Enter query terms separated by spaces.

Search for:
Display results by:
Search from:
 
through:
 

U.S. Response:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes">  </span>Border Inspectors Begin Radiation ScreeningFrom Monday, March 3, 2003 issue.

U.S. Response:  Border Inspectors Begin Radiation Screening

U.S. border inspectors began using pager-like radiation detection devices Saturday to screen all incoming visitors to the United States for signs of carrying radioactive materials, a spokesman for the new Bureau of Customs and Border Protection said Saturday (see GSN, Oct. 21, 2002).

Inspectors use the devices, strapped to their belts, to check people at U.S. points of entry while asking to see their passports, said Customs spokesman Dean Boyd.  “If a source of radiation passes close by or within a certain distance, the pager will begin beeping or alerting, and you can look down at the pager and see the amount (of radiation) that the pager is picking up,” Boyd said (Emily Gersema, Associated Press/Philadelphia Inquirer, March 2).

Some visitors to the United States were already screened for radiation when they went through U.S. border checkpoints staffed with inspectors equipped with portable detectors, according to the New York Times.  Now, however, the detectors will be more widely distributed, allowing inspectors to screen all of the 500,000 people who enter the United States each day, officials said.

All 18,000 U.S. border inspectors — 9,000 customs agents, 6,000 immigration agents and 3,00 agriculture agents — will be equipped with detectors and trained in their use by the middle of next year, Homeland Security Department officials said.  They also said they plan to begin complete screening of air- and sea-delivered cargo within a year (Philip Shenon, New York Times, March 2).

About Newswire  |  Contact National Journal  |  Re-Use Guidelines

HOME  |  CONTACT US  |  GET INVOLVED  |  SITE MAP






Back to top