Howto: Get Your Name Off The No-Fly List
The Department of Homeland Security has finally woken up, and now admits that the No-Fly List has its problems.
The list (a mishmash of multiple lists, actually) has plenty of bugs. Perhaps most famously, Massachusetts senator Ted Kennedy was kept off of airplanes, because someone with the same name was a suspected terrorist.
Getting your name removed from the list has, until now, been a painstaking and thankless task, with no guarantee of success. That's supposed to improve now, via a simplified online "redress procedure," which naturally comes with a government-ese acronym. It's the DHS Traveler Redress Inquiry Program (DHS TRIP). Get it? "Trip"? Alright then.
If you're on the list, you can visit the DHS TRIP site and get the ball rolling. It's unclear how long it takes to see real action, but in theory you should hear back within days, rather than the months it used to take. — MARK ASHLEY
DHS Traveler Redress Inquiry Program [Department of Homeland Security]
(Photo: RussellReno)
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Comments:
er... I had made a followup comment about needing to snailmail in the forms, but I'm an idiot and it's not showing up. Anywho, if you read it closer you can fax or email in digital copies. Too bad it doesn't submit the final form for you via the web, though. Guess it needs the drivers license/whatever scan.
@bones:
Trust me, Ted Kennedy doesn't need Bush to make his life more complicated than the rest of the population. It's ingrained.
A few years back I was flying some internal flights in the US and was picked for extra security checks every single time (and I mean every single flight - about 6 in total in a row). I was talking to one of the TSA guys who seemed quite nice and approachable and he said it was because I was flying alone one-way.
Don't know if that was actually why or not but it's been the only time I've been subject to extra checks on internal flights. Even flying into the country I didn't have any hassle (well apart from once but the TSA agent was ... well lets just say the offspring of a pony and a horse). So it looks like it's about right.








Don't forget the no-fly list isn't necessarily literal. Sometimes it just indicates that you *always* get searched. There are a lot of variables included in the procedure.