DOT News Masthead

REMARKS FOR

THE HONORABLE NORMAN Y. MINETA

SECRETARY OF TRANSPORTATION

REPUBLICAN WOMEN’S FEDERAL FORUM

WASHINGTON, D.C.

JANUARY 10, 2002

12:00 PM

 

Thank you, Deni, for that kind introduction.  I appreciate the opportunity to join all of you today.

As Deni indicated, I have a longstanding professional passion for improving the efficiency and safety of our aviation system.  In fact, on the morning of September 11th, I had an early meeting to discuss strengthening the aviation agreements between the United States and our European partners.    

My calendar for the following day included a trip to New York City to address the Wings Club, an important aviation forum, on the improvements we had seen in the airlines’ on-time performance, and on our plans to further enhance the capacity of our aviation system.

As you know, at 8:45 that morning, all of our priorities changed.

On receiving word of the first attack on the World Trade Center, I moved directly to the Emergency Operations Center at the White House, where I joined Vice President Cheney.  As the minutes passed, the developing picture from our control towers and radar screens became increasingly more alarming.

As soon as the nature and the scale of the terrorist attacks became clear, I took the unprecedented step of directing all airborne aircraft to land at the nearest airport, immediately and without exception.

Within four minutes, controllers had directed 700 planes to safe landings.   Another 2,800 planes returned safely to the ground within the next 50 minutes.  By shortly after noon, less than four hours after the first attack, for the first time since man began to fly, we had cleared U.S. airspace of all aircraft except military and essential medical traffic.

America witnessed numerous acts of heroism, both during and after the attacks of September 11th, and I count among the unsung heroes of that day all the men and women of the FAA who assisted in this astounding feat of crisis management, as well as the calm and courageous pilots, flight deck crews and cabin attendants of all the planes then aloft.

The horrific events of September 11th not only thrust our Nation into war, they also ushered in a new era in transportation, an era in which a determined enemy has challenged one of America’s most cherished freedoms — namely, the freedom of mobility.

I am proud to tell you that, under the leadership of President Bush and Vice President Cheney, this Administration is rising to meet the challenge.  Across every mode, the Department of Transportation has moved rapidly to identify, and begin closing, the gaps in the level of protection for our most critical transportation assets.

In particular, in the days immediately following the attacks of September 11th, the USDOT started taking steps to tighten aviation security, and together with state and local authorities and the entire airline industry, we have diligently worked at it every day since.

Over the last several months, we have put into place a number of significant improvements, which make air travel, already one of the safest means of transport ever devised, even safer.  And, in the year ahead, we will continue to make improvements in aviation security, week-by-week and month-by-month.

Some of the steps we have taken are readily visible to the public, and some of them are more behind the scenes.  For example, we immediately made funds available to the aviation industry to fortify cockpits, and all major domestic carriers completed the necessary modifications by the first part of November.

We implemented a zero tolerance policy for airport security breaches, a policy we will continue to enforce once aviation security becomes a direct federal responsibility, both during the transition to the newly authorized federal screening system, and well beyond.

We have initiated complete criminal background checks on all employees with access to secure areas at our airports.  We have trained and deployed more and more Federal Air Marshals to guard domestic and international flights, and the National Guard has joined local law enforcement officers in patrolling our airports.

Now, with the passage of the Aviation and Transportation Security Act, America stands poised to take the next important steps.  Beginning next month, for the first time, aviation security will become a direct responsibility of the federal government — not one under the control of the airlines — and Congress has chosen DOT to make it happen. 

This new statute directs the DOT to build and staff a new law enforcement agency, called the Transportation Security Administration, starting essentially from scratch — an agency that will have more people than the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the Border Patrol combined — and to get it up and running in the next 10 months.

In the short time since President Bush signed the Act, we have started putting into place the management structure and the key personnel necessary to coordinate this process, both internally and externally, with our federal colleagues and with our partners in state and local governments.

Earlier this week, President Bush appointed a distinguished figure in American law enforcement, John W. Magaw, a former director of both the Secret Service and ATF, to lead this new agency as the Under Secretary of Transportation for Security. 

In today’s world of ever-present threats, the American traveling public could not ask for a finer, more devoted public servant, nor an individual more qualified in law enforcement and security than John Magaw, and we’re delighted to have him on board.

With Under Secretary Magaw at the helm, we intend to keep moving quickly, but carefully, to build a strong foundation for this new Transportation Security Administration.  The law sets a number of extremely tight milestones, and we will hit each of them as soon as humanly possible.

While the statute provides DOT with considerable flexibility in implementing the new law, we will continue to encourage constructive involvement from transportation community stakeholders, from our friends on the Hill, and from the American public.

But, I also expect to hear from the naysayers, and from those who offer a thousand reasons why we can’t do it one way but ought do it some other way.  Already, many of these self-styled experts have started second guessing our efforts — all too often completely unencumbered by the facts.

Many of you may have heard or read about some of the highly publicized breaches that have occurred in the last several months.  In fact, since we announced our zero tolerance policy on October 30th of last year, FAA special agents have ordered the evacuation of U.S. airport terminals on more than 30 different occasions, not counting a number of evacuations conducted by airports themselves.

Some commentators have suggested these evacuations indicate ongoing problems with aviation security.  Just the opposite is true.  These evacuations show the FAA’s willingness to take swift and immediate action to protect against any and all breaches of security.

It is true that much of the media attention since September 11th has focused on aviation safety.  But, Congress created the Transportation Security Administration, not the Aviation Security Administration.  We are building this new organization to develop better security procedures and heightened awareness across every mode of transportation — including rail, highways, transit, maritime and pipeline — as well as aviation.

Protecting transportation infrastructure, and improving our ability to quickly respond to future attacks, is crucial to daily life in America.  In the days ahead, as we phase in many of these new security measures, some of the traveling public may experience a few minor inconveniences.  We intend to do all we can to minimize the hassles.

But, the USDOT will do what we must to protect the traveling public — with safety and security as our highest priorities.  And, I trust that the public will understand the need for tolerance, and will recognize that, in today’s world, patience with heightened security measures represents a new form of patriotism.

As President Bush has said, in the aftermath of September 11th, all Americans have new responsibilities.  We will remain vigilant, without giving in to exaggerated fears or passing rumors.

  We will not judge our neighbors or our fellow citizens on the basis of ethnic background or religious faith.

And, above all, we will live in the spirit of courage and optimism.

Air travel is safer today than it has ever been, and the DOT will do its part to keep it that way.  Going forward, I pledge to you that we will create an aviation security organization that can do its job with outstanding efficiency, and one that enjoys an esprit de corps and record of achievement other federal agencies will seek to emulate. 

And, I know that, in the months and years ahead, all of us will join together as Americans to make sure our great Nation will prevail.  Thank you, and God bless America.

 

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Briefing Room