TSA Plans to Produce Revamped Security Proposal by Year-end
October 24, 2011
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officials have told NBAA that they hope to issue a new proposed business aircraft security program by the end of this year. The new proposal, which is expected to be markedly different from the Large Aircraft Security Program (LASP) offered in October 2009, will need to be reviewed and approved by the Department of Homeland Security and Office of Management and Budget before being published for public comment.
“TSA heard our concerns about the most egregious elements of the original LASP proposal,” said Doug Carr, NBAA's vice president for safety, security & regulation. Those provisions included the aircraft weight threshold, prohibited items list, and the requirements for third-party auditors and Federal Air Marhalls onboard business airplanes. Even the name of the new security proposal is expected to be different, reflecting a new approach to business aviation security
TSA has included a “trusted pilot” element in all of its other aircraft operator security programs, and Carr expects it to be part of the new proposal as well. Carr also believes that the new proposal will reflect more of a risk-based approach to security, since TSA Administrator John Pistole, in an effort to evolve his agency into a high-performance counterterrorism organization, has announced plans to reorganize TSA so it can adopt a more intelligence-driven, risk-based approach to security.
Besides having received input from NBAA Staff, business aircraft operators (including NBAA's Security Council) have helped TSA officials re-craft the business aviation security proposal, said Doug Hofsass, TSA’s deputy assistant administrator for Transportation Sector Network Management, during a well-attended security session at the recent NBAA Annual Meeting & Convention. "This rule is going to make a lot more sense, and it's really good security," he declared.



