That’s just your mistaken impression. We measure these kinds of things in dollars. If you are offered overtime pay at $15 an hour, and you go to the beach for the day, then we know that you valued the beach more than you valued the next $120. It’s just a measure, not a statement that people are always being productive.
It’s not wasting time to them: they value their time and we can express that in dollars.
I hate security theater as much as the next guy, but there is is a serious flaw in trying to calculate the economic cost of waiting in line. Sometimes the line is 20 minutes, sometimes it is ten minutes. And sometimes it is 30 minutes. I don’t know in advance how long the line is going to be. I get to the airport at the same time regardless of the wait time. If the line is short, I spend more time waiting at the gate. If the line is long, I have a short wait at the gait. I’m wasting the same amount of time even if the line is two minutes every time.
Did you ever happen to notice, while you’re standing there literally staring at the wall waiting for your flight, that others do things like read, talk on the phone, go to a restaurant, shop at a bookstore…?
We need some way to see if investments we do actually pay off, and we have set up guidelines for how to do so. When we decide where to put a new highway, we must weigh the benefit of quicker transport against construction costs and disruption during building works. Without these kinds of analyses, we are just fumbling in the dark.
Not weighing pros and cons is a bad way to run a business, a family, or a country. Airport security is no different.
My father was a safety director at a maritime shipping company. He tells of how every shipping company in the world are required to run lifeboat exercises regularly. But after a few years statistics showed that more people died in exercises than were saved in emergencies! But, actually changing the requirements in international regulations are extremely difficult, and a lot of people still die needlessly because of this, although it is changing now.
Regulations have consequences, and they should always be measured for efficiency.
Because waiting around the airport is a waste of time no matter what you’re doing. It’s part of the flying experience now and it was before the TSA. I’m not wasting any more time per flight now than I was pre 9/11. get rid of TSA entirely, and you won’t find that $10billion.
All the stupid rules were added in direct response to credible threats. Nonetheless, getting rid of this rule wouldn’t save a bunch of money, would it?
Unnecessary due to 9/11, or unnecessary in general? The government isn’t ignoring accidents, of course. Air bags and other safety regulations address them. And cars are safer than ever. When I was a kid the news always reported the vast number of car deaths over the Memorial Day weekend, so much so that Mad had a parody of the Jerry Lewis telethon with the NHSA on the air pushing for more deaths to meet their estimate. See that lately? So it is a meaningless statistic.
Now, supposedly mandating airbags might lead to more accidents due to people feeling safer and taking more risks. But cutting regulations on air bags wouldn’t make people have more accidents - but cutting inspections might very well cause more incidents? Do you deny this? Therefore, normal cost-benefit analyses which don’t cover this link are not appropriate here.
What have I said that makes you suppose there was ten billion dollar bills being shredded? If you want to go to the beach rather than earn another $120 dollars working, then we know you valued the trip to the beach at least as much as $120. If you are then stuck in traffic, and never make it to the beach, you lost the equivalent of at least $120. I don’t understand what you disagree with in this.
There isn’t $10 billion difference between sitting at the Gate for a few more minutes and waiting a few minutes in the TSA line. There are a lot of reasons to criticize the TSA, but trying to put a price tag on the amount of time in line is junk science at best.
I’m always early, and haven’t needed to go any earlier since 9/11. In any case, I see lots of people doing work at the airport. Now that we carry laptops around, all is not lost. And frequent fliers have the ability to get pre-cleared and save time, which makes sense. And much better than skipping necessary screening.
Unnecessary in that they died as a consequence of a change in policy and their deaths are a disbenefit of that policy, and should be used in calculating the policy’s overall efficiency.
Of course you have to analyse the action of implementing the regulations and altering them separately. The question “What are the benefits of the new security policy?” is different from “What can we do to reduce the disbenefit of this policy”.
Are you saying that the measurements that have been done by presumably competent people by examining rules and interviewing people are worthless? That as you personally don’t waste more time now than before, no one else does either?
I can understand a challenge in degree, and that you may want to ask Bruce Schneier where he gets these numbers, but are you instead challenging the whole concept of measuring the extra wasted time?
:rolleyes:
Just a wild ass guess here, you don’t travel on business do you?
If your boss came to you and said: Hey brickbacon I want you to travel transcontinental and since I don’t want you to lose any work time, I want you to work a full day, then take the redeye to the other coast, work a full day there, fly home that night, and be back here the following morning. You don’t mind traveling on your own time do you?*
Would your answer be:
A) Sure no problem
or
B) Are you out of your ever loving mind?
If you answered A) what would you say after say 15 years of that shit doing it 26 weeks or so out of the year?
*Been there done that. Coming home to LA from NY would be a 22-23 hour long day assuming there were no issues with the flight. Going to the East Coast after a full day’s work and the then working the following day is about a 39 hour day. Not fun., sometimes necessary, but not something that any sane business person would plan.