The Federal Aviation Administration performs the essential work
of keeping airplanes from crashing into each other in the sky; in
this episode, we take a look at the new law that temporarily funds
the FAA and makes some important changes to aviation law. We also
travel back in time to the week after 9/11 to examine the origin of
the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and we examine
some ideas that the current leaders of Congress have for the future
of air travel in the United States and beyond.
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Funding
Safety
Drone Safety
Time Sensitive Aviation Reform
- By July 2017, regulations must be in effect requiring airlines
to
automatically refund bag fees to anyone whose bags are not
delivered within 12 hours after the arrival of a domestic flight or
15 hours after the arrival of an international flight.
- FAA needs to
submit a report, including public comments, about the risks of
eliminating contract weather observer service at 57 airports and
can not discontinue contract weather observer service before
October 1, 2017.
- FAA must enact regulations requiring pilots of small airplanes
to have driver's licenses and
pass all medical tests required for a drivers license,
completes a medical education course,
- Airlines will have to
let passengers off a plane if it's waiting on the tarmac for 3
hours of a domestic flight or 4 hours for an international
flight.
TSA PreCheck Expansion
Securing Aviation from Foreign Entry Points and Guarding
Airports Through Enhanced Security
Aviation Security Enhancement and Oversight
Checkpoints of the Future
- Creates a
new pilot program at between 3 and 6 airports that will test
new technologies and new baggage and personal screening systems.
Sound Clip Sources: Hearings
Hearing: Aviation
Security, Joint House Appropriations Subcommittee on
Transportation and Senate Appropriations Committee, September 20,
2001. Witnesses:
- Gerald Dillingham, Associate Director of the General Accounting
Office
- Jane Garvey, Administration, FAA
- Kenneth Mead, Inspector General of the Department of
Transportation
- Norman Mineta, Secretary of the Department of
Transportation
- Hank Queen, Vice President of Boeing’s Engineering and Product
Integrity division
Timestamps and Transcripts
- {54:15} Kenneth Mead: Given the scope
and complexity of the security challenge as we know it now, coupled
with the long-standing history of problems with the aviation
security program, I think the time’s come to revisit the option of
vesting governance of the program and responsibility for the
provision of security in one federal organization or not-for-profit
federal corporation. This doesn’t mean that everybody has to be a
federal employee, but it does mean a much more robust federal
presence and control. That entity would have security as its
primary and central focus, profession, and mission. Under our
current system, we’ve asked FAA to oversee and regulate aviation
security, and those charged with providing the security—the
airlines and the airports—themselves face other priorities,
missions, and indeed, in some cases, competing economic pressures.
And I think a centralized, consolidated approach with a security
mission would require passenger and baggage screeners to have
uniform, more rigorous training, and performance standards
applicable nationwide, and I think that would result in more
consistent security across this country and have higher quality
also.
- {1:22:46} Harold Rogers: Now, I want
to ask you about Dulles. Did you check on the employees of the
screening operation at Dulles Airport?Kenneth Mead: Yes.
We’re checking on the citizens— Harold Rogers: Tell us the
makeup of the staff there, in terms of their citizenship in the
U.S., for example. Kenneth Mead: Yes. A substantial
percentage of them are not U.S. citizens. Harold Rogers:
What percent? Kenneth Mead: I think it’s about 80%. It may
be somewhat more.
- {1:26:40} Harold Rogers: What about
the turnover rate, Mr. Dillingham? I’ve been reading the GAO’s
report on aviation security, issued June of 2000. I think you’re
the principal author, are you not?Gerald Dillingham: Yes,
sir. Harold Rogers: Tell us about the type of personnel
that’s screening companies you’re hiring around the country at the
airports to screen for terrorists. Gerald Dillingham: Let
me go back just a little bit to the point you raised before.
Screeners don’t have to be U.S. citizens. They can have a resident
alien card as well. The other point you raised with regard to
Argenbright, I think Argenbright is also a foreign-owned company as
well. And with regard to the types of personnel that are being
hired, one of the requirements is that you have a high school
diploma or a GED. We have not checked the records of individual
companies, but in the course of doing our work, we clearly got the
idea that this was not a job where you would find the most skilled
workers. Harold Rogers: They’re minimum-wage jobs, are
they not? Gerald Dillingham: Yes, sir. Harold
Rogers: And the turnover rate is exorbitantly high, is it not?
Gerald Dillingham: Yes, sir. Harold Rogers: In
one airport the turnover rate is 400% a year, correct? Gerald
Dillingham: Yes, sir. Harold Rogers: In Atlanta it’s
375% a year. At Baltimore-Washington, 155; Boston Logan, 207;
Chicago O’Hare, 200; and Houston, 237% a year; at St. Louis, 416% a
year. Is that correct? Gerald Dillingham: Yes, sir.
Harold Rogers: So these are untrained, inexperienced, the
lowest-paid personnel, many of them certainly noncitizens, and by a
company that got the contract by the lowest bid. Gerald
Dillingham: Yes, sir. Harold Rogers: Now, what’s
wrong with this picture? Gerald Dillingham: I think the
picture is clear to everyone.
- {2:28:58} Carolyn Kilpatrick: This
company that’s in 46 airports, that had the low-bid contract,
that’s noncitizens, that handles securities, and has criminal
convictions, who hired them?Norman Mineta: The airline is
the one that contracts with each… Carolyn Kilpatrick: An
airline. One airline. So did they all go together and hire them, or
each airline hires them on its own? Norman Mineta: The
airline hires the company and then the airlines—well, let me have
Ken maybe go into that because he’s maybe got the list of airports
with the contractors. Kenneth Mead: Yeah. The different
airlines can hire the same security company, and that does happen.
Carolyn Kilpatrick: Obviously. Low bids, so they’re going
for cheapness. Kenneth Mead: Right. And some airports,
Dulles, for example, you have the airlines get together there, and
they hire one vendor, and in the case of Dulles, it’s Argenbright.
In the case of other airports, where you have an airline, say, that
has a dedicated concourse, and you have two or three concourses at
that airport, you may have, in fact, three different firms
providing the security— Carolyn Kilpatrick: Okay, thank
you. Kenneth Mead: —each hired by a separate airline.
Hearing:
Review of ATC Reform Proposals, Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure, February 10, 2016.
Witnesses:
- Mr. Paul Rinaldi, President, National Air Traffic Controllers
Association
Written Testimony
- Mr. Nicholas E. Calio, President and Chief Executive Officer,
Airlines for America
Written Testimony
- Mr. Ed Bolen, President and CEO, National Business Aviation
Association
Written Testimony
- Mr. Robert Poole, Director of Transportation Policy, Reason
Foundation
Written Testimony
Timestamps and Transcripts
- {13:00} Bill Shuster: A key reform in
this bill takes the ATC out of the Federal Government, and
establishes a federally chartered, independent, not-for-profit
corporation to provide that service. This corporation will be
governed by a board representing the system’s users.
- {17:55} Bill Shuster: But I just want
to say that August of this year, Canadians will launch their first
satellites into space, and by the end of 2017, they will have over
70 satellites launched. They will have their GPS system up in
space. Currently, today, we can only see 30 percent of the airspace
on our current technology. When they deploy those 70 or so
satellites, they will be able to see 100 percent of the airspace in
the globe, the Canadians. I am told there’s already 15 or 16
countries that have signed up for their services. So Canadians, the
NAV CAN, and their partners, they’re developing this system. I
believe they are going to become the dominant controller of
airspace in the world. They’re going to be able to fly planes over
the North Atlantic and over the Pacific, straighter lines, closer
together, more efficiently; and that’s when we’re going to really
see our loss in leadership in the world, when it comes to
controlling airspace and being the gold standard.
- {19:10} Bill Shuster: Again, this
corporation we’re setting up is completely independent of the
Federal Government. This is not a government corporation, a
quasi-governmental entity, or a GSE. It is not that. The Federal
Government will not back the obligations, the financial
obligations, for this corporation. The corporation will simply
provide a service.
- {27:27} Pete DeFazio: We’re talking
about an asset—no one’s valued it—worth between $30 billion and $50
billion that will be given to the private corporation free of
charge. That’s unprecedented. There have been two privatizations:
one privatization in Canada—they paid $1.4 billion; it was later
found that it was undervalued by about $1 billion. I believe in
Britain they paid a little over $1 billion for it. We’re going to
take a much larger entity, controlling a lot of real estate, some
in some very expensive areas like New York City, and we are going
to give it to a private corporation, and the day after they
establish, they can do with those assets whatever they wish. They
can sell them, and we have no say.
- {30:11} Pete DeFazio: If someone
controls the routes, and they control the conditions under which
you access those routes, and they control the investment in the
system itself, which means maybe we don’t want to invest in things
that serve medium and small cities—they aren’t profit centers; why
should we be putting investment there—you know, we are keeping
control of the airspace? I guess there’s some technical way we’re
keeping control of it, but none of that will be subject to any
elected representative.
- {1:00:05} Ed Bolen: Our nation’s air
traffic control system is a monopoly, and it will stay a monopoly,
going forward. The airlines, for 30 years, have been lobbying
Congress so that they can seize control of that natural monopoly
and exert their authority over it. We think that is a fatally
flawed concept. The public airspace belongs to the public, and it
should be run for the public’s benefit. Do we really think that,
given control of this monopoly, the airlines would run it for every
American’s benefit? Reading the headlines over the past year would
suggest that’s probably not the case. ‘‘Airline Consolidation Hits
Small Cities the Hardest,’’ wrote the Wall Street Journal;
‘‘Justice Department Investigating Potential Airline Price
Collusion,’’ wrote the Washington Post; ‘‘Airline Complaints on the
Rise’’ was a headline in the Hill; ‘‘Airlines Reap Record Profits
and Passengers Get Peanuts.’’ That appeared in the New York Times
this past weekend.
- {1:02:30} Ed Bolen: We’re talking
about giving them unbridled authority to make decisions about
access, about rates, charges, about infrastructure. This is a
sweeping transfer of authority.
- {1:31:12} Don Young: Will the
gentleman yield? Let’s talk about the board.Bill Shuster:
Certainly. Don Young: You got four big airlines board
members. Bill Shuster: Right. Don Young: NATCA
now is supporting it. And I question that, by the way. I fought for
you every inch of the way, and we want to find out what is behind
that. General aviation has one. Unknown: Two. Don
Young: Two? Unknown: General aviation has two.
Don Young: OK, two. Where’s the other one? Bill
Shuster: Two to the government. Don Young: Two—and
who are they going to be? Do we have any input on that? No. We do
not. The president has—— Bill Shuster: The Department of
Transportation will have it. Don Young: The president. And
we’re the Congress of the United States. I’d feel a lot better if
we were to appoint them. Why should we let a president appoint
them? This is our job as legislators. If we’re going to change the
system, let us change it with us having some control over it,
financially. And the board members should be appointed from the
Congress. I am not going to give any president any more authority.
That is the wrong—we have done this over and over again. We give
the president—we might as well have a king. I don’t want a
king.
Hearing:
Airport Security Wait Times, House Homeland Security Committee,
May 25, 2016. Witness:
- Peter Neffenger, Administrator of the Transportation Security
Administration (TSA)
Timestamps and Transcripts
- {09:20} Bennie Thompson: In fiscal
year 2011, there were approximately 45,000 TSOs screening 642
million passengers. In FY 2016, TSA had 3,000 fewer TSOs screening
roughly 740 million anticipated passengers, almost 100 million more
passengers and 3,000 fewer screeners.
- {11:11} Bennie Thompson: TSA should
have access to all of the aviation security fees collected by the
flying public to bolster security. Yet, the passage of the Budget
Act of 2013, TSA is required to divert $13 billion collected in
security fees toward the deficit reduction for the next 10 years.
This year alone, 1.25 billion has been diverted.
- {29:40} Michael McCaul: And finally,
do you support—well, I can’t say—do you support the concept of
expanding TSA’s pre-check program, which, I think, would move a lot
of people in the long lines into the pre-check lines, which, I
think, would solve many of these problems as well.Pete
Neffenger: Absolutely. In fact, that’s one of my fundamental
priorities is to dramatically expand the pre-check population and
dramatically expand the capability to enroll people in
pre-check.
- {48:30} Pete Neffenger: Right now we
do not seem to have trouble meeting our recruiting targets. We have
a large pool of people that have been pre-vetted. That’s why we
were able to rapidly begin to hire that 768 because we had a large
pool of available applicants that had been screened that were
looking for work. I still want to work on bringing more of that
back in house than is currently done. As you know, we work through
a private contractor to do our hiring and recruiting right
now.
- {49:53} Mike Rogers: I plan to
introduce legislation to transform TSA from an HR nightmare to a
security-focused organization by reforming and greatly expanding
the Screening Partnership Program. Having worked on these issues
for more than a decade, I’ve seen that TSA can do a mission when
it’s given a clear, succinct mission. My bill is going to allow
more airports to hire qualified private contractors, capable of
managing day-to-day operations, and make TSA the driving force to
oversee intelligence-based security strategies.
- {1:41:30} Buddy Carter: You and I
have spoken before about privatization, and as you know, in full
disclosure, I’m really big on privatization. Atlanta and the bigger
airports are indicating to us, or at least to me, that it’s beyond
the scope of a bureaucracy to be able to do this, and I just don’t
get a warm and fuzzy feeling that you’re embracing privatization
here. Congress passed the Screening Partnership Program. Tell me
what you’re doing to implement that? We need to get to a point
where you’re on the other side of the table; you’re asking the
questions and overseeing this as opposed to being here answering
the questions from us.Pete Neffenger: We’ve made a lot of
changes to streamline that process. I was concerned that it takes a
long time because it has to go out on bid, it has to go out on
contract and the like. I have said repeatedly that the law allows
for this. I will work with any airport that’s interested. In fact,
I have directed airports like Atlanta to go out and talk to San
Francisco because that’s the only large category x airport that has
a contracted screening force, and we’ll continue to work with them.
I think that there are things that we can do. We are somewhat
hampered by the way the federal acquisition rules work. Remember,
that’s a workforce that’s contracted to the Federal Government, not
through the— Buddy Carter: Hold on. I don’t mean to
interrupt you, but I want to know. You say you’re hampered. I want
to know how I can help you to become unhampered, if that’s a word.
Pete Neffenger: Well, as I said, we follow the contracting
rules under the Federal Government contracting requirements. It’s a
contract to the Federal Government, so I want to make sure that
it’s fair and is open competition and you have to give people the
opportunity to participate in that. We’ll work with anybody who
wants to do that. Buddy Carter: Well, understand that I
want to work with you so that we can streamline that process. I
still don’t get the feeling that you’re embracing it, and I want to
know what you’re doing to encourage it, to the privatization of it.
Pete Neffenger: Well, again, it’s up to the airport to
determine whether they want to do it. We advertise its
availability, we make available information about it. There’s a
screening private partnership office that manages that.
Additional Sound Clips
- Video:
People Lay on the Floor at JFK Airport as Police Team Search,
Daily Mail, August 21, 2016.
- Video: JFK Airport Shooting
Evacuation After Shots Fired JFK Terminal, YouTube, August 15,
2016.
- Television News Clip: JFK Airport
Scare, CBS New York, August 14, 2016.
- Television News Clip:
Nightmarish Lines Continue At Airport Security Checkpoints, CBS
Chicago, May 16, 2016.
- Television News Clip:
Passengers Stranded at O'Hare Airport Due to Long TSA Lines By
John Garcia and Laura Podesta, ABC News Chicago, May 16, 2016.
- Television News Clip: Drones Interfere With
Wildfire Battle in California, CBS This Morning, July 20,
2015.
- Television News Clip: American Airlines
Passengers Stuck on Tarmac for Several Hours, ABC News, March
2, 2015.
Additional Reading
- Article:
Scenes From the Terrifying, Already Forgotten JFK Airport Shooting
That Wasn’t By David Wallace-Wells, New York Magazine, August
15, 2016.
- Article:
FAA Reauthorization Protects Weather Observer Program, Spokane
International Airport, Aviation Pros, July 14, 2016.
- Article:
Senate Overwhelmingly Passes Bipartisan FAA Bill Without
Air-Traffic Control Privatization By Andy Pasztor, The Wall
Street Journal, April 19, 2016.
- Article:
FAA Seeks To Cut Airport Weather Observers By Elaine Kauh,
AVWeb, February 5, 2016.
- Article:
Republican House Measure Seeks Independent Air-Traffic Control
Board By Andy Pasztor, The Wall Street Journal, February 3,
2016.
- Article
When Retirement Becomes a Crisis By Joseph Coughlin and Luke
Yoquinto, Slate, February 2, 2016.
- Article:
The Disturbing Truth About How Airplanes Are Maintained Today
By James B. Steele, Vanity Fair, December 2015.
- Article:
Union: Chronic Shortage of Air Traffic Controllers a Crisis By
Joan Lowy, PBS Newshour, October 14, 2015.
- Article:
TSA Body Scanner Lobbyist Now Overseeing Spending on TSA
Security By Lee Fang, The Intercept, May 27, 2015.
- Press Release:
Appropriations Committee Releases Fiscal Year 2015 Homeland
Security Bill, The U.S. House of Representatives Committee on
Appropriations, May 27, 2014.
- Article:
‘Naked Scanner’ Maker OSI Falls After Losing TSA Order By Jeff
Plungis. Bloomberg, December 6, 2013.
- Article:
FAA Plan to Terminate Airport Weather Observers Raises Travel
Safety Concerns By Jason Samenow, The Washington Post, May 1,
2013.
- Article:
Airlines Reluctant to Pay $6.6B for NextGen Air Transportation
System By Jill R. Aitoro, Washington Business Journal, April 9,
2013.
- Article:
Efforts Grow To Convince Airlines Of NextGen Worth By John
Croft, Aviation Daily, October 5, 2012.
- Article:
This Week in History: Ronald Reagan Fires 11,345 Air Traffic
Controllers By Cody Carlson, Deseret News, August 5, 2012.
- Article: Obama Signs
Bill Ending Partial FAA Shutdown By The CNN Wire Staff, CNN,
August 5, 2011.
- Article:
Everything You Need To Know About the FAA Shutdown In One Post
By Dylan Matthews, The Washington Post, August 3, 2011.
- Article
Congress Heads Home Without Extending FAA Funding By Ashley
Halsey III, The Washington Post, August 2, 2011.
- Article:
Partial FAA Shutdown Cripples Operations for Third Day By
Ashley Halsey III, The Washington Post, July 25, 2011.
- Article:
New Air Traffic Control System At Crossroads By Joan Lowy,
Yahoo News, July 5, 2011.
- Article:
Fear Pays: Chertoff, Ex-Security Officials Slammed For Cashing In
On Government Experience By Marcus Baram, The Huffington Post,
November 23, 2010.
- Article: The
Airport Scanner Scam By James Ridgeway, Mother Jones, January
4, 2010.
- Article: DHS
and TSA Have Researched, Developed, and Begun Deploying Passenger
Checkpoint Screening Technologies, but Continue to Face
Challenges, U.S. Government Accountability Office, October 7,
2009.
Additional Information
Reports
Music Presented in This Episode
Cover Art
Design by Only
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