http://gcn.com/Articles/2011/06/02/tsa-patdowns-alaska-meeting-privacy-vs-se
curity.aspx?s=SL_060611
<http://gcn.com/Articles/2011/06/02/tsa-patdowns-alaska-meeting-privacy-vs-s
ecurity.aspx?s=SL_060611&admgarea=TC_STATELOCAL&p=1>
&admgarea=TC_STATELOCAL&p=1

 

TSA might back down some on pat-downs

*       By Michael Protos
<http://gcn.com/forms/emailtoauthor.aspx?AuthorItem=%7b73783051-BE68-49C7-84
20-4971DE644FD4%7d&ArticleItem=%7bE598A9D4-CD42-4541-937A-A28A46341D7E%7d> 
*       Jun 02, 2011

The Transportation Security Administration just can't win as it tries to
appease both sides of the personal privacy vs. national security debate, and
a TSA official said June 1 that the agency might tip the scales slightly
toward privacy. 

At a meeting with irritated Alaskans, Scott Johnson, TSA field operations
manager, said the agency is considering a risk-based system for ranking the
threat of individual travelers, writes the
<http://washingtonexaminer.com/news/2011/06/alaskans-call-changes-tsa-screen
ing> Associated Press' Dan Joling. Johnson met Alaskans who want to change
screening procedures for some travelers, convened by the United States for
Travel Freedom Caucus, according to a post at the "
<http://truthiscontagious.com/2011/06/02/tsa-caving-to-pat-down-pressure>
Truth is Contagious" blog.

Alaska state representative Sharon Cissna offered the primary horror story
for the discussion. A cancer survivor who had a mastectomy, Cissna refused a
pat-down in Seattle while traveling home to Alaska and ended up taking the
slow boat to Alaska - literally. Her journey included a two-day ferry ride
from British Columbia to Juneau, writes the
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/24/rep-sharon-cissna-tsa_n_827934.htm
l> Associated Press' Becky Bohrer.

During the round table discussion hosted by Sen. Mark Begich (D-Alaska),
Cissna and others asked TSA to reconsider pat-downs for travelers with
special needs, such as sexual trauma victims or people with specific health
concerns, Joling writes. Johnson said TSA is looking into a risk-based
system that avoids qualifying as profiling while still alleviating the need
to subject every traveler to arguably invasive pat-downs.

As we wrote in May,
<http://gcn.com/Articles/2011/05/26/Texas-surrenders-to-TSA-freedom-fondles.
aspx> TSA defends its position that pat-downs are a necessary security
option to protect all travelers. For travelers who refuse to pass through
full-body scan devices - and TSA asserted in a blog post that they
<http://blog.tsa.gov/2011/05/radiation-retest-results-are-in.html> don't
present any serious radiation threats - a pat-down is in store.

>From Texas legislators to "Saturday Night Live" comedians, TSA has become
the object of criticism and ridicule. A post on the Beaumont Enterprise's
"The Bayou" blog features a
<http://blog.beaumontenterprise.com/bayou/2011/06/02/daybreak-3/> clever
clip of the SNL crew poking fun at the salacious security measures.

Sexy Lady No. 1: Looking for a little human interaction?

Sexy Lady No. 2: Do you want to feel contact in certain special places?

TSA agent: Then why not go through security at an airport?

Of course, the blog serving the Beaumont, Texas, community points out that
plenty of people don't find anything funny about the perceived
government-sanctioned molestation. The blog references Texas lawmakers'
recent decision to can legislation that would allow police to arrest and
charge TSA agents for sexual molestation - only after the federal government
threatened to ban flights from departing in Texas. And a recent settlement
further riles up the anti-TSA legions in Texas.

According to the United Kingdom's Daily Mail Reporter,
<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1393311/TSA-pays-just-2k-woman-brea
sts-exposed-patdown.html> TSA paid $2,350 in a settlement with an Amarillo,
Texas, woman who sued the agency for negligence and infliction of emotional
distress when her breasts were exposed during a pat-down in the Corpus
Christi, Texas, airport. The small dollar figure angered the blog writer in
Beaumont, who points out the total barely covers legal fees in the case.

In addition to its attempt protect the U.S. transportation system - the
mission statement doesn't mention privacy - TSA is battling a major public
relations fiasco. Although the agency won the battle with Texas, Utah looks
like the next state that will challenge the federal agency. According to
<http://travel.usatoday.com/flights/post/2011/05/utah-texas-tsa-pat-down-bil
l/172469/1> USA Today's David Grossman, Utah state representative Carl
Wimmer is preparing a bill that resembles Texas' failed version and would
ban pat-downs in Utah.

 

 



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