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ALEXANDRIA, Va. – July 14
-- A group of airports working in collaboration with the American Association
of Airport Executives (AAAE) have joined together to establish common business
rules and technical standards to create a permanent, interoperable Registered
Traveler (RT) Program which will bring passenger screening consistency and
improved security procedures to air travelers in the United States.
The Registered Traveler Interoperability
Consortium will leverage existing
airport programs and AAAE’s Transportation Security Clearinghouse network
to provide an open, universal system to develop registered traveler solutions
that allow airports, airlines and
industry partners sufficient flexibility to tailor solutions to their local
environment.
“Just as credit cards are
accepted once issued at most businesses around the country, if you signed up as
a Registered Traveler in Washington, D.C., you ought to be recognized as a
Registered Traveler in Minneapolis or any other airport around the country,” said
Carter Morris, AAAE Senior Vice President. “The Registered Traveler
Interoperability Consortium is a group of airports working together to create a
platform that works seamlessly at individual airports around the country and in
turn, facilitates Registered Traveler working everywhere.”
A
permanent, interoperable Registered Traveler Program has several advantages for
government, industry and the traveling public. In developing these standards,
the consortium will focus on six themes: improving security, expediting
passenger processing, creating passenger screening consistency, reducing the
passenger “hassle factor”, developing a system that can be used nationwide and
coordinating with TSA and airline partners. While the consortium will push for
TSA screening benefits and collaboration, a interoperable or seamless system
needs to be airport and aviation industry driven and run outside of
government. Most importantly, the consortium members believe that the program
needs to move forward operationally without further delay.
An interoperable,
nationwide Registered Traveler Program depends on the implementation of a
technical, operational, and business model capable of supporting individual
airport needs, while providing the common infrastructure that allows passengers
to use this capability at any airport nationwide. Working with the current RT
providers and TSA while leveraging the technology and identity program
expertise of Daon, a leading provider of identity management software, the AAAE
Transportation Security Clearinghouse and its partners offer airports and industry
partners the capability to implement solutions which will secure and protect
their investment in these projects. Providing the assurance and confidence that
the potential industry partners have certified their solutions into a common framework
is key to supporting a national RT infrastructure.
Airports founding the
consortium include Minneapolis St. Paul International Airport, Phoenix Sky Harbor, San
Francisco International
Airport, Denver International Airport, the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority’s
Reagan Washington National and Dulles International Airports and the Port Columbus International Airport.
Airports and providers
interested in joining the consortium should contact Carter Morris
at cmorris@aaae.org . Membership in the consortium is free to qualified
parties.
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