Guide dogs explore TSA checkpoint at Reagan Airport to get oriented to security checkpoints

Local Press Release
Monday, March 25, 2024
Dogs and their trainers entered the TSA security checkpoint to allow the dogs to get familiar with the process. (TSA photo)

ARLINGTON, Va. – Approximately two dozen service dogs got some practice going through a Transportation Security Administration checkpoint at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport this morning (National Puppy Day) so that they would be more familiar with the experience of traversing through an airport when they need to catch a flight. 

This puppy triggered an alarm in the checkpoint scanner and required his vest and collar to be patted down by a TSA officer. (TSA photo)
This puppy triggered an alarm in the checkpoint scanner and required his vest and collar to be patted down by a TSA officer. (TSA photo)

TSA officials screened 24 puppies and their trainers from the Guide Dog Foundation for the Blind to assist individuals with visual impairments and America’s VetDogs® who are trained for those with physical disabilities; individuals who are blind or have low vision; and to help veterans mitigate the effects of PTSD.

TSA officers worked with the pups as they came through the checkpoint in an effort to acclimate the future guide dogs with an important piece of the airport experience—the security checkpoint.

The familiarization opportunity will result in a smoother experience when the puppies graduate into certified guide dogs and return to take a flight, according to officials from Guide Dog Foundation. The familiarization exercise enables the canines and their trainers to know what to expect when the dogs and the people they are trained to guide, return with plans to take a flight.

The orientation session also served as a good review and reinforcement of TSA procedures for screening service animals for the TSA officers who were working at the checkpoint during the familiarization exercise.

“The orientation session was a hit with the dog trainers, the TSA officers and of course with the dogs. There was plenty of tail wagging,” said John Busch, TSA’s Federal Security Director for the airport. “The collaborative effort benefitted the guide dogs, the airport and TSA and will go a long way to ensuring that the dogs and their eventual owners will have a smooth checkpoint experience in the future.”

The TSA officers always enjoy working with the service dogs and their trainers. (TSA photo)
The TSA officers always enjoy working with the service dogs and their trainers. (TSA photo)

The dogs also had the opportunity to sniff around the airline check-in counters, baggage carousels and TSA arranged for the puppies and their trainers to board an aircraft.

Similar TSA checkpoint orientations have taken place for service dogs at other airports including Baltimore Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, Greater Binghamton Airport, Elmira Corning Regional Airport, Buffalo-Niagara International Airport, LaGuardia Airport, Westchester County Airport, Frederick Douglass Greater Rochester International Airport and Long Island MacArthur Airport, among others.

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