 images, Hatfield said.

Screeners have been much more aggressive about seizing prohibited items than their predecessors, the private screeners who worked for companies employed by airlines. Each month, screeners take from passengers about a half-million things, including 160,000 knives, 2,000 box cutters and 70 guns.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: airlinesecurity; airportscreeners; tsa
Your tax dollars at work
1 posted on 04/15/2005 7:35:28 PM PDT by SmithL
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You know, I wonder how much of the problem has to do with political correctness and other such nonsense. I'm guessing that it is a LOT of the problem.


2 posted on 04/15/2005 7:42:12 PM PDT by OldArmy94
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To: SmithL

As another FReeper recently posted, "TSA = Thousands Standing Around".


3 posted on 04/15/2005 7:43:49 PM PDT by Texas_Jarhead (To hell with Mexico, its policies, and its leaders)
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To: OldArmy94

I'm guessing that you're right.


4 posted on 04/15/2005 7:51:50 PM PDT by SmithL (Proud Submariner)
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To: SmithL
As long as we act under the assumption that it's items that are dangerous and not terrorists, a "Soviet-style" screening system is inevitable, and trying to make it more thorough can only result in it reaching new levels of Stalinism.
5 posted on 04/15/2005 7:59:48 PM PDT by Uncle Fud
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To: SmithL
Screener performance won't be acceptable "until these people have state-of-the-art technology," he said.

Bull. Two months ago I took a business trip and flew from SFO to DFW and back. When I parked my car in SFO, I tossed my keys into the side pouch for my carry-on, and didn't pull them back out until I got back six days later. It was at THAT point that I realized I'd forgotten to remove my bottle opener...with it's 1.5" knife blade...from my keychain. I carried a weapon through TSA security TWICE without these dimwits finding it.

That's probably a good thing for me, but it sure shocked the hell out of me when I got back to my car in SFO. Up until that point, I had been feeling pretty good about the new security.

They didn't need any new technology to find that knife, it was an all metal tool in a readily accessible and uncovered side pocket. All they had to do was look at the screen on the XRay machine.
6 posted on 04/15/2005 8:07:37 PM PDT by Arthalion
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To: OldArmy94
The Terrorists have already one this round. American Government is using tax payer dollars (that would be your$ and mine) trying to close the door after the horse escaped. Terrorists will wait till they have an ample opportunity and then strike, like the true gutless wonders that they are.

Till America (and the whole world for that matter) wakes up and smells the coffee about terrorism, it will continue to expand around the globe.

The PC scream for Lt. Pantano to be crusified( should be given a medal and advancement for leadership skills). Meanwhile, a POS - Hasan Akbaris up for a courts martial (should have been shot in the head till dead in the field)

As long as we have politicians who follow along in the flock, and fail to stand up for principles, America will continue to go down the drain.
7 posted on 04/15/2005 8:08:05 PM PDT by Issaquahking (.)
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To: SmithL

Personally, I think the chances of a repeat of 9/11 where hijacked airliners are used as missles is about nil. When the passengers in the 4th hijacked airplane learned via cell phones what had happened to the first 3 airplanes, the took over the plane and it crashed. I think the same thing would happen again if a hijack was attempted. If another large scale terrorist attack was to take place in the US it would be in some other form.


8 posted on 04/16/2005 7:07:19 AM PDT by ops33 (Retired USAF Senior Master Sergeant)
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