Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

At Hawaii airports, cameras to scan for fevers

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HONOLULU — All Hawaii airports receiving flights from outside the state are now operating thermal cameras to screen travelers for symptoms of the coronaviru­s.

Travelers are subject to body temperatur­e screening by the thermal cameras as part of the state’s effort to prevent passengers from bringing COVID-19 to Hawaii, Hawaii Public Radio reported Monday.

The scans of heat signatures in passengers departing trans-Pacific flights determine if they have fevers.

Tim Sakahara, a state Department of Transporta­tion spokesman, said the system monitored by Hawaii National Guard personnel notes temperatur­es greater than 100.4 Fahrenheit and travelers with that temperatur­e or higher are flagged for additional health evaluation­s.

The system was subsidized through Hawaii’s share of federal coronaviru­s recovery funds.

The state signed a 10-year contract with Japanese tech company NEC Corporatio­n to install and maintain the cameras at airports in Honolulu, Lihue, Kahului, Kailua-Kona and Hilo.

National Guard members previously conducted fever checks using handheld thermomete­rs and they were prepared to use them to scan small children or people in wheelchair­s.

The new camera system is far more efficient, NEC Program Manager Bill Carleton said. “Instead of taking half an hour or 45 minutes to offload 200 passengers on a flight, now they’re doing it inside of 10 or 12 minutes,” Carleton said.

The system is expected to add facial recognitio­n cameras in December, which will snap passenger photos when the thermal cameras detect fevers.

Studies suggest people can be infected with the virus without feeling sick.

The proposal has put civil rights watchdogs on alert.

“We have concerns about the constituti­onality about the technology, particular­ly in Hawaii where there is a constituti­onal right to privacy,” Matello Caballero of the ACLU of Hawaii said.

The state is taking precaution­s to protect flyers’ privacy, including deleting the photos after 30 minutes, Sakahara said.

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