US Releases
Long-awaited Air Cargo Security Regulation
by Aaron Karp
The US government's
final rule on air cargo security was issued this week
after three years of debate and revision, marking the
first major change to the regulations since
1999."Working with the industry, we have set a solid
foundation for a major segment of the transportation
network," US Transportation Security Administration
Assistant Secretary Kip Hawley said. "In addition, TSA
is working with our partners on a series of separate
operational measures that raise security in air
cargo."
The new rule does not
require widespread electronic screening of cargo,
which both freighter operators such as FedEx and UPS
and passenger carriers transporting belly cargo argued
would slow operations to a crawl. Instead, it focuses
on extending secure areas at airports, requires
extensive background checks of workers and heightens
scrutiny of "known shipper" lists that allow frequent
shippers of airfreight to have their cargo cleared
faster.
The rule calls for
consolidation of approximately 4,000 known shipper
lists into one central database managed by TSA,
allowing the agency "to have more visibility into the
activities of companies shipping on passenger aircraft
and permit more in-depth vetting of known shippers."
TSA has said it considers cargo coming from known
shippers to be "screened."
The regulation also
extends secure areas of airports to include ramps and
cargo facilities, a provision TSA said requires an
additional 50,000 airline employees "to receive full
criminal history background checks." It mandates
background checks of approximately 51,000 off-airport
employees working for freight forwarders as
well.
A public-private
working group comprising government officials and
representatives of airlines and other operators spent
six months in 2003 drafting recommendations for a new
airfreight security directive. TSA spent a year
mulling the suggestions and issued a proposed air
cargo security rule in November 2004. But the final
rule endured 18 months of review by TSA, the Dept. of
Homeland Security and White House officials before
issuance on Wednesday.
TSA said the rule will
be complemented by current initiatives to increase
cargo inspections at airports, including enhanced use
of bomb-sniffing canines and better utilization of TSA
workers and equipment at airports handling high
volumes of cargo.