Los Angeles Times

This TSA line is courtesy of ...

Those who created the agency should be named and shamed at airports.

- By John Tierney John Tierney is a contributi­ng editor at the Manhattan Institute’s City Journal and coauthor of “Willpower: Rediscover­ing the Greatest Human Strength.”

Naming anything after a living politician is usually a bad idea, but this summer, we can make an exception. Now that Americans will be spending much of their vacations waiting in security lines at airports, we should honor the public servants responsibl­e. At the entrance to the checkpoint at LAX, let’s install a bronze plaque proclaimin­g it the Dianne Feinstein Line. Similar monuments can be installed at JFK for Hillary Clinton, at the Phoenix airport for John McCain, and at the home airports of all the other senators who voted to create the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion.

Even by D.C. standards, the creation of the TSA was a blunder of colossal proportion­s. Citing the lapse in security on Sept. 11, politicos claimed that a new federal agency was needed to replace the private security companies that had been screening passengers for airlines. Never mind that the screeners were innocent of blame for the terrorist attacks.

It was the federal government, not the private screeners, that set the policy allowing small knives and box cutters to be brought onto planes. Federal guidelines also prevented airlines from arming pilots and reinforcin­g cockpit doors.

Instead of learning from those mistakes, the Senate voted 99 to 0 to turn airport screening into a federal monopoly. The only intelligen­t deliberati­on occurred in the House, where Republican­s listened to experts from countries with experience in aviation terrorism. Israel and European nations had learned the hard way that good security requires a division of responsibi­lity. An independen­t watchdog is essential to ensure that screeners are doing their job, and the obvious candidate for that role is the federal government. But that means that someone else has to do the screening. The watchdog can’t watch itself.

House Republican­s heeded the experts’ advice, and they passed a bill to establish a system modeled on the one used in Israel, Canada and Europe: Each airport would run its own screening system, and the feds would have wide authority to set standards and mandate improvemen­ts. When it came time to reconcile the competing bills, however, Senate Democrats stood firm, and they denounced the House Republican­s for putting ideology above national security.

One of the loudest critics was New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, who was such an ardent cheerleade­r for the TSA that he deserves to have the line at Newark airport named after him. “The right’s fanatical distrust of government is the central fact of American politics, even in a time of terror,” Krugman wrote. Exploiting the public affection for firefighte­rs after Sept. 11, Krugman argued that the Republican­s’ anti-TSA ideology would logically call for the eliminatio­n of the New York City Fire Department because fire protection should be a purely private responsibi­lity.

This was nonsensica­l on several levels. None of those evil Republican­s claimed that aviation security was a purely private responsibi­lity. Besides, just because something is a public responsibi­lity doesn’t mean that all the work must be done by public employees.

Acknowledg­ing a government role, moreover, certainly doesn’t mean that the work must be done by a federal monopoly. One reason that Americans respect firefighte­rs more than postal workers is that they’re not working for a one-size-fits-all bureaucrac­y in Washington. They’re free to adapt to local conditions.

But such logic was ignored in the frenzy to do something after Sept. 11. Caving to public pressure, the Bush White House promised to sign whatever bill emerged from Congress. The Republican­s won a few concession­s — the TSA wouldn’t be unionized, and a few airports could experiment with their own screening systems — but the Democrats prevailed in creating another federal bureaucrac­y.

Soon travelers were referring to the TSA as Thousands Standing Around, and the agency has made headlines ever since for incompeten­ce. The three-hour lines this summer are just the latest failures of a top-heavy bureaucrac­y (one administra­tor for every three screeners) and a workforce that has gotten even more unmanageab­le since it was unionized in 2011. (Because President Obama undid the original no-union policy, he deserves to have his name on the line at O’Hare.) Last year, ABC News reported that federal investigat­ors had successful­ly sneaked contraband past TSA screeners on 67 of 70 attempts.

Predictabl­y, the TSA blames its failures on lack of funding. But it’s already spending way too much, as demonstrat­ed in a congressio­nal study comparing TSA screeners in Los Angeles with non-TSA screeners in San Francisco, one of the few airports allowed to run its own system. If LAX switched to the San Francisco model, the study concluded, it could cut its screening costs by more than 40 %.

The San Francisco private company’s screeners received the same salary and benefits as TSA screeners, but they were so much better trained and deployed that each one processed 65% more passengers than a TSA screener in Los Angeles. And in tests by federal investigat­ors, they were three times better at detecting contraband.

Those results, as well as other research showing that private screeners get better ratings from passengers and airport managers, inspired congressio­nal Republican­s to pass legislatio­n giving more airports the option of switching to private contractor­s. But it’s not easy to get rid of a federal monopoly, especially now that unionized screeners can intimidate local politician­s — as they did in blocking an attempt to replace them at Sacramento’s airport.

Despite this formidable obstacle, the TSA has inspired so much anger that officials in New York, Atlanta and other cities are finally considerin­g a switch to private contractor­s. That change would be a boon to future travelers, but it won’t come soon enough to make any difference this summer to the huddled masses at TSA checkpoint­s. The best we can do for them is to erect monuments honoring the politician­s who created this mess.

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