Airlines, TSA seeking advanced security screening devices - New York News | NYC Breaking News

Airlines, TSA seeking advanced security screening devices

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NEW YORK -

Fliers may soon be saying goodbye to annoying airport security lines, and hello to a sci-fi future of high-tech safety screening.

In the next seven to 10 years, passengers will be able to breeze through security without even noticing they are being electronically scanned for weapons and contraband, if airport security experts have their way.

No longer will passengers have to suffer the indignity of pulling off shoes and belts. They will go through a security experience that seems more like passing through a hallway than enduring the angry cluster of humanity they are familiar with now.

"We see it as a walk-through process," according to Perry Flint, of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), an airline group.

Instead of metal detectors, software hooked up to video cameras will ensure safety by assessing passengers' mannerisms to help screeners determine whether they are threats.

And security screeners will identify passengers through biometric finger scans or eye scans instead of passports and driver's licenses. Weapons will be identified by remote machines that will not require a trip through a traditional metal detector.

"We see screening technology that means you are not taking your coat off, and you are not taking your computer out of its case," Flint said.

While the technology is years away, Port Authority of New York and New Jersey officials are planning for new screening technology as they seek designs for a new Central Terminal at New York's LaGuardia Airport and a new Terminal A at Newark Airport in New Jersey.

Screeners at US airports check about 600 million passengers a year through 2,300 security lanes.

Read More: Airlines, TSA seeking advanced security screening devices

 

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