aircargo screening: so far,
so good
So far, so good.
That was the consensus of airfreight forwarders polled
one week after an Aug. 1 mandate took effect requiring the
screening or physical inspection of all air cargo shipped in
the bellies of passenger planes flying from U.S. airports.
A survey conducted by the Airforwarders Association,
whose freight forwarder members operate, in aggregate,
709 facilities or stations across the United States, found that
two-thirds reported no service disruptions in the week following the mandate’s Aug. 1 effective date. About 28 percent reported scattered disruptions but chalked it up to
“glitches” relating to start-up, the group said. The remaining 5 percent said they encountered “serious issues,”
according to the survey.
Many of the forwarders who reported no problems said
the mounting compliance worries leading up to Aug. 1
reminded them of the Y2K scare, which arose over concerns
about the impact the transition to the year 2000 would have
on the world’s information technology networks. Fears
over Y2K led companies to invest millions of dollars to
upgrade their technologies prior to Jan. 1, 2000—a date
that came and went with scarcely a service hitch.
Brandon Fried, the Airforwarders Association’s executive
director, cautioned that the first week of August is usually a
slow period for aircargo activity and that the industry will
get a better read on the situation once it gets past the summer doldrums and heads into the fall peak season.
When asked about their outlook for fall, 55 percent of the
survey respondents said the heightened security would cause
little, if any, disruption during the peak season and beyond.
About 39 percent said they were a “bit worried” but cautiously optimistic, according to the survey. Six percent said
they had “serious reservations” about the industry’s ability to
scale up to significantly higher volumes without the tougher
security rules’ having an adverse impact on operations.
Of the 709 stations or facilities operated by the respondents, 88 were classified by the Transportation Security
Administration as Certified Cargo Screening Facilities. The
designation means those facilities are approved by the federal government to either screen or inspect cargo.
Fried said his members seem optimistic that the industry
can overcome operational challenges especially as security
processes improve and more screening facilities come on line.
By law, all belly cargo being shipped within the United States
or in U.S. export commerce must be screened or inspected by
a certified supply chain participant that accepts “chain of custody” responsibility for the shipment. That could be a shipper,
an intermediary, an airline, or one of the third-party screening
facilities known in industry lingo as “car washes.”
—M.S.
newsworthy
The airfreight industry is lobbying the Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) to allow companies to hire and train
bomb-sniffing dogs to help screen cargo moving in the bellies
of passenger planes, according to a well-placed industry source.
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