Lodi News-Sentinel

TSA finds floppy-ear dogs are less scary

- By Hugo Martin

In its effort to make the airport security screening process faster, the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion is employing new hightech baggage scanners, facial-recognitio­n cameras and “automated lanes” to eliminate passenger gridlock.

But TSA Administra­tor David Pekoske said the agency is also making at least one new change to reduce traveler stress: deploying more floppy-ear dogs, rather than pointy-ear dogs, to sniff out explosives in public areas.

During a recent tour of Washington Dulles Internatio­nal Airport, Pekoske told the Washington Examiner that his agency believes floppy-ear dogs are less intimidati­ng to travelers than dogs with pointy ears.

“We find the passenger acceptance of floppy-ear dogs is just better,” he said. “It presents just a little bit less of a concern. Doesn’t scare children.”

The TSA has more than 900 teams of officers and explosive-sniffing dogs either screening passengers at airports or sniffing cargo and baggage behind the scenes. About a third of those dogs interact with passengers in airports, according to the TSA.

The agency says it trains seven breeds of dogs: German shepherds (pointy ears), Labrador retrievers (floppy ears), German shorthaire­d pointers (floppy ears), wirehaired pointers (floppy ears), Vizslas (floppy ears), Belgian Malinois (pointy ears) and golden retrievers (floppy ears).

Because of the federal shutdown, TSA representa­tives could not be reached to comment on how the agency will transition to more floppy-ear dogs.

 ?? CARL JUSTE/MIAMI HERALD FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? TSA officer Cedric Belvin and German short-hair pointer Angus search departing passengers for explosives at Miami Internatio­nal Airport, Concourse J, South TSA checkpoint on Nov. 21, 2018 in Miami, Fla.
CARL JUSTE/MIAMI HERALD FILE PHOTOGRAPH TSA officer Cedric Belvin and German short-hair pointer Angus search departing passengers for explosives at Miami Internatio­nal Airport, Concourse J, South TSA checkpoint on Nov. 21, 2018 in Miami, Fla.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States