With summer travel in full swing, nearly two million Americans every day are subject to airport security that’s invasive and dubiously effective. Travelers may now be able to post one-star reviews of their poor treatment on Yelp, but that doesn’t address the real problem with airport security: current screening methods are illegal.
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In July 2011, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled that the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) broke the law when it rolled out body scanners, because the agency did not go through the rulemaking process established by Congress. Now, in August 2015, the TSA still hasn’t complied with the court’s mandate that it go through the proper rulemaking process.
This means the American people have no way to hold the TSA accountable in court for employing these invasive and ineffective machines. The TSA has been doing as it pleases, kicking the can of accountability further and further into the future. It is time for the TSA’s lawlessness to end — that is why our organizations, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, National Center for Transgender Equality, and The Rutherford Institute, filed suit on the four-year anniversary of the ruling, asking the court to compel the TSA to complete a body scanner rule within 90 days. (They are being represented by CEI’s attorneys.)
The TSA started using whole-body imaging scanners to screen airline passengers back in 2008. But the agency never proposed updated regulations, solicited public comments on its body scanners, or published its rules in the Federal Register. Under the federal Administrative Procedure Act, however, the TSA is supposed to take these steps before it revises its screening policies.
In 2012, the TSA tried to explain away its inability to complete the regulatory process, saying it needed to fill “three current vacancies for economists.” This is laughable. The TSA has more than 50,000 full-time equivalent employees; it spent nearly $7.4 billion in 2014. In fact, Congress has noted that TSA has more employees than “the Departments of Labor, Energy, Education, Housing and Urban Development, and State, combined.” And the TSA’s parent department, the Department of Homeland Security, employs more than 1,800 attorneys. The TSA’s claim that it lacks the budget and personnel to comply with federal law and a court’s mandate is simply absurd.
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