Lee K said:
I wonder what the purpose of diverting to Bangor is
Found this today......
Airport in Maine is prime spot to halt `no-fly' passengers
Also receives other interrrupted flights
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USA Today 05/20/05[/size]
author: Associated Press
(Copyright 2005)
BANGOR, Maine -- Bangor International Airport once was known as a place where unruly passengers were dropped off. Now, in the post-Sept. 11 era, it plays a role in the war against terrorism.
Twice in less than a week, trans-Atlantic flights have been diverted to the airport because a passenger's name appeared on the terrorism "no-fly list." Both episodes turned out to be false alarms.
Both times, airport workers sprang into action, and the FBI and other federal agents removed the passengers for questioning.
"We're so used to it," says Bob Jarvis, the airport's operations manager. "We handle it like any other one and get it back in the air."
Bangor, about 230 miles northeast of Boston, is the first large U.S. airport for incoming European flights. It also offers uncluttered skies and one of the longest runways on the East Coast. Together, those make the airport an ideal drop-off place for someone who may be too dangerous to be aboard a passenger jet.
The Bangor airport, created from the former Dow Air Force Base, was much busier when it served as a refueling stopover point for 4,500 to 5,000 international charter flights a year during the late 1980s and early 1990s, Jarvis said.
Activity slowed with the advent of longer-range jetliners. Now, Bangor serves only an occasional international charter flight. It continues to receive cargo planes and older aircraft that need to refuel.
In addition, it gets flights diverted because of terrorism fears, medical emergencies, bad weather, equipment failures or passengers who get drunk and unruly.
Seven international flights since the Sept. 11 attacks have been diverted because a passenger's name appeared to be on the federal no-fly list, and four of those went to Bangor, according to the Transportation Security Administration.
One of those was a highly publicized episode in September involving Yusuf Islam, the singer formerly known as Cat Stevens.
Federal law requires airlines to transmit to the Homeland Security Department the passenger lists for flights bound for the USA within 15 minutes of takeoff. Officials check the names against terrorist watch lists. But by then, many of the flights are airborne.
Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., sponsored legislation that directed Homeland Security to run checks before takeoff. The department is three months behind schedule in coming up with a plan.