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Hire Me! Hire me for your writing assignment or event. I'm reasonable and reliable. Also looking for additional writing gigs. Email me at rclimpert003@yahoo.com

Based in Atlanta, GA - Rick Limpert is an award-winning writer, a best-selling author, and a featured sports travel writer.

Named the No. 1 Sports Technology writer in the U.S. on Oct 1, 2014.

Entries in holiday travel (2)

Thursday
Nov202014

Audiobooks.com Makes for Great Holiday Reading

Love Audiobooks.com and I, with the help of the folks at Audiobooks.com give some holiday travel reading picks.

http://www.examiner.com/article/mile-high-club-audiobooks-picks-for-holiday-air-travel

Saturday
Nov202010

Holiday Travelers Worried Over TSA Body Scans

As the high-travel Thanksgiving holiday approaches, travelers and lawmakers in Washingtonare up in arms over airport security measures.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the U.S. Travel Association have been getting thousands of complaints. Facebook and Twitter are smoking with posted outrage. And the talk at the airports is not about canceled or delayed flights, it's about security sceenings and touching of one's "junk."

In response to terrorist threats, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) now gives airline passengers two choices: Get a full-body scan using low-dose radiation that shows a naked image – everything from head to toe – which may or not be harmful to one’s health, depending on the expert cited. Or refuse the scan and have a stranger run his or her hands over every part of your body.  What a choice!

"With the holiday travel season fast approaching, we need to make sure that security measures are in place that actually make us more secure without compromising passenger privacy," says the ACLU, which is urging people to sign its petition to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano.

In Washington, meanwhile, Rep. Ron Paul (R) of Texas has introduced the "American Traveler Dignity Act."

"It removes the immunity from anybody in the federal government that does anything that you or I can’t do," says Paul. "If you can’t grope another person and if you can’t X-ray people and endanger them with possible X-rays, you can’t take nude photographs of individuals, why do we allow the government to do it?"

The congressional concern reaches across the aisle.

Reps. Bennie Thompson (D) of Mississippi and Sheila Jackson Lee (D) of Texas (who chair the Committee on Homeland Security and the transportation security and infrastructure subcommittee, respectively) have asked the TSA for detailed information on the new enhanced security system and how the agency is handling complaints.

This Wednesday has been designated "National Opt-Out Day" in which travelers have been asked to refuse the relatively quick X-ray scan, which means that already long lines could become even longer as people wait to be patted down – a sort of slowdown meant to jam up the security system but which could also cause thousands of passengers to miss flights.

On its web site and Facebook page, the U.S. Travel Association (which represents some 1,700 travel businesses) is surveying travelers’ personal experiences, which it is forwarding to Congress and the White House.

As the debate continues, the use of the controversial scanners around the country is increasing each and every day.

"The number of scanners jumped from 40 at the start of this year to 373 installed at 68 airports across the USA as of last week," reports USA today. "The TSA is scheduled to have deployed 500 scanners, which cost roughly $170,000 each, by Dec. 31, and a total of 1,000 by the end of 2011."

Secretary Napolitano has asked for patience with the new enhanced security system.

The holiday season will be a major test of the system – and of travelers’ and airport workers patience.

The AAA estimates that 42.2 million Americans will be traveling – 1.6 million in the air.