Taser Us Looks at Proposals for Airlines 2001
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u.s. looks at which tech proposals Government deluged with ideas for airports, airliners By Tract Watson • the irises of their eyes. Both body I Newideas for alrIine security In the wake of Sept 11, federal regulators are mulling thousands ofproposals designed to make air travel safer. Some ideas, such as stronger cockpit doors, already have become law. Most, however, are still on the drawing board TermmM Iris scanner USATODAY Would compare a passenger:S iris, which is as unique as a flngerprint, to tl'E Image OIl the passenger's ID card. Remote-controUed flights. Bul- ~. :::::---''' .. Tower Remote-coatro8e lI:I:gbt Would allow contioIJers OIl the ground to steer ajet to a safe lancji:ng if pilots were disabled letproof cockpit doors. Eye scanners at airport gates. Air security As federal aviation officials ponder how to make air travel safer after the Sept 11 attacks, they've been deluged with more £han 30,000 ideas such as these for applying technology to airport and airline secwity. Ideas for new safety gizmos and smart security systems have roUed in not just from companies with ~ • .-.-I'r.Jnce-_ !bl>""n_. dollar signs in their eyes. Gtizem G.1rftoy: Fav<xs' ~ who are trying to be helpful have use ofblometric:'0l0gy; also offered suggestions since President Bush on Sept 27 adv0cated some technological ad~ vances in security as a way of restoring public confidence in commercialairtravel.- And the government is taking them serious~ The Federal Aviation Administration is wading throuWI the proposals it has received and plans to require the airlines and airportS to adopt the best ones. The Transportation Depart- ment is doing the same. Bush has set aside $500 million for airlines to spend on security techno~ indoomgtbrtifyingjet c~. Among some of the other ideas that are being reviewed: ....Stuo.guns. United Airlines has proposectgiving all afits pilots stun guns, which can subdue assaj!ants with jolts of electricity. Stun guns are now banned aboard planes. ~ Full-body scans. These modified X-ray machines can look through clothing to see weapons, drugs and other items. The Customs Service uses them to screen some passengers arriving from overseas. ~ Video cameras in the cabin. They'd allow pilots to monitor the rest of the pfane without leaving the cockJ?it Delta has installed test cameras mone ofits planes. ~ Strobe lights and sirens in the jet that could distract hijackers. Although few dispute that spending more money on people, such as baggage screeners, can make travel safer, aviation experts -""" ~ Ahigh-tech X-1dY that can spot weapons and I -.._- I ~","k'_."~_' Olckpit or cabin Ily also say that machines like these can do things people can't "Machines don't t distracted, 6 says Steve Lu~ ~ad of the security committee for the Airline Pilots Association. "They don't get tired, they don't need a break. and they don't need to go to the bathroom. Technology's great" Although lucKey and other experts share the president's hope that technology can make air travel safer, they also dismiss some suggested fixes, such as Bush's suggestion for remote-control pilotmg. as naive. Other ideas, such as building tamper-proof transponders or ID cards, have prpvoked disagreement'over their etfectiveness and alfordability. Even taking seemingly simple steps as strengthening cockpit doors, which Bush advocated as one of the first steps of applying technology to malre flying safer, is not so easy. For years, the FAA required cockpit doors to be light enough to breaK through in case pilots had to be rescued. Duurs also had to allow air to pass during a sudden decompressIon, so most were de· signed to swing open or allow a panel to flip open under pressure. Such doors could be easily battereddowlt After the hijackings, the FAA gave airlines 18 months to make it harder to storm cockpits. It will take clever engineering to design doors that can stop a 250- fly StuilguusforpiloC'S Emits strong shock; woukI allow pilots to subdue hijackers. ::r-. . HeUEr tnnsponden New wiring or roltware could guarantee that I on!ypilotscoukl turnolfthesedevices, which j give ~taiIs ofajeJ;'s ·Ift .,," location and Identi~ ..'"'_ I ••_ ,''v alI". Un es L_._ ,...YO: ~.. _ G_.... . ';:)f'/i{/ ...." .~"" .' n d d =~th:~ xn.ouo= ~''''''J.:\;.- material used in Could disorient ' hijackers or unruly passengers. buUetproofvests. ~,,;,:'in se~ what's going on . without leaving' the cockpit <:' , codqtit Videocame:tas in the cabin Pilots could '-:::j:j<r!/;.':..m. l~byTR<:l~ ...... mMy Ily ~ E. Mulll... USI\ TlXlAy pound man yet stiII give way in case of eme~cy,eJg):erts say. But they also say it's possible. So far, the nation's largest: airlines have !;lut new locks and bars on cockpit doors as a stopgap measure. Only Alaska Airlines, which flies on the WestCoast, and JetBlue Airways. which flies mostly out of New York's Kennedy International AirPort, have started instalfmg doors lined with material used in bulletproof vests on aU their craft. It's not clear yet whether the doors wiH meet FM standards. tess feasible, experts say, is Bush's suggestion that technology be developed to allow controUers on the ground to land jet> if trouble:such as a hijacking. broke out ~I don't know anybody who's tbought about it 11.1ld who thinks it's a good idea," says john Hansman, a professor of aeronautics and astronautics at the Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology. Hansman and others say that such a ground-control system would be just as vulnerable to ter· rorists as airplanes are - and to computer hackers as well. Security experts also fear that the takeover of an aircraft's flight controls could desperate hijackers to start .. passengers on the plane to getw theywant In addition, less than half of the nation's commercial fleet is equipped Ibr tIUs rechnique. Brmging the fleet up to snuffwould cost billions of dollars, experts say; And controllers would need extensive training to handle the task. '1hat's one for the reject bin." says Robert Poole, director of transportation studies at the Reason Pub6c Policy Institute, a free· market think tank. Discarding obviously unworkable ideas is easy. Much harder is decid!ng whatto do about technolo~ that has generated both ait· iasm and enthusiasm. For example, Bush has said that the government would fund rt:search on transponders that cannot be switched offin the cockpit. Transponders, which are normaly kept: on during flights. identify jets to radat The Sept;. 11 hijackers turned them olfso that ~und controllers couldn't see the Jets' altitude or identification codes. The recommendation sounds simple enough. Bijt such a step should be approached cautiously, 5 parts are as unique as fingerprints. Similar systems already are in place for passengers entering the Amstenlam airport from ;iliroad. London's Heathrow Airport will soon start a trial of iris-Unked ID cards for Americans and Canadians who travel to Britain frequen~ At. a congressional hearing last month. FAA Administrator Jane Garvey called this body·based technology; kno'wn as biometrics, ~one I'd like to see aU ofus embrace and advance in an even more aggressive fashion." The Air Transport Association, the trade group for airlines. goes a . step fwtheI: It says such ID cards couk! be linked to databases held by the FBl the Immigration and Naturalization service and other security agencies. That way anyone who's had any trouble with the law would be stopped before get· ting on a plane. ~If you don't subscribe to the voluntary approach. you're going to go through a very rigid, invasive search, says Michael Wascom, the association's vice president of conununications. That's precisely the problem, according to opp'onents. ~~le will eft'ectively be coerced into getting these cards to avoid intrusive, sometimes demeaning searches," says Barry Steinhardt. associate director of the American Ovil Uberties Union. Besides, say Steinhardt and others. the purpose of the cards could easily be Undermined. It's so easy to concoct a new identity that criminals could get a biometric ID card under a fake name and legal history, Steinhardt says. Others point out that such a system probably wouldn't have prevented the 5epl11 attacks. "Seventeen ofthe nineteen Sept 11 terrorists were ordinary, Iawabiding citizens until after they were cin the planeS,6 says james Wayman, director of the National Biometrics Test Center at San jose Stote U _ "They had Social Security cards and frequent-flier numbers. How could any biometric device have stopped them?" Even the loudest critics don't doubt that some technologies can Improve safety. The AClU for example, doesn't oppose the use of biometric ID cards to bar access to areas olf-Iimit to the public. Such cards are in use at O'Hare international Airport in Chicago. says Charles Higgins, head of a newly created diVision of Boeing that'M:lli<s on security technoiogy. For ~le, what would nappen if a redesigned transponder shorted out and began sparking? In modem jets. pilots can shut off power to devices to prevent fires. Should the transponder be given different safety standards than the rest ofthe electronics? And What about the hazards of rewiring the cockpit? Wiring is one of aviation's top safety concerns. and work on Jet wirmg has led to numerous safety incidents. Safety officials say the idea is feasi· ble, but they warn thata rushed effort to redo the wiring of thousands ofjets could cause trouble. Critics also have strong grievances about a technology that has won widespread favor from airlines and some security experts: voluntary identification cards. Passengers would get one by undergoing a strict background check. Card holders courd then breeze throll.l!Jl the airport with· out being su"bjeeted to rigorous searches. Automated airport scanners would verify cardholders' identity by checking their palms or Contributing: Alan levin ---- --- ---------- USA Todlf Walllingllln, DC W..hln.tln DC Mil Ar.. 6 Mllnl:!lIJ m1.757,.'9 NOV 26. 2e9t IIIII~ ~ IIIIIIIIIIIII~ 11111111111111 l11rDnil "..... Ullr!IL!lPR£SS r:!-1PPfNGS II ., r__ ,,,. ,.,...... ,,. , , -c-~ ;-