"...Chertoff says the nation's aviation system remains "the No. 1
target" for terrorists, and he warns that his agency may have to cut
spending on security at airports if Congress rejects a fee increase
for some passengers."



What Chertoff is not saying is that the security surcharge is on TOP
of the federal tax on airline tickets that is supposed to pay for
airports and their security.  But the proceeds from that tax are often
diverted to other spending within DHS and elsewhere.  Or not spent at
all.  It is funny that, while CICBush43 is pushing heavily to make
permanent the tax breaks for the rich and add on new ones, that
Chertoff is essentially asking for a tax INCREASE on the average
person who uses air travel.  And he does not offer up (and DHS has not
even attempted or looked at), any actual or proposed efficiencies in
airport security operations. Last year he suggested reverting the
security screening operations to private companies but got laughed out
of Congress, since that would put things back to 9/11 ground zero. And
where did the $1Billion shortfall this year come from (they already
cut 2,000 screeners because they didn't get the fee increase last
year)? Best guess is that it was siphoned out of the DHS 2007 budget
to pay for Pentagon costs in Iraq which are nearing the $400Billion
mile marker on the way to $500Billion.  And to think that the Budget
Office official, before the Iraq conflict, who predicted a
$50-60Billion Iraq conflict cost was fired by CICBush43.

David Bier

http://www.usatoday.com/travel/news/2006-02-26-airport-security_x.htm

Chertoff warns of airport security cutbacks

By Mimi Hall, USA TODAY

WASHINGTON — Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff says the
nation's aviation system remains "the No. 1 target" for terrorists,
and he warns that his agency may have to cut spending on security at
airports if Congress rejects a fee increase for some passengers.


Chertoff says most people are willing to pay            
Chertoff says most people are willing to pay "an extra couple of bucks
for safety."    
http://images.usatoday.com/travel/_photos/2006/02/27/chertoff-ins.jpg


By Tim Dillon, USA TODAY

"If the airline industry fights a fee all the time and wins and the
result is we have to cut spending on airline screening, then lines are
going to be longer, and customers are going to be more ticked off,"
Chertoff said in an interview Friday. "And of course, the worst thing
would be if something happened and a plane blew up. That would be a
real shot at the heart of the airline industry. So they've got a real
interest in making sure we have adequate funding for this."

As part of its budget request this month for the 2007 fiscal year,
Chertoff's department proposed doubling the $2.50 security tax paid
each way by passengers on non-stop flights. Passengers on multileg
flights already pay $5 each way.

Congress rejected a similar request last year, and Rep. Hal Rogers,
R-Ky., chairman of the House committee that controls Homeland Security
spending, chastised department officials for making the proposal
again. Rogers says it would cost air travelers about $1.4 billion.

The Air Transport Association, which represents major U.S. airlines,
opposes the increase, saying it will inflate travel costs and "cause
further economic damage to the already-crippled U.S. airline industry."

Without the fee, the Transportation Security Administration, which
runs airport security, will need to close a $1-billion-plus hole in
its budget, Chertoff said. He said that could mean cuts to the
nation's force of airport screeners. When Congress rejected the fee
increase last year, the number of screeners was cut from 45,000 to 43,000.

"I know there's a lot of skepticism as to whether we can get Congress
to pass a fee or not," Chertoff said. But he said he believes most
people would be willing to pay "an extra couple of bucks for safety."

David Castelveter, a spokesman for the Air Transport Association,
called for "improved efficiency" in security instead of "constantly
adding to the anti-terrorism taxes, fees and expenses imposed uniquely
on the airlines and their passengers."

Chertoff also warned that air travel will be less convenient if the
TSA cannot implement its plan to check domestic airline passengers'
names against terrorist watch lists and other databases. The program
would allow the government to verify passengers' identities.

Plans for the controversial Secure Flight program repeatedly have been
put on hold amid concerns from privacy advocates such as the American
Civil Liberties Union and criticism in government audits that the TSA
improperly stored private information about airline passengers.

Another TSA program, Registered Traveler, is set to begin in June.
That program would allow passengers to pay a fee of up to $100 and
agree to a check of their personal and, possibly, financial records.
Special security lanes would be set up for those who pay and are
approved to move more quickly through airport screening.

The ACLU and other privacy rights advocates also have expressed
concern about that program. Chertoff fired back: "If people rail
against Registered Traveler and rail against Secure Flight, we'll
continue to screen and we'll have a good level of security. It'll just
be inefficient and inconvenient."

In the interview at Homeland Security headquarters, Chertoff also
reflected on his first year on the job as the second secretary of the
department, which opened for business in 2003.

Although just weeks after being taken to task in Congress for his
department's poor response to Hurricane Katrina, Chertoff insisted
that he's glad he took the job.

The former federal judge, who gave up a lifetime appointment to the
bench last year to take over the department, joked that at Homeland
Security, "every year is like a lifetime." But he said he's not
complaining.

"It's not a job you would take if you want to just kind of take a
victory lap," he said. "The best outcome is nothing happens, and if
everything goes well, nothing happened so what's the big deal? And the
worst is if something did happen and that's bad. ... On the other hand
... there's a tremendous opportunity to accomplish something here."

Contributing: Thomas Frank 





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