Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Screening Partnership Program (SPP), instituted in 2004 by the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) in the United States, is a program that allows airports to employ private security agencies to conduct screening, instead of having the TSA conduct said screenings. Airports and security agencies must complete applications in order to ...
The CDC program, the worker tells her, is to help track COVID-19 variants and other infectious diseases that could be coming into the country. The survey and nose-swabbing will only take a few ...
A program to implement temperature checks for passengers, widely expected to be introduced in the coming days, was not included in the changes.
"Because the symptoms of COVID-19 are nonspecific, symptom-based screening programs are ineffective for case detection," the CDC says.
A Clear kiosk at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in 2009. A registered traveler is a person qualified through an airline passenger security assessment system in the United States air travel industry.
Congress presented the TSA with a list of requirements for a successor to CAPPS I. Some of those requirements were: The government, not the airlines, would control and administer the system; Every ticketed passenger would be screened, not just those who check bags; Every airline and every airport would be covered by the system
Membership costs $100 and requires a rigorous screening via online application and in-person interview, after which travelers can enter through automated airport kiosks. baona/istockphoto
Boarding pass of passenger selected for secondary security screening, indicated by the initials SSSS. CIA Assessment on Surviving Secondary Screening. Secondary Security Screening Selection or Secondary Security Screening Selectee, known by its initials SSSS, is an airport security measure in the United States which selects passengers for additional inspection.