The TSA as We Know it is Dead - Here's Why

If you don't believe the TSA is doomed after watching yesterday's House Aviation Subcommittee hearing, then you'll have to at least agree that the agency as we know can't continue to exist as it does.

For starters, TSA Administrator John Pistole refused to testify before the committee on the innocuous subject of "common sense" improvements to America's airport security, reportedly because the committee has no jurisdiction over his agency. (That's odd - I always thought Congress funded the federal government, but maybe I wasn't paying attention during government class.)

One by one, panelists took turns excoriating the agency charged with protecting America's transportation systems. It was plainly clear why Pistole was a no-show, and it had nothing to do with jurisdiction; it would have been an openly hostile crowd.

Charles Edwards, the Department of Homeland Security's acting inspector general, described the TSA as bureaucratic and dysfunctional. Stephen Lord of the Government Accountability Office, suggested the agency was ignoring the thousands of complaints from air travelers. And Kenneth Dunlap, who represented the International Air Transport Association, criticized the current TSA as expensive, inconsistent, and reactive.

"As this mushrooming agency has spun out of control," the committee chairman, John Mica, concluded, "passengers have not been well served."

The congressmen present in the hearing agreed with many of the criticisms, but it's the solutions that would have sent Pistole running for the exits. On the conservative end, critics recommended aggressively reforming the TSA to create a smaller, more responsive agency that fulfills its mission of protecting and serving air travelers.

But some went much further. Charlie Leocha of the Consumer Travel Alliance, who represented the interests of air travelers on the committee, said the TSA should not just be downsized, but also limited to protecting only air travel (something it currently isn't).

In his testimony, he described a future TSA that more closely resembled the pre-9/11 security system, which used magnetometers (metal detectors) as its primary screening method, had employees that dressed in non-threatening uniforms, and banned only the most dangerous weapons, such as guns and explosives, from aircraft.

The real security work would take place behind the scenes, prescreening every passenger with the help of technology and through coordination between intelligence agencies, law enforcement, and airlines.

"The mass screening of passengers would be replaced for the great majority of passengers
with a Trusted Traveler program that seamlessly checks passengers before they fly, while at the same time being respectful of their privacy," says Leocha. “Every passenger is already prescreened for every flight.”

Such an agency would be called the TSA in name only. In fact, it would be better named the Airport Security Administration, although that acronym might be problematic.

With a powerful congressional committee like this lining up behind sweeping TSA reform, it is not a question of if, but when Congress -- which by the way, does sign the TSA's checks -- acts to dismantle this $8-billion-a-year security boondoggle.

I'm not just saying that because I'm CTA's ombudsman and helped devise some of these solutions. Anyone who doesn't believe the current TSA is a federal disaster area with an impossibly sprawling mandate isn't in touch with reality.

The TSA as it exists can't die soon enough.

Note: For those of you looking for a response to some of last week's comments on the TSA opt-out story, I have included them here. I read every comment posted here and although I can't respond to every one, I do my best to address them. Thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts.

By the way, after you've left a comment here, we can continue the discussion on my consumer advocacy site or on Twitter, Facebook and Google. I also have a free newsletter. Here's the signup form.

Shaun Dail

VP Sales & Marketing, North America at Orad, Inc.

11y

T-housands S-tanding A-round

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Jeff Roddy

Corporate Director of Technical Services at Phoenix (Retired)

11y

I know everyone has there own personal horror stories, but if you fly out of Midway, as I do regularly, you start to see consistant problematic behaviors. Mt guess is these people got the job through the Chicago political machine, because there is no behavior being exhibited that suggests they have any pride in what they do. The last three times through, I had to talk to a supervisor, because the person doing the licence/airline ticket match, never even looked up to see if I was indeed the person on the paperwork. Then, when you get to the scanner, the belt is running, but the person on the monitor is chatting up a female employee, who obviously has nothing to do either. But for the upside, I find the most professional groups to be at the smaller regional airports, where pride in doing a good job still seems to exist.

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cheryl wisniewski

Chemist at Fresenius-Kabi

11y

Whenever I fly I am forced by TSA to x-ray my scarf. However, my Mother routinely travels with her butane curling iron in her carry-on and has NEVER been stopped!

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Terrorists must be laughing. They won. They got US to build our own Terrorism organization. Don't you feel somewhat terrorized when you go through the TSA devices and risk getting a pat down?

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