Coming TSA secure flight deadline, what could possibly go wrong?

by Janice Hough on September 3, 2010


The TSA deadline for “Secure Flight” is two months away — November 1, 2010.

In the past, some government deadlines for travelers have changed, most notably for passport rules. But airlines are already asking for the data, (full name, gender and date of birth), and tour operators have been calling our office all week to get the information for anyone booked to travel in November or later.

At the same time, carriers are issuing dire warnings about canceled reservations if such information is not provided after the deadline.

Leaving aside the question as to whether any of this makes us safer, it strikes me there are more than a few upcoming issues.

What happens if people get the advance information wrong, either name or birth date? Travel agents get enough errors as it is with just first and last name.

Numbers are easy to transpose in dates. Besides, travelers may have the wrong information about their companions. (In fact, one client who shall remain nameless says she routinely tells people she is five years younger than she is, and has even traveled with a gentleman friend who was not aware of her true age.)

There’s also a practical issue for job applications that runs smack into another law, namely the fact that corporations cannot ask someone’s age as part of the interview process. (This is to prevent age discrimination.)

On a pretty regular basis, companies fly top applicants in for final interviews, so either the airlines will have to start allowing a grace period for the traveler in question to enter their own information, or figure out another solution.

Another issue that comes to mind is with foreign names. Some nationalities have two family names, and others may use both an original and English first name.

No doubt too there are a number of issues that we haven’t even thought of year. (I am sure Consumer Traveler readers will enlighten me on some of them.)

In any case, one thing seems certain – fasten your seatbelts, it’s going to be a bumpy ride.

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  • MeanMeosh

    I think the bigger problem will be with birthdates, specifically, the old month/day/year vs. day/month/year debate. If your birthday is something like November 15th, it’s not a big deal. Whether you enter 11/15 or 15/11, it’s pretty obvious what you mean. But what about if it’s something like April 5th? I’d write that out as 4/5, and having grown up in the U.S., if I saw “4/5″, that’s what I’d interpret it as. Imagine the nightmare if you have a client from a country that uses the day/month format and tells you their birthday is “4/5″. They really mean May 4th. Unless I’m actively thinking about it at the time, I probably wouldn’t even think to ask and enter it in wrong.

  • John M

    It’s already happened and will continue to happen. So far the TSA has been decent about letting folks on but what the future holds, I won’t predict. Not only are birth dates an issue but so are names. We’ve had clients send us copies of their passports so we can make sure the names are correct and the airlines and TSA don’t have enough room to put all the names into the system. We had one person who had 4 first names, 6 middle and 2 surnames on the passport. How are we supposed to pick which names need to go to the TSA?

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