WASHINGTON –
Service members are trusted to defend the nation, surely they can be trusted when boarding a plane.
This is the thinking of the Transportation Security Administration, which is pushing to ensure that service members and Department of Defense civilians know they can use the TSA Precheck program.
All service members of all components of the armed forces and students at the armed forces' service academies are automatically enrolled in TSA Precheck. Their DOD ID numbers -- a 10-digit number that should be on the back of your Common Access Card -- serve as their Known Traveler Numbers.
Civilian employees must opt into the program using milConnect website. Their DOD ID number is also their KTN.
Again, there is no cost for military members or civilians. For the general public that enrolls in the program, the cost is $85.
"This is a real benefit for being a member of the armed forces, and it is good for us from a security perspective," Petoske said.
To obtain their positions, service members and DOD civilians undergo background checks, and most have security clearances. They are trusted to carry weapons in defense of the United States or to safeguard America's secrets. So the TSA decided that there was no need for them to take off their shoes and belts at a checkpoint to get on an aircraft.
All travelers must add their DOD ID number to their Defense Travel System profiles to access TSA Precheck while on official travel, but eligible service members and civilians can also use it on personal travel, Pekoske said.
"If you go on any airline website, when you are making flight reservations, there is a box for the KTN and that is where they put their DOD number in," he said. "Once you put the number in -- especially if you are a regular flier on that airline -- every time you make a reservation, or a reservation is made by the DOD travel service for you, they will automatically pick up that number."
"The effort makes sense from an agency perspective and it is also a way to say thanks to members of the military and the civilian members of DOD and the Department of Homeland Security who sacrifice so much," the administrator said. "It's a really good program and it provides a direct benefit to those who keep us free."