Lawmaker Presses TSA to Release Reports on Airport Scanner Radiation

Members of Congress two months ago started demanding the release of inspection reports regarding the possible ill effects of radiation from full-body X-ray scanners widely used for airport security.

The wait, USA Today reports, is making at least one key lawmaker irritable. “The public has a right to know, and there isn’t something so sensitive that requires holding it back,” said Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, who called the delays “inexcusable.”

Chaffetz, the chairman of a House subcommittee that oversees homeland defense, has introduced a bill that would scale back the use of full-body scanners.

The Transportation Security Administration, which oversees the use of the scanners to screen airline passengers, responded that the agency is still vetting the reports for “sensitive security or privacy-protected information,” but that the material will be released “within the next few weeks.”

The worries about possible radiation overdoses stem partly from a 2008 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It found that the TSA had previously been unable to detect incidents when excessive doses of radiation were emitted by  X-ray machines used to inspect baggage. Furthermore, TSA officials failed to detect machines whose safety protections were missing or disabled.

The TSA operates 400 full-body scanners at airports around the nation, roughly evenly divided between those that use X-rays and those that employ electromagnetic pulses. The TSA, as USA Today reports, says the radiation dose from the X-ray machines is tiny — equivalent to what a person receives during two minutes inside an airplane at cruising altitude.

The TSA has told members of Congress that, in evaluating a one-year period that ended in September, the agency found no malfunctions in the X-ray scanners that would have caused any passengers to receive excessive amounts of radiation. More than 15 million passengers passed through airport scanners during that period.

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One comment to “Lawmaker Presses TSA to Release Reports on Airport Scanner Radiation”

  1. JoesephW

    Pat search all the way.

    There is scientific evidence that both types of machines Backscatter (Cancer) and Millimeter Wave (DNA damage) ARE DANGEROUS in ANY amounts.

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