For airline passengers, the
attempted Christmas Day attack and a
directive by President Obama to
pursue advanced screening technology
will certainly mean added security
procedures at airports. ¶ So for
high-tech companies in Southern
California and elsewhere, the
increased focus on airport security
means new opportunities to land
hefty government contracts. ¶ Among
those is Syagen Technology Inc., a
Tustin company with 20 employees
that has built an airport screening
device that blows air on travelers
and then analyzes the cast-off
particles to detect explosives. The
Transportation Safety Administration
shelved an older version of the
device because of maintenance
problems. But, company President
Jack Syage said, the Christmas
attack has renewed interest in the
next generation of air-analyzing
units. ¶ "Everybody has started to
talk about new technology at the
airports," he said.
Other firms, including a small New
York company that makes a
shoe-scanning device and a Torrance
venture that builds screeners to
take full-body images of passengers,
have shifted into high gear in
recent weeks to meet the renewed
security efforts.
And plenty of money is at stake.
The Obama administration set aside
$1 billion last year in stimulus
funds for new security technology
for the TSA. About $700 million of
that will be spent to improve
baggage screening efforts, and $300
million is allocated for technology
to detect explosives carried by
passengers.
In response to a presidential order
this month to "aggressively pursue
advanced screening technology" at
airports, Homeland Security
Secretary Janet Napolitano said her
agency would move quickly to deploy
new machinery and would work with
other government agencies to develop
cutting-edge security equipment.
Some of the new technology may also
come from government scientists. The
Homeland Security Department's
science and technology directorate
operates a laboratory in New Jersey
where technology is developed and
tested. For example, scientists at
the lab are trying to create a
device that, much like trained dogs,
can smell explosives.
"There are a lot of things we are
looking at that are not ready for
prime time," said John S. Verrico, a
spokesman for the directorate. "A
lot of it may not even work."
Such devices will be added to what
analysts call a "layered approach"
to airport security. This means that
before passengers board an airplane,
they must clear a series of security
measures and devices such as watch
lists, X-ray scanners, metal
detectors and full-body image
scanners.
Despite the advanced wizardry of
today's security devices, some
terrorists might already be devising
ways to skirt them.
"Even though it is a layered
approach, it is fairly predictable,"
said Steve Vinsik, a vice president
at Unisys Corp., one of the many
larger companies also involved in
the rush to improve airport
security. The Pennsylvania firm won
a contract last month to design and
manage a security system for Los
Angeles International, L.A./Ontario
International and Van Nuys airports.
Unisys evaluates and coordinates the
use of different technologies, but
Vinsik said he believes more money
should be spent to train and
dispatch airport security agents.
"At the end of the day, there is no
computer system that is going to
replace that," he said.
Still, small and large technology
companies see the heightened concern
about airline security as a chance
to turn a profit.
Michael Goldberg, president of IDO
Security, a New York company with 11
employees, was thrilled last month
when the TSA issued a "request for
information" on devices that screen
shoes for weapons and explosives.
The request means the TSA wants to
gather information about the
technology on the market, with an
eye toward eventually ordering the
devices. About nine years ago, a man
on a flight from Paris to Miami
tried to ignite an explosive hidden
in his shoes.
Goldberg submitted to the TSA
information on his invention, the
Magshoe, a step-on device that
screens shoes while they're still on
passengers' feet. The units, priced
between $5,000 and $7,000 each, can
detect metal and metal compounds in
explosive material. The Magshoe is
already in use at airports in Israel
and will soon be deployed in China.
"The time for our technology has
definitely come," Goldberg said.
After the attempted attack on
Christmas Day, in which a Nigerian
national is accused of trying to
detonate explosives hidden in his
underwear on a flight from Amsterdam
to Detroit, the TSA announced plans
to buy 300 new full-body scanners
that can produce what looks like a
nude image of passengers, showing
weapons and explosives hidden under
clothes.
Smiths Detection Inc., a New
Jersey-based security technology
firm with about 2,500 employees, is
testing a full-body scanner that can
produce a passenger image instantly.
(Similar devices take up to 15
seconds to create the image.) The
units sell for about $170,000 each.
"The TSA is aware of this
technology," said Mark Laustra, vice
president of homeland security for
Smiths Detection, which has been
making X-ray machines and other
security devices for airports since
the 1980s. "The indications we have
are that it is something they want
to look at more closely."


