SOURCE: TSA
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September 11, 2008 08:00 ET
Transportation Security Officers Have Renewed Focus & New Look on Seventh Anniversary of 9/11
WASHINGTON, DC--(Marketwire - September 11, 2008) - Starting Sept. 11, 2008, transportation
security officers at airport checkpoints nationwide will begin wearing new
uniforms and badges, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA)
announced today. The new uniforms and badges are another step in the
ongoing evolution of TSA, an agency that was created in the wake of Sept.
11, 2001 to federalize airport security.
The most striking change is the color of the shirt -- from white to blue --
and a gold metal badge will replace the embroidered patch. This will better
align the officers' uniforms with the other security professional positions
in the Department of Homeland Security.
Just as the job classification and title changed from "Screener" to
"Transportation Security Officer" in October 2005, this new uniform
represents the highly skilled and tested nature of TSA's frontline
workforce. Nearly 50 percent of TSA's current employees joined the
organization during the agency's stand-up in 2002, motivated by a call to
action to do everything within their power to never let another 9/11 happen
again.
"While the uniform and badge represent the professionalism of our officers,
it is what's behind the cloth and metal that embodies the spirit of TSA --
a focused, intelligent and dedicated workforce that lives the agency's post
9/11 mission: 'not on my watch,'" said TSA Administrator Kip Hawley.
As part of TSA's Checkpoint Evolution, a transformational culture shift
designed to maximize the human element of security while also leveraging
technological innovations, every transportation security officer and all of
their managers will participate in two days of training. This training
incorporates information sharing, more advanced explosives detection
skills, and ways to engage with passengers that promote a calmer checkpoint
environment and better security result. It uses the physical checkpoint to
TSA's advantage to improve security.
The new uniform and badge grew out of a recommendation from TSA's National
Advisory Council (NAC), a formal organization of transportation security
officers, assistant federal security directors and security managers that
meet quarterly to discuss issues that directly impact the frontline
workforce and provide regular, valued input to TSA leadership. The new
uniform addresses officers' concerns of utility, respect, and confidence,
and will stand as a readily identifiable symbol of TSA's security mission
and officers' role of keeping the traveling public safe.
To view photos of the new uniform and badge, log onto www.tsa.gov.