How Not to Fix Airport Security

DEALEY, SAM

How Not to Fix Airport Security Banning curbside check-in isn't going to cut it. BY SAM DEALEY IN THE DAYS following the terrorist attack on New York and Washington last week, an employee of a...

...These included the suspension of curbside check-in, allowing only ticketed passengers in airport gate areas, and prohibiting all knife-like instruSam Dealey is a writer in Washington, D.C...
...Certain groups of people have higher rates of hijacking, and not to regard them more closely is naive and dangerous...
...Precisely what actions onboard employees should take in the event of a hijacking are secret...
...They barely make a living wage, and turnover is very high...
...Yes, unionizing airport security workers...
...Which is not to say the steps so far are wholly inadequate...
...We should feel safer already...
...But, as with the FAA's new guidelines, there are disturbing signs that lawmakers and bureaucrats will simply repackage existing procedures and market them as New and Improved...
...We don't need to make these situations more dangerous than they are," say the flight attendants...
...Other than to say they are designed to be non-confrontational, aviation officials refuse to divulge specific techniques...
...Traditional interest-group politics is alive and well...
...We don't want to give advantages to anybody," says John Mazor, spokesman for the Air Line Pilots Association...
...Aviation folks say these are temporary procedures, but they give a sense of the direction airline officials will be taking in the weeks and months ahead as new policies are crafted...
...We feel the weakest link is security workers at the airports," says the flight attendants' union spokeswoman...
...So far the likely effect seems to be longer waiting lines, increased flight delays, and the banning of knives at airport restaurants—it's forks and spoons only, now...
...As Mica recalls, the guidelines include a mixture of reverse-Helsinki Syndrome psychology—"Try to befriend the hijacker"— and Cold War phantasm—"When you land in Havana, try to notify the Swiss Embassy...
...Nonetheless, the big players seem to think these are all reasonable ideas...
...No, no...
...Why would you say that...
...Next-generation planes will likely have thicker and more armored bulkheads, to protect the flight cabin more thoroughly...
...But if their actions in the immediate aftermath are any indication of what's to come, the copycats Americans should be most worried about are the ones crafting new airport security measures...
...There's always going to be kooks and copycats...
...That's a non-starter," says the Pilots' Association...
...But whether the initiative will have a fighting chance in Washington is doubtful: The unions are staunchly against it...
...The problem, in a nutshell, is that the sort of solution that would have a chance of foiling an attack like last Tuesday's would involve not just changing a procedure here and there, but altering a mindset—the sense of complacency that says safety and security can be left to trained government officials—and confronting two political taboos, profiling and guns...
...Last Wednesday, Transportation secretary Norman Mineta issued a handful of emergency procedures in response to the terrorist hijackings...
...What's more, the procedures still don't work...
...I'm not sure they're matched up that well...
...That a corkscrew has now been deemed a weapon gives one a sense of the impossibility of this approach...
...But a spokeswoman for the Association of Flight Attendants admits, "From the information we have, it doesn't seem that these new security procedures would have been able to stop these terrorist acts from happening...
...And what's wrong with profiling passengers...
...Last Thursday three Northwest Airlines employees deliberately walked through security at the Phoenix airport with a pocketknife and a corkscrew...
...After all, if a corkscrew is a weapon, then conceivably one could hijack a plane with a fork...
...After day-long meetings with FAA officials last Wednesday regarding Mineta's measures, the pilots' union "came to the conclusion that, as short-term solutions go, these were sufficient...
...You're going to see a great debate on this regarding our freedoms and our safeguards...
...BY SAM DEALEY IN THE DAYS following the terrorist attack on New York and Washington last week, an employee of a major U.s...
...A sensible approach, for example, might include permitting pilots to carry sidearms...
...Given that two of the hijackers bought tickets under names that were on FBI "watch lists," a combining of law enforcement and some intelligence databases seems probable...
...And that's not reassuring...
...Armed "sky marshals" have already been placed on some flights, and a number of legislators are agitating to make this practice widespread, if not permanent...
...They 'may have been a bit hasty...
...airline read to Florida congressman John Mica the procedures his carrier instructs its pilots to adopt in the event of a hijacking...
...No question about it," says Porter Goss, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee...
...The chairman of the House aviation subcommittee calls them "outdated," but he's being diplomatic...
...The first response to the crisis by federal aviation players was a double dose of the medicine that didn't work...
...Meanwhile, an FAA spokesman reacts with hostility to the idea that the new guidelines may be half-baked...
...ments with blades under four inches long...
...At least give our people a fighting chance...
...he mocks...
...I very much favor it," says Mica...

Vol. 7 • September 2001 • No. 2


 
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