Earlier this week the DHS Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) published a notice
in the Federal Register (83 FR 11236-11240) providing a summary of the
enforcement actions that were undertaken in the surface transportation security
realm for calendar year 2017. Looking at the results it is apparent that the
TSA significantly stepped up its enforcement of the Transportation Workers Identification
Credential (TWIC) program under 49
CFR 1570. For the second year in a row TSA reported no enforcement actions
under the rail security provisions of 49
CFR 1580.
The table below shows a summary of the last four year’s
enforcement activities. The total for this year’s report is a little overstated
because there were twenty instances in this report where two or more violations
were reported for a single incident.
Did not allow TSA Inspection
|
||||
Rail Car Chain of Custody
|
4
|
1
|
||
Rail Car Security
|
||||
Rail Car Location
|
1
|
|||
Reporting Security Concern
|
1
|
1
|
||
Use of another’s TWIC
|
8
|
5
|
4
|
15
|
Direct the use of another's TWIC
|
7
|
3
|
41
|
|
Fraudulent Manufacture of TWIC
|
2
|
5
|
8
|
|
Use of an altered TWIC
|
15
|
34
|
134
|
|
Total
|
14
|
31
|
46
|
198
|
The continued failure to report any railroad enforcement
actions would tend to indicate that the TSA is effectively ignoring rail security
issues. This is hardly surprising with the very small Surface Transportation
Security inspection force and the very widely spread rail network. It is much
easier to concentrate efforts in the fairly limited port areas of the country.
What is disappointing however, it the apparent failure to look at rail security
operations in the port areas where the inspection forces are apparently concentrated.
In previous years reporting (see here
for example) I tried to summarize the information provided on fines proposed
and assessed. This year, with the huge increase in the reported incidents, I
have not attempted to do so. Most of the incidents reported resulted in just
warnings being issued. The largest fine proposed this year was $6,000 and the
largest actually assessed was $2,000. With the violations being typically
assessed against individuals rather than commercial organizations, these
figures are probably reasonable.
One final point that is interesting in this TSA report; the
file numbering system that TSA uses to track their surface transportation
security enforcement activities. It consists of a four-digit year number, a three-character
city code, and a four-number sequence code. The city code is the international
airport code for the city involved instead of the 4-character code for the port
involved. This is just another indication of the extreme airport bias of the TSA.
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