Pilots' Licenses Lack Security Measures, Mica Says
08:29 pm
October 19, 2010
by Bill Chappell
If you were pulled over while driving — and you showed the officer a license with Henry Ford's picture on it, they would be forgiven for thinking something's very wrong. But as the AP reports, most pilots use a license whose sole image is that of Orville and Wilbur Wright.
As the article details, most airline pilots are expected to show their company ID when accessing a plane or tarmac. But most private pilots would only be expected to show their FAA license — when renting a plane, for instance.
The new requirements were in the expansive Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004. In it, Congress told the Federal Aviation Administration to create a pilot's license that included a photo and the ability to store biometric information to help confirm the pilot's identity.
Rep. John Mica of Florida, the ranking Republican on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, recently sent a letter to the heads of the FAA, the Transportation Security Administration and the Homeland Security Department to ask why the license hadn't been created.
Part of the delay seems to have come from the agencies' inability to agree on a single biometric system — to ensure that the system used in the licenses would be readable by scanners at airports. But, Mica told the AP, the three agencies are merely pointing fingers at each other.
And on his Web site, Mica said the situation "looks like a Three Stooges episode."
Responding to his letter, FAA spokeswoman Sasha Johnson told the AP that "the licenses issued now already have the capability to hold biometric information."
But according to the AP, "Mica said that's not what the agency told his staff."
A hint of why Mica might be publicly calling out the transportation and security agencies might lie in another news item linked to from his site. This one, an article from The St. Augustine Record, is titled "Mica Would Become Transportation Committee Chairman."
The piece details how Mica was poised to take control of the panel in 2007 but, "That didn't work out," Mica told the newspaper.



Renewal every 3 year for $5.00. Hows that for the start of a new tax. 