Starts today — the biggest TSA change you never have heard of

by Janice Hough on May 14, 2009

It’s called “Secure Flight.” And if you haven’t heard of it yet, you will.

The only question is just how much havoc this rule change wreaks while they fine tune it.

Secure Flight is TSA’s new vetting program. The idea is to eliminate passengers’ being mistakenly delayed due to similar names with people on TSA’s watch list.

Only time will tell if the cure is worse than the disease. The new program starts May 15. Yes, today.

Travelers will be asked to enter their full name as it appears on the government identification they will be using to fly. If the drivers license and passport have different names, the name on the ticket should match exactly to the identification they will use on the specific trip.

This means middle name or initial, and anything else noted on the identification, including things like “Jr.”

The press release says.

By enhancing and streamlining the watch list matching process, the Secure Flight program makes travel safer and easier for millions of Americans.

In the near future, small differences between the passenger’s ID and the passenger’s reservation information, such as the use of a middle initial instead of a full middle name or no middle name/initial at all, will not be an issue for passengers. Over time, passengers should strive to obtain consistency between the name on their government issued ID and the travel information they use for booking flights.

Note “in the near future.” But eventually – by early 2010 – the goal is to require an exact match

As of August 15, 2009, passengers will need to enter their date of birth and gender when booking reservations.

Leaving aside the issue of time involved, especially for third-party reservations, the complication possibilities are endless. Airlines already do not do name changes easily if at all, and most of those who do, charge for the change.

Frequent flier programs are also going to be inundated with name changes. And travelers who don’t update their names, a sometimes time-consuming process, are going to have problems getting miles. While some carriers are somewhat forgiving with small variations in first and/or middle names, others, Delta especially, require exact matches.

This means if a passenger is signed up as John Doe, and he books a reservation as John Henry Doe, he will not get credit, nor any status perks such as better seats or waived baggage charges.

As frequent travelers know, many government rule changes – the passport rule to Canada, Mexico and the Caribbean for example – are often delayed. So no one knows for certain when these requirements will be absolute.

But for those who want to be ahead of the curve, and the potential hassles, it would not be a bad idea to start updating frequent flier programs now. And even if you really would prefer that no one ever know your middle name, it is probably time to start using it. At least for airline tickets.

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  • laura

    So, for those of us with only a first name/last name on our Driver’s license, this does what?

    Maybe I’m exception, but since I have seven names, my state decided only to put two on my ID….

  • http://leftcoastsportsbabe.com Janice Hough

    Those with just two names on their license are lucky. Nothing changes. It’s just most people with middle names that may be going to have problems if they have been travelling (and enrolled in mileage programs) with only first and last names.

  • Michael

    Next thing they’ll want your shoe size, cup size (upper and lower) and toilet paper preference.
    Just another way for Uncle Sam to get his grubby little hands down our pants!

  • Tim

    Laura–7 names?? A little greedy, are we? I am joking, of course. And for the record I have a first, middle, and last name–and all are more considered first names than last names.

    So what the TSA is doing is making sure that the name on the bad guy’s fake ID matches the name on the ticket. And this is going to make us safer how? And if they check in online and reprint their boarding pass with a different name, how are they going to get caught? As Bruce Scheier called it, this is more “security theater.”

    As I have mentioned in other sites before, knowing WHO is flying is not as important as WHAT is flying. I would rather have a person some agency thinks is suspicious on my flight rather than a bomb in the cargo the plane is flying. With the former, they have gone through supposedly thorough security so we know he is not carrying weapons; the latter has not (very little cargo is checked before being loaded on a commercial plane).

    But as Janice says, make sure the airline has your name as seen on your ID and you will be fine.

  • K. Millner

    My passport contains my full middle name – my driver’s license only my middle initial. So which one am I supposed to use for a frequent flyer program?

  • Wrona

    And since most airline’s websites only have a field to enter First Name Last Name, this is going to be interesting.

  • Cathy Baar

    A certain southern-based airline has several hundred frequent flyers in its program with a first name listed as “Bubba…” Got to wonder how the TSA is dealing with that!

  • Brock

    And for those of us with only a first initial (not an abbrev. but legally no first name) we already have trouble with web sites and reservation systems that insist on more than one letter for a first name.

  • laura

    Tim@ 12:23-
    My family’s British – a lot of foreigners, or those with families following cultural traditions from outside the US, have more than 3 names.

    But it gets worse than that! My full legal name is actually nine words long and my first name has an apostrophe, L’Aura.- (Don’t ask, my parents wanted the French version for its meaning). All my children have more than 3 names and my husband has no middle name (but a hyphenated first name!)

    It’s the hyphens and the apostrophes that usually kill us when making airline reservations.

    I don’t know about others, but the state that licensed me (not my home state, BTW) allows folks to ‘correct’ inaccuracies on a drivers license. Depending on how you feel about it, you may want to ‘correct’ your legal name to something easier to fly with.

  • envie

    #1 this did not start yesterday/today; it is place on a litmited number of carriers
    #2 the airline and agent booking systems SO cannot handle the requirements, you have a while before you have to worry :). Laura’s case above is a prime example. The booking system cannot accept that number of characters, yet her passport can…..

  • Mr Bad Example

    Being that the TSA (Trained Shoe Analysts) Can’t find their arse with both hands in a phone booth with a flashlight, I know I don’t feel more secure.

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