Secure Flight launches today

Published 15 May 2009

Secure Flight is the third version — you may recall CAPPS and CAPPS II — of the U.S. federal government’s decade-old effort to screen commercial airline passengers for risk against terrorist watch lists; it launches today

Third time lucky? Secure Flight, the third version of the U.S. federal government’s decade-old effort to screen commercial airline passengers for risk against terrorist watch lists, takes off today, one day after the Government Accountability Office (GAO ) told Congress that the program still needs more work.

Airlines will begin asking passengers to make flight reservations using the exact name on their government-issued identification. As implementation proceeds, travelers will be required to provide their date of birth and gender. If travelers have experienced previous false matches, they may also provide a TSA-issued redress number to expedite vetting.

GAO reported that it has not received TSA’s assurance that the program would remain under budget and reach full implementation on schedule next year. TSA’s original cost estimate of $1.36 billion is “not comprehensive, fully accurate, or credible,” GAO said, further citing TSA’s failure to develop plans periodically to assess the program’s name-matching accuracy.

Greg Soule, a TSA spokesman, told Security Management that today represents the first step in a phased approach toward making Secure Flight fully operational by early 2010 for all domestic flights and by late 2010 for all international flights.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) launched its Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System (CAPPS ) in the late 1990s. Nine of the 19 9/11 hijackers were flagged under CAPPS when they checked in for their flights, either based on their names or for failure to provide adequate identification. All were cleared either because they had no checked bags or  their checked bags were screened, according to the 9/11 Commission.

Matthew Harwood writes that after 9/11, the newly established TSA launched the ill-fated CAPPS II, under which airlines maintained responsibility for passenger vetting. Poor administration and the use of several unconsolidated watch lists led to rampant false matches, even affecting members of Congress.

The TSA canceled CAPPS II in 2004 and rebranded it in 2005 as Secure Flight, acting on the 9/11 Commission recommendation to move screening responsibility from airlines to the government, who will receive passengers information from carriers. Congress, however, placed ten conditions on Secure Flight, of which GAO said this week that TSA had satisfied all but one, covering cost estimates and plans.