Security Scanner
Newcastle Airport operates security scanners in accordance with Department for Transport (DfT) guidelines.
Below you will find a host of frequently asked questions about the scanner, the reason for its implementation and the selection process.
The security scanner uses active millimetre wave technology. It will scan the passenger’s body and analyse the data using Automated Threat Recognition (ATR) software. This software identifies any areas where prohibited items may be concealed, which are flagged on a standardised stick-figure on a screen. The security officer can then conduct a further targeted hand-search on these identified areas.
All passengers will undertake a body scan and some passengers may be randomly selected for additional screening such as the removal of footwear and subject to conventional hand searches.
You will be asked to step into the scanner and adopt the required stance. Newcastle Airport staff will then explain what will happen and guide you through the process. Unlike a hand search, no physical contact is required and you will not feel anything. The whole process takes only a few seconds. If the scanner detects any potentially dangerous items on your person, then airport security staff will need to search you further to determine what these are and you may be asked to go through the scanner again.
As you pass through Newcastle Airport security on departure from the UK you will be asked to pass through the security scanner.
The scanner works alongside the other methods of screening to will help Newcastle Airport security staff to detect a variety of items that could potentially be used to cause harm to an aircraft and its passengers.
No image is created or stored by the security scanner.
Children are required to be screened by a security scanner if selected. To do otherwise would risk undermining the effect of these measures and potentially leave children vulnerable to exploitation by terrorists.
The DfT is confident that requiring children who are selected for screening to be screened is a proportionate and necessary measure in enhancing security for all passengers.
No. Airlines include the right to refuse to carry passengers if they refuse a security check to be carried out on them or their baggage as part of the terms and conditions of sale of tickets for travel. Passengers should ensure that they arrive at Newcastle Airport with plenty of time to pass all necessary security checks before boarding their flight.
All passengers must be screened by a security scanner, or the alternative, involving at least a private search. Exemptions from this screening will not be granted.
All technology used in the scanning process is required to have all data storage equipment removed, and USB ports disabled or removed. It must not be possible to save, copy, or transfer data.
In ATR (Automatic Threat Recognition), the security scanner collects data from the millimetre waves. This data is not processed to produce an image of the person being scanned. Instead it identifies features in that data indicative of an anomaly on the body. The results of this are then presented on a standardised stick-figure image. All the processing is done electronically.
Yes. The security scanner uses millimetre waves, emitting very low power electromagnetic radiation, many times lower than that emitted by mobile phones. There are no known health risks associated with this.
There are no known health risks from scanners using active millimetre wave technology, including for expectant mothers. The waves are reflected off the surface of the skin, and are not absorbed.
Unlike some medical devices, the security scanner is designed to image external characteristics of the body. It is not designed to scan internal organs or prostheses.
The scanner is designed to detect any concealed item on the body of a person. Items such as colostomy bags will be identified by the scanner. Staff are trained to deal with items of this nature sensitively.
No. The technology has been assessed by government health and safety regulators and there are no known health risks from being scanned with this technology.
All passengers are subject to security screening by any of the methods deployed in airport security checkpoints, which includes security scanners, if selected. In order to undergo a security scan it is necessary for the passenger to stand for a few seconds. Whilst this will not be possible for some wheelchair users, others will be able to do so. Newcastle Airport security staff will discuss with passengers whether they are able to stand, but the presumption will be that passengers who can undergo the scan should do so. Passengers who refuse to be screened by the security scanner will be allowed to request a private search alternative.
An alternative form of screening, of at least a private search, will be required if any passenger refuses to be screened by a security scanner. The private search is an enhanced hand-search in private which may involve the loosening and/or removal of clothing. This alternative screening method will take significantly more time than passing through a security scanner and, as well as a hand search in private, potentially involves additional security processes. Passengers may also be escorted to a different location in the airport from the main search area, such as a private search room. No passenger details will be recorded.
If you refuse a private search then you will not be offered third means of being screened and, on that occasion, you will not be allowed to fly.
If you would like to make a complaint about any aspect of your journey through Newcastle Airport please email [email protected].