From Laura Batchelor
CNN
NEW YORK (CNN) — Commuters on the New York-New Jersey Port Authority Trans- Hudson (PATH) rail system will have added security screening Wednesday as part of a month-long pilot program, according to a press release from the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
The screening system, called the Passive Millimeter Wave (MMW), can detect threats including explosive devices hidden under clothing, the Port Authority explained in a press release. The TSA and the Port Authority stress that there is no current threat to the mass transit system, nor do they anticipate delays for commuters from the new technology, which has already been tested at several other transit locations.
The Passive Millimeter Wave “detects threats by analyzing the energy generated by the human body,” according to TSA spokesperson, Lara Uselding. The camera-like device displays an image for operators, and “an indicator produces a strength bar from green to red that indicates the presence/absence of anomalies that could have security implications, including the possible presence of explosives,” according to the TSA Web site.
The TSA and the Port Authority emphasize that the device is non-invasive and completely safe.
The Port Authority’s press release explains that all PATH passengers are subject to the pilot security screening, and passengers who do not want take part must leave the station.
The TSA has partnered with agencies in various cities in the past to test out the same security screening system, including in 2007 at Washington’s Union Station and on New York’s Staten Island Ferry. The TSA has also tested the MMW at several U.S. airports including Minneapolis-St. Paul, Denver and Boston.
HEY! How safe is this? Has anyone done any private, independent research on this?
BIG BROTHER ON YOUR ASS! LITERALLY! Does anyone really feel safer?
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