FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 19, 2024
peterspress@hsgac.senate.gov
Legislation follows Peters’ Report that Found Growth and Redundancy of Terrorist Watchlist and Other Airport Screenings Risks Sweeping Up Innocent Americans with Little Recourse
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Gary Peters (D-MI), Chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, introduced legislation to reform the traveler redress process and improve screening practices at airports and ports of entry that repeatedly affect individuals who may pose no danger to national security. The bill would require the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to provide Congress with a comprehensive plan to reform the redress process and ensure counterterrorism resources are used effectively. This bill will help evaluate a ballooning set of screening processes, some related to the terror watchlist, by improving transparency about these processes and by reforming the redress process to allow affected Americans to seek an effective remedy if they believe they are mistakenly caught in this system.
“We must ensure our travel screening practices protect the nation without unfairly burdening law-abiding citizens,” said Senator Peters. “My bill will seek to improve current screening practices and ensure there is a plan to fix the redress process for innocent Americans. By doing so, we can strengthen public trust in our screening practices, increase transparency into the screening system, and protect travelers’ civil rights and civil liberties.”
In December 2023, Chairman Peters published a report that revealed that well-intentioned screening practices at airports and other ports of entry have ballooned over time, often at the expense of travelers who may pose no threat to national security. Members of the Arab, Muslim, and South Asian American communities report that they are unfairly targeted by these screening practices; however, federal agencies do not effectively assess whether discrimination occurs in these processes. These practices are intended to protect the U.S. from terrorists and other security threats, but these practices have expanded into a layered and duplicative screening system that is difficult for the government to explain, and for American citizens to understand why they have been flagged for secondary screening or how they can seek real redress.
The Enhanced Oversight and Accountability in Screening Act would require DHS to provide Congress with a plan to meaningfully reform the redress process and improve the experience of individuals who believe they have been wrongly subjected to additional screenings or have experienced delays in travel. The bill establishes a DHS Screening and Watchlisting Advisory Committee, comprised of both governmental and non-governmental representatives, to advise the Secretary on the development, refinement, implementation, and evaluation of security processes. To enhance transparency, the bill also mandates the DHS Secretary to provide Congress with a report assessing the effectiveness of secondary screenings and inspections by the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).
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