Hello BEAV!  This effort is not BEAV, but the longer term solution is right up their alley.
  Northwest reinforcing cockpit doors                     Tony Kennedy                     Star Tribune
                                            Published Oct 4 2001
                      Northwest Airlines began reinforcing its cockpit doors                     Wednesday night, a company-engineered short-term fix to                     thwart potential hijackers. The effort is expected to be                     completed on all 442 NWA jetliners within 30 days.
                      Northwest spokeswoman Mary Beth Schubert said the                     custom-designed security devices will be installed on an                     around-the-clock schedule at select NWA maintenance bases,                     including in the Twin Cities.
                      "NWA is committed to completing the entire program within                     30 days," Schubert said.
                      She said the first devices were to be placed on airplanes destined                     for Reagan National Airport in Washington, D.C.
                      When Reagan National reopens today for the first time since                     the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Northwest will be one of only six                     carriers allowed to fly there. In the initial reopening phase, only                     eight U.S. airports will offer direct flights to Reagan National.
                      Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport (MSP) will be                     Northwest's only initial destination from the close-in                     Washington airport. Schubert said Northwest will operate four                     daily flights between MSP and Reagan National during the first                     phase of reopening.
                      Northwest, the nation's fourth-largest airline, followed United                     Airlines, American Airlines and Alaska Airlines in                     announcing reinforcement projects for cockpit doors. Like                     American and United, Northwest will use a crossbar locking                     device on some planes, but Schubert said different designs are                     required for different types of planes in the fleet.
                      "There's not a one-size-fits-all solution," she said.
                      "All improvements and all the security efforts are obviously                     welcomed," said Will Holman, spokesman for the pilots' union                     at Northwest.
                      The reinforcement devices are considered short-term measures                     to address the threat of hijackings. Airplane manufacturers are                     striving for a permanent solution to keep intruders out of                     cockpits by designing new doors. But those products might not                     be ready for more than a year.
                      Northwest declined to reveal the cost of its short-term project.                     At Alaska Airlines, installation is estimated to cost less than                     $5,000 a plane, according to the Wall Street Journal.
                      The federal government is paying for increased cockpit security                     under a $500 million industry set-aside program announced                     Sept. 27 by President Bush. The Federal Aviation                     Administration said airlines can make initial modifications                     without FAA approval, then submit paperwork to the agency                     within 90 days.
                      Plans for a long-term solution, which must meet FAA design                     standards, are expected to be submitted by manufacturers and                     the airlines within six months.
                      "There are about 7,000 aircraft in the U.S. commercial fleet                     that may be modified," said FAA spokeswoman Elizabeth                     Isham Cory. "There are 40 different cockpit door designs on                     these aircraft."
                      The Northwest fleet includes seven different models of Boeing                     and Airbus planes. The program at Northwest does not cover                     the 109 small jets and turboprop planes at its Twin Cities-based                     Airlink affiliate, Mesaba Airlines.
                      A Mesaba spokeswoman said company officials will meet next                     week with the FAA in Washington, D.C., and move forward                     with their own plan for cockpit door security.
                      Tammy Lee, a spokeswoman for Mendota Heights-based Sun                     Country Airlines, said the carrier is working closely with                     manufacturer Boeing Co. to reinforce cockpit doors on Sun                     Country's 727s and 737s.
                      Meanwhile, Sun Country pilots are using existing equipment in                     the cockpit to bar the doors, Lee said. For security reasons, she                     declined to provide details.
                      In other airline news Wednesday, Northwest said it has resumed                     its Internet check-in service. The program, which allows                     electronically ticketed Northwest passengers to print boarding                     passes from their personal computers, was suspended Sept. 11                     through 30.
                      Northwest, the only major network airline to offer Internet                     check-in, reopened the service after determining that it fully                     complies with the FAA's latest security requirements, the                     airline said in a news release.
                      -- Tony Kennedy is at tonyk@startribune.com .
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