Record #: R2016-328   
Type: Resolution Status: Failed to Pass
Intro date: 5/18/2016 Current Controlling Legislative Body: Joint Committee: Aviation; Finance
Final action:
Title: Call for Commissioner of Aviation to apply for participation in Transportation Security Administration Screening Partnership Program to enhance effectiveness and efficiency of passenger screening at Chicago's O'Hare and Midway Airports
Sponsors: Burke, Edward M., Laurino, Margaret, O'Connor, Patrick, Zalewski, Michael R.
Topic: CITY DEPARTMENTS/AGENCIES - Aviation
Attachments: 1. R2016-328.pdf
Related files: R2019-362
RESOLUTION >C-\^^ ~
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WHEREAS, On May 15, 2016, approximately 450 American Airlines customers at O'Hare International Airport (O'Hare) missed flights due to security lines of more than two hours; and

WHEREAS, Security lines of nearly three hours have been reported at Midway International Airport (Midway), and more than 2 million people have viewed a video showing the security line stretch nearly all the way the CTA Orange Line station; and

WHEREAS, Transportation Safety Administration (TSA) screeners nationwide numbered 45,000 in 2011 and now total 42,525; and

WHEREAS, TSA workers at O'Hare dropped from 2,045 in 2012 to 1,932 last year; and

WHEREAS, Chicago's airports are among the busiest in the world having served more than 90 million passengers in 2015; and

WHEREAS, The TSA's Screening Partnership Program permits airports to have passenger and baggage screening performed by qualified private contractors under federal oversight and in compliance with all TSA security screening procedures; and

WHEREAS, Twenty-one U.S. airports, including San Francisco International and Kansas City International, employ their own screeners under the Screening Partnership Program; and

WHEREAS, In February, citing chronic staffing shortages causing long passenger waits at TSA checkpoints, the general manager of Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport informed the TSA that the airport was considering utilizing private security personnel under the TSA's Screening Partnership Program; and

WHEREAS, In May, the director and the chief security officer of The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the operator of John F. Kennedy International, Newark Liberty International and LaGuardia airports, sent the TSA a letter highlighting the continuing inadequacy of TSA passenger screening services and stating that the Port Authority was exploring the merits of participating in the Screening Partnership Program to enhance flexibility in the assignments and operating hours of...

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