Friendly Frog
DIS veteran with a mouse on her back.
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2005
- Messages
- 1,701
I hate coming into a thread like this late, especially when it is headed to being locked.
People make mistakes. TSA agents are under a lot of pressure. The must safely, quickly, and thoroughly inspect everyone while not "upsetting" or "over searching" anyone...and it can be a life or death matter.
The bad guys are testing airport security every day. You can bet that as soon as they find an area of minimum search, they will exploit it. ( Yes, better safe than, umm dead.)
The screening job is repetitive. I would imagine that it would really hard to stay in full concentration every moment of every day....day in and day out..... watching bag, bag, bag, bag, bag, bag. I am grateful that the employee put airport security first by alerting to the bag, rather than cover her tush and say nothing.
In the final analysis, I see it as a mistake was make. TSA owned up to it. They went into action and did everything they could (thank goodness) to insure our safety. The next step is to review what happened and learn from it. See if policy or procedure changes can help to prevent this from occurring again. As much went right as went wrong.
As for the guys seemingly doing nothing. Maybe their job is to watch for suspicious behaviour? That is a large part of any security team. Maybe their job is to "hang out", observe, and step as added force when needed?
People make mistakes. TSA agents are under a lot of pressure. The must safely, quickly, and thoroughly inspect everyone while not "upsetting" or "over searching" anyone...and it can be a life or death matter.
The bad guys are testing airport security every day. You can bet that as soon as they find an area of minimum search, they will exploit it. ( Yes, better safe than, umm dead.)
The screening job is repetitive. I would imagine that it would really hard to stay in full concentration every moment of every day....day in and day out..... watching bag, bag, bag, bag, bag, bag. I am grateful that the employee put airport security first by alerting to the bag, rather than cover her tush and say nothing.
In the final analysis, I see it as a mistake was make. TSA owned up to it. They went into action and did everything they could (thank goodness) to insure our safety. The next step is to review what happened and learn from it. See if policy or procedure changes can help to prevent this from occurring again. As much went right as went wrong.

As for the guys seemingly doing nothing. Maybe their job is to watch for suspicious behaviour? That is a large part of any security team. Maybe their job is to "hang out", observe, and step as added force when needed?