The Transportation Security Administration
is getting ready to take over responsibility from the airlines for
checking passengers’ names against terrorist watch lists, and is
advising travelers to start booking airline tickets using their full
name as it appears on their driver’s license or passport.Later this summer, the agency will also begin requiring airlines to
ask passengers for their birth date and gender during the ticketing
process, information the carriers will then transfer to the T.S.A. The
goal is to help make the watch list matching process more accurate.But
it turns out that what’s in a name is more complicated than many
reservation systems are currently prepared to handle. So the airlines
are telling passengers not to worry if there is no place to enter a
middle name when purchasing a ticket, or no field for a date of birth.“I
think the most important thing for passengers to know is that when
their airline is ready to ask for that information, they’ll ask for
it,” said Tim Wagner, a spokesman for American Airlines — advice that was echoed by other carriers.While
the T.S.A. has announced Aug. 15 as a target date for the airlines to
begin asking for each passenger’s full name, gender and date of birth,
and has already begun publicizing the program, called Secure Flight,
the agency acknowledged that it would go into effect in phases as the
airlines update their systems.“What we’re trying to do is make
the public aware that these changes are coming,” said Paul Leyh, the
agency’s director for Secure Flight. “If your name is Jonathan Smith
and you travel as John Smith and your license says Johnny Smith — get
all those things aligned.”The government’s aim is to streamline
the process of checking travelers’ names against its watch lists — a
task currently handled separately by each airline — and to collect more
detailed information so passengers with names similar to those on the
watch list are less likely to be mistakenly detained.Asking
for a birth date, for instance, decreases the likelihood that a child
with a name close to one on the list would be subject to an additional
search — one example of a false match that has led to complaints.As
part of the Secure Flight program, travelers who have gotten caught up
in some type of name problem and go through the process to get their
identity cleared will be assigned a “redress number” that they can then
enter when booking a flight.This number, along with the other
passenger information, will be sent to the T.S.A., which will check it
against terrorist watch lists and tell the airline whether the traveler
is cleared to get a boarding pass, should be subject to an additional
search or is not allowed to fly.“Secure Flight is going to allow us to clear over 99 percent of passengers,” Mr. Leyh said.For
travelers who are cleared, the T.S.A. will keep passenger information
on file for seven days. For those who are a potential match, it will be
kept for seven years and for confirmed matches, it will be stored for
99 years.Concerns about data storage and privacy were among the
issues that held up the transfer of name-matching duties from the
airlines to the government, which was mandated by Congress in 2004.While
many of those objections have been addressed by narrowing the scope of
the information collected, there are still concerns about the quality
of the watch list data.“To be precise, we support the fact that
the government is now trying to make its matches more accurate,” said
Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy
Information Center, which has been advocating for stronger privacy
protections since Secure Flight’s inception.“The problem with
Secure Flight is that there’s still not adequate transparency or
redress for people who are placed on the list,” Mr. Rotenberg said. “As
we know from the latest report from the inspector general, the list is
riddled with errors.”The change will probably also create
frustrations for people who go by different names and have to
standardize the name listed on their passport, driver’s license and
possibly frequent-flier accounts.“I’ve got Francis on my
passport but I’ve always gone by Frank — my state I.D. and all of my
frequent-flier accounts are Frank,” said Frank Ritchotte, who handles
logistics for an audio and visual equipment manufacturer and flies
about 150,000 miles a year. CONTINUE READING..