U.S. airport security improves since
screening lapses: DHS
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[June 08, 2016]
(Reuters) - The Transportation
Security Administration (TSA) is working to improve airport screening
after major lapses last year, a U.S. government investigator said on
Tuesday, adding that the agency has embraced oversight.
"As a result of our audit reports ... TSA is now, for the first
time in memory, critically assessing its deficiencies in an honest
and objective light," said John Roth, inspector general of the U.S.
Department of Homeland Security, the TSA's parent agency. "We are
generally satisfied with the response we have seen at TSA."
"We went from a cultural situation where we were fought at every
turn to one in which they now embrace oversight in a way that I
think is ... positive," he added, in testimony before a U.S. Senate
committee.
In a covert audit, department staff had succeeded in bringing banned
items through airport checkpoints and raised concerns about the
TSA's vetting of its workforce.
The TSA has since cut back on directing travelers into faster lanes
that let them keep shoes on and laptops packed. That change along
with low staffing levels and more flyers had sparked long lines this
spring.
Roth, in testimony before the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland
Security & Governmental Affairs, said the TSA has come up with
nearly two dozen ways to improve procedures. His office will
continue checks on TSA this summer.
"Over the past 11 months, we have undertaken a systematic and
deliberate transformation of TSA," Administrator Peter Neffenger,
who took the TSA's top job after the lapses, said at the hearing.
Neffenger said the TSA has retrained staff and is vetting employees
daily.
To address long security lines this summer, the U.S House of
Representatives passed a bill on Tuesday that would give local
airport, airline and TSA officials more say on staffing if enacted
into law, and would require more transparency about staffing
decisions made nationally.
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Travelers stand in line to go through Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) check-points at Los Angeles International
Airport in Los Angeles, U.S., May 31, 2016. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
Neffenger also said in his testimony that TSA is working with about
a dozen airports to increasingly automate screening and create a
"true curb-to-gate security environment, as opposed to just focusing
it all around that checkpoint."
Delta Air Lines Inc <DAL.N> and Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta
International Airport, the world's busiest, opened two lines last
month that automate the distribution of bins for carry-on bags at
checkpoints, to avoid screening bottlenecks.
Neffenger said the lanes have improved efficiency at the checkpoints
by 30 percent.
(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in New York and Julia Edwards in
Washington; editing by Jeffrey Benkoe and David Gregorio)
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