Search This Blog

Showing posts with label TSA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TSA. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

T.S.A. Is Considering Automating ID Checks

Excerpt from an article in

The New York Times
Tuesday, March 20, 2012

T.S.A. Is Considering Automating ID Checks

By SUSAN STELLIN The Transportation Security Administration has spent a lot of money on technology to keep dangerous items off planes — with mixed results — but has been slower to address another risk: travelers who are using a fake boarding pass or identification.

Despite announcing plans last fall to test machines that can electronically verify passengers’ documents, the agency still relies on its agents to visually inspect boarding passes and IDs, and confirm that each traveler matches the photo on a driver’s license or passport. At a busy airport, one employee may check several hundred documents an hour.

The repetitiveness of that task has left plenty of room for human error, as Michael Krug and his colleague discovered when they were on a Delta flight in February and realized they each had a boarding pass for seat 12C, both printed with Mr. Krug’s name.

“The person at security didn’t notice that my co-worker’s boarding pass had my name on it and he had an ID with his name,” Mr. Krug said.

The two men checked in as part of a group and figured that the agent must have handed them two copies of the same boarding pass, a mistake that was overlooked at the security line and then again at the gate. That triple error may be rare, but it highlights a security flaw that has been publicized many times.

Last year, for instance, a Nigerian man managed to fly free from New York to Los Angeles with an expired boarding pass in someone else’s name, but was arrested a few days later at Los Angeles International Airport when he tried to fly to Atlanta using another expired pass.

Travelers, security specialists and the news media have reported many other instances when T.S.A. agents failed to notice a fake or expired boarding pass or improper identification, a vulnerability that has been a concern since it was discovered that many of the 9/11 hijackers had obtained fraudulent IDs.

With the advent of online check-in, it became easy to digitally alter a real boarding pass with a different name or new travel date and print a copy that would get through security. There have even been Web sites that generated a fake boarding pass or provided instructions on how to make one at home.

The T.S.A. said it was working to address this problem as part of its shift toward a more risk-based approach to screening passengers, which gives higher scrutiny to travelers the government knows less about.

In October, the agency announced that it was spending $3.2 million to buy 30 document authentication systems from three vendors, which it planned to test in airports in early 2012. Those tests are now expected at select airports “in the coming months,” said Greg Soule, an agency spokesman.

“The technology is designed to read security features embedded in both the boarding pass and ID to verify their authenticity and ensure the names match,” Mr. Soule said in an e-mail.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Expansion of Passenger Pre-screening

From the Dept. of Homeland Security:


TSA Pre✓™ Pilot to Expand to Busiest US Airports

Release Date: February 8, 2012
For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
Contact: 202-282-8010

WASHINGTON – Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano and Transportation Security Administration (TSA) Administrator John S. Pistole today announced the expansion of TSA Pre√™, a passenger pre-screening initiative, to additional airports across the country following the program’s success at seven pilot locations.

With more than 336,000 passengers screened to date through TSA Preê lanes, this screening concept enhances security by enabling TSA to focus its efforts on passengers the agency knows less about while providing expedited screening for travelers who volunteer information about themselves prior to flying.

“TSA Pre√™ moves us closer to our goal of delivering the most effective and efficient screening by recognizing that most passengers do not pose a threat to security,” said TSA Administrator John S. Pistole. “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.”

TSA Preê is currently operating with American Airlines at airports in Dallas, Miami, Las Vegas, Minneapolis and Los Angeles, and with Delta Air Lines at airports in Atlanta, Detroit, Las Vegas, and Minneapolis. US Airways, United Airlines and Alaska Airlines are all opting in new passengers and will begin operations later this year.

As part of the initiative’s expansion, TSA Pre√™ will be implemented at the following airport locations throughout 2012:
  • Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI)
  • Boston Logan International Airport (BOS)
  • Charlotte Douglas International Airport (CLT)
  • Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport (CVG)
  • Denver International Airport (DEN)
  • Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL)
  • George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH)
  • Honolulu International Airport (HNL)
  • Indianapolis International Airport (IND)
  • John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK)
  • LaGuardia Airport (LGA)
  • Lambert-St. Louis International Airport (STL)
  • Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport (MSY)
  • Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport (SJU)
  • Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR)
  • O’Hare International Airport (ORD)
  • Orlando International Airport (MCO)
  • Philadelphia International Airport (PHL)
  • Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport (PHX)
  • Pittsburgh International Airport (PIT)
  • Portland International Airport (PDX)
  • Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA)
  • Salt Lake City International Airport (SLC)
  • San Francisco International Airport (SFO)
  • Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA)
  • Tampa International Airport (TPA)
  • Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport (ANC)
  • Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD)
TSA will continue expanding TSA Preê to additional airlines and airports once they are operationally ready.

Eligible participants include certain frequent flyers from participating airlines as well as members of Customs and Border Protection’s (CBP) Trusted Traveler programs (Global Entry, SENTRI, and NEXUS) who are U.S. citizens and fly on a participating airline. Individuals interested in participating in the pilot can apply via Global Entry at http://www.globalentry.gov/.

If TSA determines a passenger is eligible for expedited screening following the TSA Pre√™ vetting process, information will be embedded in the barcode of the passenger’s boarding pass. TSA will read the barcode at the security checkpoint and then may refer the passenger to a TSA Pre√™ lane, where they will undergo expedited screening, which could include no longer removing the following items:
  • Shoes
  • 3-1-1 compliant bag from carry-on
  • Laptop from bag
  • Light outerwear/jacket
  • Belt
TSA will always incorporate random and unpredictable security measures throughout the airport and no individual will be guaranteed expedited screening. As part of the agency’s risk-based security initiative, TSA is currently testing several other screening initiatives, including initiatives designed to provide positive ID verification for airline pilots and the use of expanded behavior detection techniques.

For more information about TSA’s risk-based security initiatives, visit www.tsa.gov.

###