Aim of new technology to speed up border crossings
The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO - New technology at the nation's busiest border crossing can
read chip-enabled travel documents up to 30 feet from an inspection booth,
promising shorter waits but raising concerns about targeting by computer
hackers.
San Diego's San Ysidro border crossing is a key test for the devices,
known as radio frequency identification readers, because the facility is
used by about 150,000 people daily.
It's the 13th land crossing to get the technology in recent months,
and U.S. Customs and Border Protection plans to have it in place by June
at the 39 busiest crossings with Mexico and Canada.
The chips already are contained in about 40,000 drivers licenses in
two Canadian border states - 32,000 in Washington and 7,700 in New York.
Arizona, Michigan and Vermont begin issuing the enhanced drivers licenses
this year.
In unveiling the technology here Thursday, U.S. authorities said the
technology will shave six to eight seconds off each inspection because
information will appear on an officer's computer screen before a motorist
even arrives at the booth.
That would be a welcome development at the 24-lane San Ysidro crossing,
where waits exceed three hours in Tijuana, Mexico, during peak times.
"If you save a few seconds, you will reduce the (waiting time) enormously,"
Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Ralph Basham said at the San
Ysidro crossing, where motorists flashed documents out their windows as
they reached the front of the line.
But some privacy advocates said the document readers lack safeguards,
referring to a hacker who reported lifting information from travel documents
in the streets of San Francisco with the aid of a $250 gadget.
"Someone with a fairly low-tech device, using off-the-shelf technology
from some place like RadioShack, can snag (your information) out of the
air," said Brock Meeks, spokesman for the Center for Democracy and Technology
in Washington.
Paul Henning, a Customs and Border Protection official in San Diego,
said an aluminum storage sleeve prevents people from stealing information.
Travelers pull the document from the sleeve - one is provided by the government
- when they cross the border.
Henning said successful hackers would only be able to lift an identification
number - not personal information such as name and address.
Despite the promises of speedier crossings, El Paso, Texas, immigration
attorney Kathleen Walker said she hasn't noticed significant improvement
since the technology was installed in the Texas border city. The document
readers might help, she said, but the only way to achieve shorter lines
is adding more inspectors and vehicle lanes.
"Let's not read this is as the Second Coming," she said.