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To: steve who wrote (21573)11/21/2001 2:52:59 PM
From: steve  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 26039
 
November 20, 2001

Technology to play prominent role in
aviation security

By Liza Porteus, National Journal's
Technology Daily

The Federal Aviation Administration must test the
security benefits of biometrics or other technologies in
at least 20 airports under the aviation-security bill
President Bush signed into law Monday. The
biometrics language is just one of several
technology-related provisions in the law.

"Thanks to this bill, we have a new commitment to
security in the air," Bush said during a signing
ceremony at Washington Reagan National Airport--the
last U.S. airport to be reopened after the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon. "Security comes first. The federal
government will set high standards, and we will
enforce them."

FAA Administrator Jane Garvey, Transportation
Secretary Norman Mineta, and some House and
Senate lawmakers joined Bush at the event.

Congressional debate over the bill, S. 1447,
emphasized issues such as making the baggage
screeners at U.S. airports federal employees and hiring
more air marshals for commercial flights. But the new
law also is laden with tech language.

The biometrics language requires the FAA to consider
the deployment of technologies that identify
individuals and to test it in a pilot program. Groups
such as the American Association of Airport
Executives recently touted biometrics technologies in
testimony before Congress. The group also has called
for the Defense Department to reevaluate classified
technologies to see if they can be put to use in
airports.

The aviation-security law also establishes a council to
coordinate intelligence, security and criminal
enforcement activities with the intelligence
community, and it directs the Transportation secretary
to explore using wireless or wireline data technologies
to transmit potential aviation threats to a common
database of suspected terrorists. The database would
be connected to other federal and state agencies.

The law also requires all airlines to secure their
computer reservation systems against unauthorized
access.

The FAA must periodically review potential aviation
threats and analyze its systems to weigh the possibility
of cyberattacks that could disrupt their operations. Air
carriers must expand their use of the
Computer-Assisted Passenger Pre-screening System to
cover all passengers.

The law authorizes money for the FAA to conduct
research and development on, and testing and
evaluation of, security technologies. And it authorizes
the FAA to issue research grants for longer-term
airport security improvements, secure networking and
the sharing of information about aviation threats
among federal agencies and law enforcement.

The statute also calls for: the use of video monitors,
voice-stress analysis and other technologies to pinpoint
disturbances; the electronic transmission of the names,
birth dates, passport numbers and other relevant
information of each airline passenger and crew
member; and the use of technology to allow "trusted
passengers" to bypass long security checkpoints.

Groups such as the U.S. Conference of Mayors have
urged the federal government to help states and
localities fund any federal airport-security mandates.

govexec.com

steve