From the USA Today website...
Sep. 13th, 2001 04:57 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
There are interesting observations published online in this article on new FAA safety rules:
Also, passengers will not be allowed to carry any kind of knife on board, which means I'll have to remember to take my little Swiss Army combination toothpick, tweezer, miniature scissor, nail file, and (deadly, one-inch) knife off of my key chain, else risk forfeiting it at the gate. Furthermore, airlines will no longer provide steak knives with meals, and terminals are being cleared of plastic cutlery. (Gee, I hope it doesn't turn out that the hijackers also threatened their victims with ballpoint pens, or else we'll have to turn those in, too, I suppose.)
United is set to start operations tomorrow. My going home on Saturday is far from a cinch at this point; if Durango isn't one of the airports that's pronounced adequately secure by the FAA, then there will be no place for me to go until that happens.
Ah, well. No use getting hot about it until something definite turns up. For now, the work day is over, and I'm going to go home.
Cheers...
Experts aren't surprised. They say the FAA directives fail to address underlying security shortcomings that made Tuesday's hijackings possible.Among other measures, the new FAA directive will only let ticketed passengers through the security checkpoint to the gate. In light of the recent news that Tuesday's hijackers appear to have all been ticketed passengers, I cannot imagine why I should feel safer with this rule in effect.
"Everybody wants people to do something, but I'm not sure that any of these changes are effective," said Steve Luckey, chairman of the national security committee of the Air Line Pilots Association International. "They're just going to inconvenience the passengers and the people that haul them."
Even one FAA security official said the directives are more form than substance. "They're extraordinary in terms of perception, but in reality, they'll have very little effect," said the official, who asked not to be identified. "It's going to be costly and time-consuming, but it's not going to buy a higher level of security overall."
Also, passengers will not be allowed to carry any kind of knife on board, which means I'll have to remember to take my little Swiss Army combination toothpick, tweezer, miniature scissor, nail file, and (deadly, one-inch) knife off of my key chain, else risk forfeiting it at the gate. Furthermore, airlines will no longer provide steak knives with meals, and terminals are being cleared of plastic cutlery. (Gee, I hope it doesn't turn out that the hijackers also threatened their victims with ballpoint pens, or else we'll have to turn those in, too, I suppose.)
United is set to start operations tomorrow. My going home on Saturday is far from a cinch at this point; if Durango isn't one of the airports that's pronounced adequately secure by the FAA, then there will be no place for me to go until that happens.
Ah, well. No use getting hot about it until something definite turns up. For now, the work day is over, and I'm going to go home.
Cheers...
no subject
Date: 2001-09-13 04:35 pm (UTC)I do think that the security screening areas need to be handled by the airports themselves, though, not by the airlines or subcontracted companies not directly responsible to the airport authorities. That wouldn't be totally effective, either, but it would be better.