October 22, 2008

Top 10+ Tips For Holiday Travel!

The holidays are here and so is the stress.  There is nothing like the stress of booking tickets and traveling during the holidays.  Added to that stress is airport security.  I am a former TSA airport screener (www.tsa.gov) and I have made it my personal mission to help passengers get through airport security fast, safe and easy.

Here are my top ten valuable airport security tips to help you travel through airport security this holiday season.  Be sure to tell me your horror stories or comments on traveling through airport security during the holidays.

Filed under Travel Tips by Natalia Ippolito

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Top 10 secondary screening tips for holiday travel

Summer is almost here and millions of air travelers will be hitting the airports for vacation.  The one question passengers are most concerned about is how can I breeze though airport security screening. 

My first tip is know ahead of time if you are one of the lucky ones selected for secondary screening, even before you arrive at the airport.  You do this by printing out your boarding pass from home the night before.  If you are successful in printing one out, then you are not selected by the airlines for secondary screening.  If you are unsuccessful in printing your boarding pass, then you are selected by the airlines for secondary screening and you must check in at the ticket counter. 

Filed under Passenger Awareness, Travel Safety, Travel Tips by Natalia Ippolito

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7 Ways To Keep You and Your Children Stress Free When Traveling Through The Airport!

When traveling with children, you must Plan Before You Stand!

When you get up in the morning to dress your children for travel, remind yourself that they too need to wear clothes with little or no metal. Overalls will alarm. Small children will be asked to remove their shoes, so have them wear ones that slip on.

If your child is traveling alone, parents are allowed to walk them to the gate with an escort pass from the airlines. Just show your escort pass to the metal detector screener, and you are on your way. Ask for a supervisor if the screener questions the pass.

Primary screening is hard enough for children, especially if the screener requests the parents to divest the child’s security blanket or favorite stuffed animal. Children don’t understand why; all they know is that something they treasure and love has been stripped away from their tiny hands, and now they are upset. They are in the middle of a breakdown. As the child throws a tantrum, the parent is trying to get him or her to walk through the metal detector. The child just stands there and cries. At this point they pick up their child and walk through together. They both alarm. They go back and check to make sure that all of their metal items have been divested, and they walk through again. They alarm again. Now there is a bigger problem as they are both required to go to secondary screening, and the child is even more upset. The crying turns into screaming.

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Filed under Airport Stories, Passenger Awareness, Travel Safety, Travel Tips by Natalia Ippolito

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October 5, 2008

15 Important Tips Revealed: Airport Screening for Children with Disabilities

Children are born to move. They have tons of energy and need an outlet to burn it up, so it can be tough to get them to be still and listen. It is even more difficult for children who have special needs or disabilities to be confined to an area.

Most large airports have a designated lane for passengers with a disability. It normally is marked with a universal handicap symbol (blue placard). If you have a child with a disability, you may utilize this lane if it is available at your airport. You can also use the kid friendly lanes. If you don’t see a blue placard right away, then tell the boarding pass/identification checker that you will need to use a lane designated for children with a disability, and he or she will direct you.

Filed under Passenger Awareness, Travel Safety, Travel Tips by Natalia Ippolito

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