The Denver Post

FLYERS TO U.S. TO FACE MORE SECURITY

Foreigners might face security interviews from airline employees

- By Jon Gambrell

Passengers traveling on internatio­nal flights to the United States will face tougher security screening beginning Thursday, the TSA says.

DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES» All incoming flights to the United States will be subject to new security screening procedures before takeoff, including American citizens and foreigners possibly facing security interviews from airline employees, the U.S. government said Wednesday.

American air carriers and global airlines must comply, affecting all the 2,100 flights from around the world entering the U.S. on any given day. The directive is far broader than an earlier Trump administra­tion ban on laptops inside the cabins of some airliners, which targeted only 10 Mideast cities and their airlines.

Confusion greeted the new rules. While five global long-haul carriers said they would begin the new security interviews Thursday, each offered different descriptio­ns of how the procedure would take place, ranging from a form travelers would be required to fill out to being verbally quizzed by an airline employee. Other carriers insisted their operations remained the same.

“The security measures affect all individual­s, internatio­nal passengers and U.S. citizens, traveling to the United States from a last point of departure internatio­nal location,” said Lisa Farbstein, a spokeswoma­n for the U.S. Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion. “These new measures will impact all flights from airports that serve as last points of departure locations to the United States.”

The new rules come at the end of a 120day window for new U.S. safety regulation­s to be implemente­d following the lifting of the laptop ban imposed on some Mideast airlines. They include “heightened screening of personal electronic devices” and stricter security procedures around planes and in airport terminals, Farbstein said. She did not elaborate.

U.S. carriers also will be affected by the new rules. Delta Air Lines said it was telling passengers traveling to the U.S. to arrive at the airport at least three hours before their flight and allow extra time to get through security.

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