[Infowarrior] - DHS, HHS make secret pact to share airline passenger info
Richard Forno
rforno at infowarrior.org
Fri Apr 21 21:22:57 EDT 2006
DHS, HHS make secret pact to share airline passenger info
BY Bob Brewin
Published on Apr. 20, 2006
http://www.fcw.com/article94142-04-20-06-Web
The departments of Health and Human Services and Homeland Security have a
secret agreement to exchange airline passenger information as part of a
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention plan to help combat pandemic flu,
the Air Transport Association (ATA) said in a filing with the CDC.
Barry Steinhardt, director of the Technology and Liberty Program at the
American Civil Liberties Union said that such an agreement raises serious
privacy concerns and appears to violate an agreement between the United
States and the European Union. That agreement limits the exchange of foreign
carrier passenger information to help combat terrorism and crime.
Steinhardt added that the secret agreement between DHS and HHS also raises
concerns hat the highly detailed passenger information CDC wants to collect
could ultimately be shared with DHS. ³I¹m very concerned this is a two-way
data sharing agreement,² Steinhardt said.
The existence of the secret agreement between DHS and HHS surfaced in a
filing the ATA made last month with its comments on proposed CDC regulations
that would electronically track more than 600 million passengers a year
traveling on more than 7 million flights through 67 hub airports.
Katherine Andrus, assistant general counsel at the ATA, said in her filing
with CDC last month that DHS and HHS recently executed a memorandum of
understanding (MOU) that ³though not publicly availablereportedly includes
provisions for data sharing, including allowing CDC access to passenger
information, including passenger name records, through² Customs and Border
Protection.
Steinhardt said passenger name record files include a large amount of data
besides personal identifiers, such as meal preferences, which could help
determine a passenger¹s religion.
The sharing of information between DHS and CBP appears to violate a
passenger data sharing agreement between the European Union and the United
States executed in May 2004, Steinhardt said. That agreement limits DHS to
using data it obtains from EU airline reservation and departure control
system databases to prevent and combat terrorism and other serious crimes,
including organized crime, that are transnational .
Steinhardt said this agreement does not cover the exchange of passenger name
record data to help combat pandemic flu.
The ACLU is concerned that the MOU between DHS and HHS will allow CDC to
share data with DHS once its system is operating. The information that CDC
wants to collect regarding airline passengers vastly exceeds DHS¹ passenger
data collection efforts, Steinhardt said in the ACLU filing with CDC.
Steinhardt said he is concerned that the MOU between DHS and HHS has not
been made public, and he filed a Freedom of Information Act request for it
today.
Public affairs officers at DHS and HHS did not return calls from Federal
Computer Week by the requested deadline. A CDC spokeswoman responded, but
said HHS must answer any queries.
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