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Ed
03-31-2008, 04:37 AM
Tighter security anchors Port Canaveral
Experts beef up the screening of passengers and bags at Canaveral.

Jeannette Rivera-lyles
Sentinel Staff Writer
March 31, 2008

If you're cruising out of Port Canaveral, you might face additional security screening under a program announced by the Transportation Security Agency on Sunday.

Then again, you might not.

A team of security specialists from various federal and local agencies will be randomly deployed at the port to screen passengers and their bags, said Lee Kair, the federal security director for TSA at Orlando International Airport.

"One day we might have on-site an expert on fraudulent documents and another expert on behavior," Kair said.

"The next, we might have none or we might have 10 other experts. The idea is to keep things random and unpredictable."

Port Canaveral is only the second port in the state to get the beefed-up TSA security. The Port of Jacksonville was the first.

TSA officials did not say how many days each month Port Canaveral, the second-busiest in the state for cruise-ship passengers, would have the added security.

Some of the experts will be visible, while others will work undercover.

"You want part of the team to be visible as a deterrent factor, but we will have people working behind the scenes as well," Kair said.


No additional cost

There is no dollar figure attached to the new program because the TSA will use existing resources, Kair said.

The team of experts at the port on Sunday included members of the U.S. Coast Guard, Federal Air Marshals, U.S. Customs, the U.S. Border Patrol, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and the Brevard County Sheriff's Office.

TSA created the "visible intermodal prevention" teams after the 2004 Madrid train bombings to enhance security on rail and other mass-transit systems.

It was recently extended to cover waterways.

Most cruise-ship passengers at Port Canaveral on Sunday welcomed the added security, which included bomb-sniffing dogs and plenty of uniformed officers from various agencies circulating at the check-in areas.


The same attention

"It makes sense that ports be given the same level of attention as airports," said Raymond Bach of Atlanta.

"I think you're actually more vulnerable to an attack in a ship that is out in the middle of the ocean for days than in a two-hour plane ride. If a bad guy gets in, they'll have quite a bit of time to carry out their plan," he said.

Other passengers said they were surprised it had taken this long to roll out this security plan in the ports.

"Wasn't that what was supposed to happen after September 11?" said Leigh Jordan, a Tallahassee resident. "I thought all of these agencies were supposed to be collaborating and sharing resources. Well, I'm glad they're finally here."


No specific attack on radar

A statement issued by the agency said there is no new intelligence suggesting a specific terrorist attack at this time.

The deployment of security teams to U.S. ports is designed to enhance "security networks."

TSA is the lead passenger- and bags-screening agency in the nation's airports but acts only as "a support agency" in ports, said Sari Koshetz, a spokeswoman with the agency.

Carnival Cruise Lines, Disney Cruise Line and Royal Caribbean International all sail out of Port Canaveral.

The port generates more than 35,000 jobs in Central Florida and $80 million in regional taxes.


Jeannette Rivera-Lyles can be reached at [email protected] or 407-420-5471.


Copyright © 2008, Orlando Sentinel

JerseyDad
03-31-2008, 02:27 PM
"It makes sense that ports be given the same level of attention as airports," said Raymond Bach of Atlanta.

"I think you're actually more vulnerable to an attack in a ship that is out in the middle of the ocean for days than in a two-hour plane ride. If a bad guy gets in, they'll have quite a bit of time to carry out their plan," he said.

Other passengers said they were surprised it had taken this long to roll out this security plan in the ports.


...I say, "Bravo" to added security. Although no one can crash a ship into a building....I'm not sure why the 1985 hijacking of Achille Lauro didn't spur on these action YEARS ago. I was on to Wonder this past November, and was SHOCKED...about how fast I got through security.

Jasper
03-31-2008, 02:41 PM
You can add me to the list of those who have wondered what was taking so long to get better security at the ports. And even at this rate the stepped up measures appear from here to be more selling of the sizzle rather than selling the steak!

While I agree that it would be hard to ram a ship into anything important you can still kill a whole lot of people on that ship if you take it down or set loose an environmental agent of some sort. In fact, even though I am no expert, I would think that some sort of chemical or biological agent released into a closed environment like a cruise ship could cause major havoc VERY quickly.

Of course, this still doesn't take into account the huge number of cargo ships that off-load onto our docks every day! Obviously there is still room for a lot to be done at the ports!