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Chaffetz won a 310-118 vote on the House floor last year to cut off funding for the machines but the administration and the Senate refused to go along. The likelihood of a similar outcome this year may have reinforced the decision to withhold the funds. But advocates of the full body technology say that the alternative to the machines are even more intrusive pat downs
-- such as recent high-profile incidents in which a baby was patted down at the Kansas City airport and a 6-year-old was upset after being frisked at the New Orleans airport. They say people far prefer the full body screenings than a hand-on pat down. "Now they will have to hand search more people. More hand search means a lot more expense than using the technology," said Peter Kant, Executive Vice President of Rapiscan Systems, one of the two companies that makes the machines. "Ninety-five-plus percent of people would rather be scanned than go through a pat down." Kant was referring to a CBS News poll last year that also showed 81 percent of respondents support the full body scanners despite a concerted campaign by opponents. The government has already spent about $1 billion on the machines. That big an investment ensures they probably aren't going anywhere. And the machines have powerful advocates like Sen. Thad Cochran of Mississippi, the top Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee. A Rapiscan plant in his state employs 20 people manufacturing the machines. "The whole-body-imaging machines have something that (bomb-sniffing) dogs don't have," Chaffetz said. "Lobbyists."
[Associated
Press;
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