American Airlines Pilots Revolt Against the TSA
Minyanville
The Atlantic
Monthly's Jeffrey Goldberg, no
fan of the TSA himself, got his hands on a letter from Captain
Dave Bates, president of the Allied Pilots Association, which represents
11,000 American Airlines pilots.
Goldberg wonders:
"It is
a source of continual astonishment to me that pilots many
of whom, it should be pointed out, are military veterans who possess
security clearances are not allowed to carry onboard their
airplanes pocket knives and bottles of shampoo, but then they're
allowed to fly enormous, fuel-laden, missile-like objects over American
cities."
Anyway, here's
the note sent to APA members by Captain Bates:
Fellow Pilots,
In response
to increased threats to civil aviation around the world, the Transportation
Security Administration (TSA) has implemented the use of Advanced
Imaging Technology (AIT) body scanners at some airport locations.
While I'm
sure that each of us recognizes that the threats to our lives
are real, the practice of airport security screening of airline
pilots has spun out of control and does nothing to improve national
security. It's long past time that policymakers take the steps
necessary to exempt commercial pilots from airport security screening
and grant designated pilot access to SIDA utilizing either Crew
Pass or biometric identification. As I recently wrote to the TSA
Administrator:
"Our
pilots are highly motivated partners in the effort to protect
our nation's security, with many of us serving as Federal Flight
Deck Officers. We are all keenly aware that we may serve as the
last line of defense against another terrorist attack on commercial
aviation. Rather than being viewed as potential threats, we should
be treated commensurate with the authority and responsibility
that we are vested with as professional pilots."
It is important
to note that there are "backscatter" AIT devices now
being deployed that produce ionizing radiation, which could be
harmful to your health. Airline pilots in the United States already
receive higher doses of radiation in their on-the-job environment
than nearly every other category of worker in the United States,
including nuclear power plant employees. As I also stated in my
recent letter to the Administrator of the TSA:
"We
are exposed to radiation every day on the job. For example, a
typical Atlantic crossing during a solar flare can expose a pilot
to radiation equivalent to 100 chest X-rays per hour. Requiring
pilots to go through the AIT means additional radiation exposure.
I share our pilots' concerns about this additional radiation exposure
and plan to recommend that our pilots refrain from going through
the AIT. We already experience significantly higher radiation
exposure than most other occupations, and there is mounting evidence
of higher-than-average cancer rates as a consequence."
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the rest of the article
November
6, 2010
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