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TSA must consult GA stakeholders, says House subcommittee

By Janice Wood · May 15, 2009 ·

The House Homeland Security Committee responded to concerns raised by the general aviation community by calling for the Transportation Security Administration to increase GA participation in security initiatives, in a bill passed out of committee on May 6.

In a markup of a bill authorizing funding for TSA programs, the transportation security and infrastructure protection subcommittee included provisions to increase stakeholder participation with the TSA on security initiatives affecting GA. Chairman Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas), Ranking Member Charlie Dent (R-Pa.), and other members of the subcommittee voiced concern over the lack of communication from the TSA to the GA community about proposals affecting GA, particularly the controversial Large Aircraft Security Program (LASP), according to a May 13 report from AOPA.

The LASP proposal would apply commercial airline security procedures to aircraft weighing more than 12,500 pounds, regardless of how they are used. The Transportation Security Administration Authorization Act would create an Aviation Security Advisory Committee (ASAC) and a General Aviation Security Working Group to ensure that the agency consults stakeholders before imposing security initiatives such as LASP, which could have a crippling effect on GA. The GA security working group would provide the TSA with recommendations on ways to improve security at GA airports. The bill also establishes a grant program for $10 million worth in security improvements at GA airports.

The TSA proposed its LASP rule in October without any consultation about the potential effect on GA. Since then, lawmakers from across the country have been urging the agency to work with the GA industry on an alternative.

During the markup, Rep. Pete Olson (R-Texas) introduced an amendment that would have required the TSA to engage in a negotiated rulemaking process for the LASP proposal, obligating the agency to consider stakeholder input. He withdrew it with the promise that the subcommittee will hold a hearing on the LASP and GA. “I am concerned that the TSA is moving ahead with a rule without having a true substantive discussion with the stakeholders that will be most affected by it,” Olson said. “I support improving security for general aviation aircraft and airports. However, I object to a rushed approach that abandons the objective risk analysis upon which TSA decisions should be based. I am pleased that the Chairwoman has recognized the need to further investigate this matter, and I look forward to working with her and the subcommittee as we move forward.”

Dent cosponsored Olson’s amendment, saying that the TSA overreached with the proposal. “Over the last few months, I’ve spoken with a number of pilots in my district (PA-15) who are both confused and outraged at the TSA’s effort to promulgate a rule that would significantly impact their ability to utilize their personal aircraft” without allowing them to participate in the process, he said after the markup. He added that he will continue to pursue the issue “until we reach an equitable conclusion for industry as well as TSA.”

Rep. Candice Miller (R-Mich.) and Delegate Eleanor Holmes-Norton (D-D.C.) also expressed concern at the markup with the agency’s lack of consultation with GA stakeholders for the LASP. The bill was passed by the subcommittee 12-0 and will be considered by the full committee before going to the House floor.

About Janice Wood

Janice Wood is editor of General Aviation News.

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