----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, January 18, 2011 10:11 AM
Subject: Airport security?
Interesting observations
and questions.
My question is: by keeping vehicles from entering after you,
are you the police now? Are you expected to enforce a regulation, law, what
ever? Is that responsibility passed on to you because you rent space? Our
airport does the same thing and has for a long time. I think it’s to placate a
local congress person.
Jim
From: Lancair
Mailing List [mailto:lml@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of marv@lancair.net
Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 8:50
AM
To:
lml@lancaironline.net
Subject:
[LML] Airport security?
Posted for "Douglas Brunner"
<douglasbrunner@earthlink.net>:
Yesterday (1/14), I
headed out to my airport (KMTN) to do some work on
my
plane. Recently, my airport has installed a sliding gate
with a code to
control entry.
On my way in, I
observed the car in front of me stop at the keypad, spend
some time
sitting there and then drive away from the entry. My
inference
was that they did not know the access code to the
airport. I pulled up to
the gate, punched in the access code
and pulled through the gate. I stopped
on the other side of
the gate, to limit entry to one car. The car which had
been
in front of me (and had failed to gain entry) then tried to pull
around
me and go through the gate while it was still open. I
moved my car slightly
to block their entry figuring that if they didn't
know the code, they
shouldn't be coming in with
me.
Well it turned out that the two men in the car, were
actually police
officers, and they did not take kindly to my blocking
their entrance. In
essence they "copped an attitude" (pun
intended) and gave me a hard time
about blocking them. After
a few unkind words were exchanged, we both went
on our ways.
Normally, I am not a huge fan of the (pseudo) security procedures
at
airports. And perhaps from time to time, I have been
known to let someone
follow me in through the security gate, or to
follow others in. However in
this case, it appeared to me that they had
demonstrated that they did not
know the code so I treated them (not
knowing they were cops) differently.
Several
questions/observations:
Since the number of terrorist
incidents attributable to GA aircraft both
prior to and after
instituting these security precaution is ZERO, is it
logical to infer
that the procedures have been a success???
Since the police
appear to regard the security precautions as optional
should these
security precautions should be observed religiously by non-
law
enforcement types???
Has the amount of time and
money spent on airport security post 9/11, (which
probably exceeds the
GDP of some African and Latin American countries) been
well
spent???
Or are these security precautions are an expensive
charade designed to
persuade gullible people that the government is
making them safer???
--
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