You're just wrong on this one PCL. SWAPA simply took a different tack on   how to best develop a system of identifying Known Crewmembers. SWAPA   went the direction of using biometric data to most securely identify the   identity of crewmembers. The system developed and tested by SWAPA is  in  fact superior to the system that is currently in place even though  it  was not adopted for fear of cost problems. The original mandate  included  the need for a 
biometric component which is exactly why SWAPA  went the  direction of biometrics. 
SecureScreen  was jointly developed by the Southwest Airlines Pilots  Association  (SWAPA), Southwest Airlines (SWA), the Coalition of Airline  Pilots  Associations (CAPA), Maryland Aviation Authority (BWI),  officials from  TSA, and Priva Technologies. ClearedKey utilizes  commercially available,  biometrically enabled microchips with the  government?s FIPS 140-2 Level  3 certification. 
 SecureScreen addresses the congressional mandates in H.R. 1 (Public   Law 110-053), implementing the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission,   which requires TSA to enhance security by properly identifying   authorized airline flight deck and cabin crew members at screening   checkpoints, granting them expedited access through screening   checkpoints and 
to integrate biometric identifiers into airport security   access control systems.
 http://secureidnews.com/news-item/southwest-airline-pilots-undergo-biometric-screening/
The program, called SecureScreen, is a joint effort by the
  Transportation Security Administration, Southwest Airlines, the  Southwest Airlines Pilots' Association, the Coalition of Airline Pilots  Associations, Priva Technologies and the Maryland Aviation  Administration. 
More than 200 BWI-based Southwest Airlines pilots will  participate in  the project and have their fingerprints, photographs and  other security  information stored on Priva's ClearedKey devices. A  reader at a TSA  security checkpoint will verify pilots' identities  against the devices'  biometric data. 
http://gcn.com/articles/2008/09/18/tsa-tests-biometrics-for-pilots.aspx?admgarea=TC_SECCYBERSSEC
SecureScreen  addresses the congressional mandates in H.R. 1 (Public Law  110-053),  implementing the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission,  which requires  TSA to enhance security by properly identifying  authorized airline  flight deck and cabin crew members at screening  checkpoints, granting  them expedited access through screening  checkpoints 
and to integrate  biometric identifiers into airport  security access control systems. -  See more at:  
http://secureidnews.com/news-item/so....GYbhET5Y.dpuf
The  first participants in the SecureScreen program were 200 Southwest  Airlines pilots who went through a quick enrollment process, which  stored their fingerprints, photograph, and other protected security  information on what is called a ClearedKey.  It's a token with a USB  interface.  The ClearedKey data can only be accessed by TSA at a  security checkpoint, where the ClearedKey reader verifies the pilot's  fingerprint and also provides an additional layer of security by showing  the TSA agent the pilot's photograph.  After positive identification,  TSA clears the pilot to proceed into the secure area to report for  flight duty.  
 
"The screening takes only a few seconds but it offers robust access  control because it provides not only biometric identification of users,  but an additional three different ID verification factors including the  user's photo and the confirmation of the authenticity of the ClearedKey  and the ClearedKey reader.  In addition, the platform protects the  privacy of the personal information provided by users and is designed to  foil spoofing," says Chambers.  
                                                                                             
http://www.redorbit.com/news/busine...es_beyond_biometrics_says_priva_technologies/