Thousands miss flights because of airport
screening: American Airlines executive
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[May 27, 2016]
By Jeffrey Dastin
(Reuters) - More than 70,000 American
Airlines <AAL.O> customers have missed their flights this year and
40,000 checked bags failed to be loaded on scheduled flights because of
airport screening delays, an executive for the airline told a U.S.
congressional panel on Thursday.
A shortage of staff and a surge in air travelers have created a
nightmare scenario for the U.S. Transportation Security
Administration (TSA), with airport wait times in places like Chicago
having stretched beyond two hours.
Those 70,000 customers account for just a fraction of the 63 million
trips on scheduled flights of American, the world's largest airline,
through April, but the number of missed trips is likely greater when
including large U.S. rivals Delta <DAL.N>, United <UAL.N> and
Southwest <LUV.N>.
TSA said on Wednesday that while it is taking steps to shorten lines
such as hiring more full-time officers, it lacks the staffing to
handle peak travel times this summer.
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson, who oversees
the TSA, said he asked Congress on Thursday for another $28 million
to boost staffing at the 20 busiest U.S. airports.
But extra travelers and fuller planes will make it harder for
airlines to find empty seats to accommodate customers who miss their
flights.
"To say customers are agitated is putting it mildly," Kerry
Philipovitch, American Airlines senior vice president for customer
experience, told a subcommittee of the House of Representatives
Homeland Security Committee.
American wants the TSA to create a senior internal role focused on
traveler concerns, Philipovitch said.
The request comes days after TSA Administrator Peter Neffenger shook
up TSA's management, removing the head of security operations, Kelly
Hoggan.
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Passengers make their way in a security checkpoint at the
International JFK airport in New York October 11, 2014.
REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
The TSA has projected it will screen 740 million people at U.S.
airports this year, some 15 percent more than in 2013 despite a 12
percent cut in its staff.
Philipovitch also recommended that TSA consider reinstating
risk-based screening programs like one it canceled last year because
of high-profile lapses.
In the program, officers trained to detect irregular behavior pulled
unsuspicious travelers randomly into "PreCheck" lanes that can
process people faster, as they do not remove their shoes and other
belongings.
Addressing concern raised by small airports, the Homeland Security
Committee introduced a bill Thursday to let local TSA make staffing
decisions, rather than wait for higher-up approval before adding or
rearranging lines.
(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in New York; Editing by Alistair Bell
and Leslie Adler)
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