On 2/10/06, Derby Chang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Patrick writes eloquently about some run-ins with security while taking
> planespotting pics. I'm sure many of us have had the same experience.
>
> http://www.salon.com/tech/col/smith/2006/02/10/askthepilot173/
>

Thanks for the link, Derby.  Interesting article.  I expect
advertisements when reading this sort of thing, but unfortunately
Salon has become exceedingly annoying with their method of presenting
advertisements.  I almost didn't read the article.  In an effort to
simplify it for the rest of us, the entire article follows.  Feel free
to flame me to a crisp for copyright violations, turn me over to
INTERPOL, etc.


Ask the pilot
I took some pictures at the airport -- and fell into the clutches of
bureaucrats mouthing the cheap prose of patriotic convenience.

By Patrick Smith

Feb. 10, 2006 | It was 1986, as our Finnair DC-9 descended through the
midwinter overcast above Moscow. The captain came on to make the usual
pre-landing announcement, this time with an addition: "Ladies and
gentlemen, photography through the aircraft windows, or anywhere at
the Moscow airport once we land, is forbidden." A stewardess then
walked down the aisle, making sure we all had our cameras put away.

>From 10,000 feet, the landscape below was hardly photogenic -- sky,
clouds and terrain merging in a featureless curtain of gunmetal gray.
But the captain's warning wasn't a surprise, flavoring our arrival
with a little Cold War excitement. This was, after all, communist
Russia, and photography at public installations was, everyone knew,
strictly off limits. As tourists from the so-called free world, we
expected some firsthand experience with the constraints of Soviet
society. But while the rules made good stories for friends back home,
for an airplane buff they were highly vexing; I so badly wanted a
picture of the Tupolev jet we'd later ride to Leningrad -- the
terminal guard waving his finger as I gestured hopefully with my dad's
old Minolta. It all seemed excessive, really.

Skip forward 20 years. It's January 2006, and I'm at the airport in
Manchester, N.H. This is a state, mind you, famous for its fiery brand
of New England individualism -- a haven for refugees from
big-government tyrannies, like that sweltering welfare state to the
south, Massachusetts. Here, license plates cry liberty in no uncertain
terms: "Live Free or Die."

There's a shiny new airport in Manchester, and I'm there to take
pictures as part of an article I'm working on for that mouthpiece of
liberal fascism, the Boston Globe. I've shot about six digital
pictures, and I'm working on the seventh -- a nicely framed view of
the terminal façade -- when I hear the stern "Excuse me." A young guy
in a navy windbreaker steps toward me. It says AIRPORT SECURITY in
block letters across his back. "You can't do that. You need to put the
camera away."

"I do? Why?"

"Pictures aren't allowed."

"They're not?"

"Sorry."

"Sorry what? I don't think that's true, actually. I'm pretty sure that
it isn't illegal to take pictures at an airport."

"You'll need to talk to a deputy, sir."

I slip the camera into a pocket as the guard, who despite his crested
cap and cocksure understanding of the rules, is a private security
guard and not a law enforcement official, quickly summons over two
members of the Rockingham County sheriff's department, which
administers the Manchester airport.

The deputies -- a woman and a man -- are polite but stern, and they'd
like to know exactly what I'm doing. "You need to have a permit to
take photographs," one of them says. "Maybe we can call and see if
they'll give you clearance."

I'm not sure I believe it. "What do I need a permit for? Is there a
rule here against taking pictures? Is it illegal?"

"I don't know," she replies, crossly, as if the question somehow isn't
relevant. "I don't think so, technically."

"So, if not, why would I need a permit?"

"That's what the airport wants. You'll have to ask the airport manager."

They ask to see press credentials. When I explain that I'm a
freelancer they demand a driver's license. The woman deputy takes it
and disappears for several minutes.

While waiting for my license to return from its secret mission, I tell
the other officer how this is the same airport where, in 1986, I
received my private pilot's license. From runway 35, four years later,
I made my first takeoff as a cockpit crewmember. It's all very
different now, in more ways than one. And I tell him how, as
adolescent planespotters in the late '70s, my friends and I would
scour the terminals at Boston-Logan every weekend, armed with cameras,
notebooks and binoculars, taking pictures and logging tail numbers,
fully aware that in many countries, hobbies like ours were essentially
illegal.

The cop shakes his head. He's an older guy, who probably remembers
when MHT had two flights a day with 15-seaters, before Southwest came
in with seven gates and nonstops to Vegas. "I know," he says. "It's
too bad. But we live in a different world now."

Soon thereafter my license reappears and I'm free to go. "May I use my camera?"

"Yes," is the answer, so long as I don't take any photos inside the
terminal. And next time, it would behoove me to receive permission
before arriving.

The following afternoon, at T.F. Green Airport in Providence, R.I.,
the very same thing happens. Again I'm taking pictures for the Globe
story, and again I'm detained by an airport policeman. The
conversation unfolds almost identically, with similar confusion over
whether my activities are in violation of a law or statute. And this
time, it winds up taking an absurdly long 45 minutes before I'm
allowed to proceed.

"I understand what you're doing, and why you're doing it," I say. "But
can you tell me: Am I breaking a law or statute?"

"Well, no, I don't believe so," he answers, sounding less than
confident and maybe a touch annoyed that I'd phrased things so
directly. He's professional and polite -- a young guy, maybe an
ex-Marine, all arms-akimbo and barrel-chested in that way of cops.
"But," he asserts, "there are certain things you can't take pictures
of."

When I ask him to clarify this obvious contradiction, he can't. "Well,
which things are those?"

He pauses. "I can't tell you."

"Like the control tower maybe? What about airplanes?

"I can't tell you."

"How can you prohibit people from photographing things, but not tell
them what those things are?"

To this he only shakes his head, relaying my vitals into his shoulder
mike and scribbling onto his notepad. Is he being evasive, or does he
not know for sure that he's right?

Finally I'm asked to open my camera and scroll through each of its
stored photographs, presumably to ensure I haven't snapped any shots
of those shadowy forbidden items. When that checks out, and the news
comes crackling back that I'm not a wanted fugitive, the officer
thanks me for cooperating and lets me go. He makes sure to remind me,
just as his colleague in New Hampshire had done, that next time I'd
benefit from advance permission, and that "we live in a different
world now."

Not to put undue weight on the cheap prose of patriotic convenience,
but few things are more repellant than that oft-repeated catchphrase.
There's something so pathetically submissive about it -- a sound bite
of such defeat and capitulation. It's also untrue; indeed we find
ourselves in an altered way of life, though not for the reasons our
protectors would have us think. We weren't forced into this by
terrorists, we've chosen it. When it comes to flying, we tend to hold
the events of Sept. 11 as the be-all and end-all of air crimes,
conveniently purging our memories of several decades' worth of
bombings and hijackings. The threats and challenges faced by airports
aren't terribly different from what they've always been. What's
different, or "too bad," to quote the New Hampshire deputy, is our
paranoid, overzealous reaction to those threats, and our amped-up
obeisance to authority.

A somewhat confused and recalcitrant authority at that. For the
record, I don't necessarily fault the officers at MHT or PVD for
checking me out. What concerned me was the length of the questioning,
and the uncertainty over the legality of what I was doing. In some
ways, a system of semiautonomous bureaucracies is less dangerous than
a centralized and overconfident one, but it felt as if the airports
were trying to have things both ways -- affecting an absolute,
take-no-prisoners attitude toward any potential threat, yet without
being able to actually tell me who controlled what, or why. (And I
hate to think how long my detainment might have lasted had my name
been Muhammad or my I.D. not readily available.)

The million-dollar questions are: Is it a violation of law to take
photographs at airports? And under whose jurisdiction does the matter
fall?

"No, it's not against the law," says Anne Davis, a Transportation
Security Administration (TSA) spokeswoman. When asked about
jurisdiction, Davis describes TSA as the overseer of all airport
security matters, including the supervision of local law enforcement.
"The buck stops with us," she says, adding that the agency has no
specific policy with regard to picture taking, other than asking
people not to tape or photograph screening apparatus.

At T.F. Green, public affairs vice president Patti Goldstein clarifies
that technically I'd done nothing wrong, but that media members are
requested to call in advance so that TSA or police aren't surprised.
"This is a public space, and media are allowed to photograph and film
in and around the airport. All we ask is for prior notification."

That's sensible, but I wasn't approached as a member of the media. As
far as the officers in Providence and Manchester knew, I was just a
guy with a backpack -- a passenger, a visitor waiting to greet a
family member on an inbound flight -- who happened to be aiming his
Canon around.

I then presented the issue to Phil Orlandella, the media relations
director for Boston's Logan International Airport. As the departure
point for both of the 767s that hit the World Trade Center on Sept.
11, Logan's security procedures came under intense scrutiny in the
weeks that followed. Orlandella's office sits off a corridor between
Terminals B and C, and he's been intimate with all all things Logan
for more than a quarter century.

"Who controls security, TSA or the local police?" he says. "They both
do, it's that simple. And no, it's not against any rules to take
pictures, inside or outside, period. If anyone tells you otherwise,
that's a bunch of baloney."

He warns that yes, individuals snooping around with cameras might be
approached and questioned, but photography itself is fully within a
visitor's rights. "A passenger is free to take any picture he or she
wants," he says, "in any public area of the airport, end of story. If
you're not deemed a threat, you're free to click away."

Soaring nearly 300 feet above Orlandella's office, meanwhile, is
Logan's FAA control tower, the 16th floor of which once housed an
observation deck. That deck has been shuttered for several years, but
it got me thinking about the many planespotters and other
aerohobbyists around the country -- and around the world -- whose
penchant for staking out runways with binoculars and telephoto lenses
has almost certainly led to trouble. At Miami International, large
groups of enthusiasts used to gather along the fences. Crews taxiing
past would slide their cockpit windows open and wave. According to
Miami International spokesman Marc Henderson, most vantage points were
blocked off after Sept. 11. From Miami and elsewhere, stories abound
of spotters harassed and evicted from their favorite perches.

"We've tried to accommodate those people," says Orlandella at
Boston-Logan. "To some extent it's a property issue; we could say that
a parking garage or a terminal rooftop, for example, isn't there for
the purpose of hanging out all day with a camera. But I've met with
planespotters, and so long as we know where they are and what they're
doing, that's fine with us."

Orlandella's frankness and open-minded approach are refreshing. He was
at Logan on the morning of Sept. 11, which he shudderingly describes
as "the worst friggin' day of my life," and he and his airport have
been subject to an avalanche of criticism ever since. Most of it
misguided. Regulars to this column are familiar with my own feelings
about that day -- specifically my opinion that the attacks had little
or nothing to do with a breakdown in airport security -- but it's
comforting to hear somebody of Orlandella's experience and position
speaking with candor and reason.

Truth be told, the United States isn't the only nation wrapped around
the axle over the specter of terrorism. Many foreign airports have
been the setting for some pretty notorious crimes of their own. In
1988, Pan Am 103 lifted off from London-Heathrow, then and now one of
the world's most security-conscious airports, and also one of the most
popular for planespotting. There, commercial recording or photography
is prohibited without a permit. Personal photography is not specified,
but according to Damon Hunt of the Heathrow press office, "There are
obviously some sensitive areas where no one can film, and these are
clearly marked." Hunt explains that spotters at Heathrow, who can
number in the hundreds on any given day, tend to gather near the
visitors' center, some distance from the perimeter.

At Amsterdam's Schiphol airport, commercial photographers and members
of the media are similarly asked to apply for a permit. "The press
office then will give permission, stating what is allowed and what
not," says Schiphol spokeswoman Marianne de Bie. Otherwise,
photography of security, baggage and immigration facilities is
generally prohibited. Photography of airline staff or operations areas
is allowed only with consent of the airline.

"We hardly experience any problems with these procedures," de Bie
says. "It all takes place within reason, and passengers do not feel
harassed."

Spotters are still permitted to take photos from an outdoor terminal
terrace, and along the viewing area adjacent to runway 06/24, "so long
as they're not hindering traffic," de Bie says. "If so, police can ask
you to move on." Schiphol's perimeter bikeways remain open to the
public. One can cycle from the terminal to the city center in
approximately 45 minutes.

The whole uneasiness surrounding cameras and airplanes turns pretty
laughable when you click over to Airliners.net. From terminal views to
closeup glimpses from the cockpits of almost every airline on earth,
the comprehensiveness of this site's archives is a wonderful testament
to artistic freedom and the strange cult of aerophilia. Officially,
few airlines permit photography of their flight decks nowadays, but at
Airliners you've got a search feature able to winnow through your
choice of airline, aircraft type -- right to the very tail numbers of
individual planes.

Admittedly, the twitchiness of airport security and the revocation of
spotters' rights doesn't quite shatter the foundations of American
democracy. Still, the lesson here is one about precedent and the
slippery slope from grudging acquiescence to iron-fisted prohibition
only a bombing or hijacking away. And, of course, the unsettling
irony: in 2006 you're liable to encounter fewer hassles taking
pictures at former Cold War outposts like Prague or Bucharest than you
are in New Hampshire or Rhode Island.

I also have the distinct impression that the majority of people told
to put their cameras away, regardless of their right to refuse, will
simply do so. Airport authorities aren't out to harass or steal your
liberties, but neither, it seems, are they terribly interested in
arguing the fine print. For cops patrolling a terminal, it's easier
just to bully an unsuspecting passenger and be done with it. Chances
are he or she won't complain. And that, if anything, is the proverbial
different world in which we've come to live.

GO-AROUNDS

RE: Airline woes symptomatic of a lost America?

The decline of our airline industry reflects a decline in energy and
optimism in North America in general. The contrast with China is
dramatic. On my last trip there, I was impressed with the many new
regional airports being built in places like Changsha, Xian, Kunming
and even Dunhuang, in the Gobi desert. I see the energy and optimism
in every area of Chinese society that reminds me of the '60s in North
America. Going to China now is like going back to that happier time
when anything seemed possible. Why has everything become so depressing
and paranoid here?

-- Peter Patten

--
Scott Loveless
http://www.twosixteen.com

--
"You have to hold the button down" -Arnold Newman

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