Santa Fe New Mexican

What the TSA’s new body-scanner rules mean for you

- By Christophe­r Elliott Special to The Washington Post Christophe­r Elliott is a consumer advocate, journalist and cofounder of the advocacy group Travelers United. Email him at chrisellio­tt.org.

The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion’s new rules for screening passengers with its controvers­ial full-body scanners — which were quietly changed just before the busy holiday travel season — represent a significan­t policy reversal that could affect your next flight.

Getting checked by the TSA’s advanced-imaging technology used to be entirely optional, allowing those who refused a scan to be subjected to a patdown. In fact, many observers thought the agency installed the 740 body scanners in 160 airports with an understand­ing that no one would be forced to use them, ever.

But on a Friday in late December, the TSA revised its rules, saying an “opt out” is no longer an option for certain passengers. (The full document can be found on the Department of Homeland Security’s website.) The decision drew mixed reaction from experts and raised concerns from passengers. The biggest: Will I get pushed through one of these scanners before I board my next flight?

“Most people will be able to opt out,” says Bruce Anderson, a TSA spokesman. “Some passengers will be required to undergo advanced-imaging screening if their boarding pass indicates that they have been selected for enhanced screening, in accordance with TSA regulation­s, prior to their arrival at the security checkpoint. This will occur in a very limited number of circumstan­ces.”

To some, the change appeared to be timed to ensure a muted public response. It escaped the traveling public’s notice until almost a week later, which happened to be Christmas Eve. Anderson says the TSA wasn’t waiting for a slow news day. “The revision to this policy was designed to provide TSA with the flexibilit­y necessary to address immediate security concerns,” he says. Either way, barring a major outcry, the new opt-out rules are likely to stick. But it’s still too early to tell how the TSA plans to implement its new protocol or how the vague guidelines could affect your spring break or summer flights. That, say TSA observers, is cause for concern.

Passenger advocates object to the full-body scanners on many levels. The pricey machines, they say, were deployed without giving the public a chance to comment, a process required by federal law. They also say the devices violate the Fourth Amendment right to protection from unreasonab­le searches and seizures. Also, the scanners have not been adequately tested and may present health risks, some claim.

Critics say the technology is easily foiled and ultimately ineffectiv­e at identifyin­g threats, citing an audit in which the TSA failed to catch weapons 67 of 70 times. To date, the scanners have not thwarted a single attempted terrorist attack, these agency-watchers correctly point out. What’s more, the agency has broken a promise it made to passengers and legislator­s when it began installing the scanners in 2009.

“The TSA is going back on its word,” says Fred Cate, a law professor at Indiana University and prominent TSA-watcher. “The scanners were sold to Congress and the public on the promise that they were optional, but for at least some people, that is no longer the case.”

Marc Rotenberg, the executive director of the Electronic Privacy Informatio­n Center, which filed the original lawsuit to suspend deployment of the devices, says the new policy represents an important reversal. In previous court filings, the agency offered written assurance that the scanners were optional. Based on the agency’s statements, a federal appeals court affirmed the legality of using the full-body scanners as long as fliers were given a choice. “The TSA lacks the legal authority to compel travelers to go through the body scanners,” Rotenberg says.

Despite the concerns, the new scanning rules might improve security. “I believe it is one of the best initiative­s taken by TSA in recent memory,” says Anthony Roman, a counterter­rorism expert in Lynbrook, N.Y. “Surprise is the key element of this initiative. It creates a randomness and unpredicta­bility regarding who will be scanned and who will not be scanned.” That randomness, for fliers screened in the future, can prevent a terrorist attack, he adds.

Some fliers are skeptical and upset about the change. Karen Pliskin, an anthropolo­gist from Oakland, Calif., opts out of the scanners and plans to continue doing so. She objects to the advanced-imaging technology for several reasons, chief among them her fear that they may emit harmful radiation.

“I had a small skin cancer removed, and I don’t do anything that could potentiall­y exacerbate a recurrence,” she says. “No matter that the TSA says that their scanners are foolproof, only a fool would say that something is foolproof.”

For now, the TSA’s new rules mean you might not be able to say “no” to its full-body scanners on your next flight. If you do, you won’t be allowed into the boarding area. (Time is running out for the TSA; its scanners are expected to start reaching the end of their useful life in two years, and it’s unlikely they’ll be replaced.) Down the road, it’s unclear whether the TSA’s rules will change yet again, perhaps mandating that an opt out is no longer an option at all.

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