U.S. Travel’s advocacy and leadership defeats a harmful amendment to the FAA renewal bill
May 17, 2024 By U.S. Travel Association
The travel industry’s collective voice was on full display as a bipartisan,
long-term Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) renewal bill passed
earlier this week. U.S. Travel Association President and CEO Geoff Freeman called
enactment of the legislation “a big step toward vastly improving the travel experience.”
Measures in the bill will address delays and cancellations and other travel hassles by
modernizing air traffic control technology, boosting the air traffic control workforce,
and investing in additional improvements to our nation’s airports and air travel
system.
U.S. Travel was instrumental in defeating a harmful amendment proposed to the FAA bill
that threatened to prevent the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) from using and
expanding most automated facial recognition
technology at airport checkpoints in the U.S.
This amendment would have undermined national security and slowed checkpoint screening –
resulting in travelers waiting an additional 120 million hours in TSA lines each year by
significantly slowing both TSA PreCheck and standard screening lanes.
Defeating the amendment was the result of aggressive lobbying, media, and grassroots advocacy from U.S. Travel, our members and the broader aviation community.
On May
2, Tori Barnes, U.S. Travel’s executive vice president of public affairs and policy, told
Skift, “We see this as a very dangerous bill that would undermine aviation security, delay
millions of flyers, and set TSA passenger screening back decades. Frankly, biometrics is
the future of air travel screening.”
U.S. Travel will continue its work to educate members of Congress on the benefits of
expanded facial recognition technology—with the goal of ensuring provisions like the
amendment by Senator Jeff Merkley (D-OR) and Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) don't threaten
progress.
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