Why does TSA security vary so much for different airports?

8/18/2014 2:35:13 PM

In a word, money. And to some extent, people.

Everything costs. Some airports have had scares in the past and will allocate more money to TSA procedures. Some changes, like the Global Entry Pass, have improved some things and will cost additional money.

Let’s say the TSA has decided some new fancy scanner is the latest and greatest bomb detector. Can every airport afford to buy it? Even if the city or government pays for it (I’m not sure who does), people have to be trained to use it. And some of that technology is pretty modern – no longer are we checking people’s bags for water bottles, it’s now determining whether power packs for charging cellphones might or might not be potentially explosive batteries. When SSD harddrives became mainstream, iyt required more training as staff had been told to look for moving parts in laptops’ harddrives, and now there aren’t any.

There’s also limits in staff numbers – they all cost. So at certain times at certain airports you’re far more likely to be selected for gunpowder residue screening. Why? The guy’s job is to check a person, and when that’s done, look up and pick the next person. At peak times, 50 people may have walked past him in that time. He can’t check them all. However at quieter times, or in a smaller airport, the traffic of passengers is lower and he can check a greater percentage.

Same applies with drug/fruit-sniffing dogs. They get tired, require training, and can only be on the floor for a given period of time and check a limited number of bags.

So in a few words perhaps: money, time, and people.

8/18/2014 2:05:28 AM

There are 67,000 people in the TSA, and an increasing number of airports that opt for privatized security companies to do the job instead, so some variance will be inevitable. In your particular case, it sounds like either you’ve been going through the TSA Precheck line at OAK, or they’re confused/lazy/running a quiet trial and applying the Precheck rules to all passengers:

TSA Precheck allows passengers who have been pre-approved to keep on
their shoes and belt, not remove their jackets, keep their laptops
inside their cases, and not have to remove select liquids and gels
from their bags.

Full-body scanners are not mandatory and are in fact being removed now from all airports because (shh) they didn’t work.

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Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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