Texarkana Gazette

Your face will be your passport at Delta check points

- By Natasha Rausch

Delta Air Lines Inc. is deploying facial-recognitio­n technology to replace passports and tickets at Atlanta’s airport in a test that could lead to more widespread use of biometric identifica­tion for flyers.

The new system will be phased in on Oct. 15 at check-in kiosks, baggage-drop counters, security checkpoint­s and boarding lines for internatio­nal flights in Terminal F of Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport, Delta said Thursday.

If customers take to the technology at the world’s busiest airport, and it helps to reduce boarding times and shorten long lines, the biometrics will be rolled out to other domestic and internatio­nal airport terminals, said Delta Chief Operating Officer Gil West.

“If it works in Atlanta, it’ll work anywhere,” West said.

The service is optional for now. To use it, customers will enter their passport informatio­n during online check-in. Then, at each transition point at the airport, passengers will approach the kiosks with cameras to scan their faces and wait for a green check mark before proceeding to the next spot. Passengers flying with Delta partners Aeromexico, Air France KLM, and Virgin Atlantic Airways are also eligible to use the service, the U.S. carrier said. Streamlini­ng Travel

Airlines and security agencies are experiment­ing with fingerprin­t scans and facial-recognitio­n technology to streamline the traveling experience for passengers. In June, the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion became the latest participan­t, using fingerprin­t scans at the Denver and Atlanta airports to identify passengers and their flying itinerarie­s in lieu of official identifica­tion papers and boarding passes.

The new technology is in line with a Congressio­nal mandate for Customs and Border Protection to begin using biometrics to identify people as they exit the country, according to John Wagner, deputy executive assistant commission­er at U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

By partnering with airlines and airports, the agency is “solving a complicate­d security mandate by focusing on the traveler experience,” Wagner said. “What we’ve heard from travelers is, if it’s quicker, makes them more secure and it’s easier to do, then they’re all for it.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States