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Transportation
Security Administration takes over responsibility for airline safety
By
JONATHAN D. SALANT
Associated Press
CHANTILLY,
Va. Airline passengers had their airport routines sharply
altered after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and now the way theyre
protected has changed as well.
The new Transportation
Security Administration took over responsibility for airline security
Sunday, the first step toward a system where better-trained, higher-paid
federal employees screen passengers and luggage.
Passengers at
Washington Dulles International Airport were pleased with the changes,
even if security is tougher.
Tanie Guy, an
Oracle Corp. employee, now arrives two hours early at the airport.
Theyre a bit stricter, to say the least, he said
before going through the security checkpoint en route to San Francisco.
If a private
organization does it, theyre looking to make money so theyre
cutting costs and cutting corners in order to make money,
said Brandon Buhai of Chicago, departing OHare Airport, also
for San Francisco. You hope cost is not as much of a concern
to the government.
Travelers, however,
said the security changes they observed Sunday werent dramatic.
I was
with passengers a lot, and they really didnt notice any difference,
said Melanie Miller, a spokeswoman for Baltimore-Washington International
Airport.
Employees have
not been given any new instructions, said American Airlines spokesman
John Hotard. Weve always reinforced that they need to
do their jobs, he said.
At Bostons
Logan Airport, originating point for the two jetliners that crashed
into the World Trade Center Sept. 11, there were no outward signs
of the federal takeover.
The only things
passengers will notice at first are chairs to sit on when asked
to remove their shoes to be checked for explosives, said John Magaw,
undersecretary for transportation security. In addition, travelers
inspected with handheld wands will have their valuables in front
of them.
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