Reason Writers Around Town: Get Government Out of Airport Screening
For the Washington Times' "Cut or Be Cut" series, Robert Poole, co-founder of this magazine and director of transportation at Reason Foundation, writes that it is time to get the TSA out of the passenger and baggage screening business:
Following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, governments across the world increased airport security, and rightly so. But in a hasty overreaction to that tragic day, Congress gave the job of screening passengers and baggage to a new federal agency: the Transportation Security Administration (TSA). As a result, taxpayers pay for more than 48,000 airport security screeners and TSA has requested nearly $8.2 billion in funding for 2011.
Creating the massive bureaucracy was a mistake. Even though the quality of airport screening was low before Sept. 11, it was not a failure of the "rent-a-guard" screeners that let those 19 terrorists board planes "armed" with box cutters. Those "weapons" were perfectly legal at the time. The real failure was one of policy, which didn't make use of passenger history and law enforcement information that should have flagged most of the terrorists as suspicious characters who warranted enhanced scrutiny.
Even with today's bloated TSA, that problem still exists. Consider that our various intelligence agencies failed to share vital information, and a suspected terrorist, the underwear bomber, was allowed to board - and tried to blow up - an international flight bound for Detroit on Christmas. Thankfully, the Obama administration last week took some needed steps to help fix this problem.
Following Sept. 11, most other countries increased their standards for airport security by letting each airport implement its own procedures under government supervision. In Europe, that led to nearly all major airports hiring certified private security firms to do their screening. Canada created a new federal agency to implement better screening but outsourced the actual screening. This kind of high-performance contracting permits better training and airport-specific flexibility (e.g., higher pay scales in Canada's jobs-rich oil patch) and it better matches screener numbers to changing travel patterns and airport passenger levels.
In contrast, the system Congress and the George W. Bush administration created came with a massive conflict of interest: TSA serves as both the aviation-security regulator and the provider of key security. Who's watching the watchmen? When it comes to baggage and passenger screening, TSA is regulating itself. As with any bureaucracy, its natural incentive is to hide errors and make itself look good. In addition to the obvious conflict of interest, this also makes for fragmented airport security.
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Unlike prisons, this is where (re-)privatization is a very good idea.
Execpt it will be private companies bound by federal regulations paid by the taxpayer. The only difference is how many CEOs will be paid with tax dollars. The feds will still dictate to the private companies as if they were government employees.
TSA=stupid^2
LOL, the TSA is the biggest WASTE of an agency in the country. Complete and incompetent idiots.
Lou
http://www.surfing-anonymity.br.tc
Kill this bot before we take matters into our own hands.
Having just experienced the dehumanization of airport security just yesterday in Newark, I can say without question that the TSA needs to getvthe fuck out of the airports.
Having just experienced the dehumanization of airport security just yesterday in Newark
FIFY
The TSA sucks. Just... rude, barely competent little pricks with badges. The ONLY ones that I liked were the ones at (get this!) JFK -- everywhere else, they acted like people who couldn't possibly be expected to have some common courtesy.
I cannot fucking believe that those assholes are the best we can manage.
(Can you tell how little I like them?)
I had a TSA guy at Norfolk checking IDs. He said nothing but could look at you in a way that would freak some people out. It was like he would break out the chainsaw. He could probably make most terrorist and 1/4 of the citizenry wet their pants with his stare. I thought it was pretty cool.
TSA should be abolished !
Never happen. Next subject.
Which assumes that creating the TSA was about doing a good job of providing aitport security rather than another source of government jobs.
Remember Daschle's slogan "We can't professionalize unless we federalize"?
Ya I don't like TSA, I saw a good video about TSA,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1gMlS0KjMhw
It made me laugh.
Wally
TSA should not be abolished. Remember that airports were privatized when Sept 11 happened. There has not been another terrorist attack since TSA was created. Wise up people.