Precheck program successful for TSA

Here's bad news for anyone who has ever used the expedited airport security lines without having applied for the program.

The Transportation Security Administration has been so successful at signing up travelers for the faster security lines, known as TSA PreCheck, that the agency will restrict passengers who sometimes are waved in when standard screening lines get long.

TSA PreCheck, which accepts travelers who submit background information for pre-clearance, has signed up more than 430,000 fliers since it started in 2011. People who are approved don't have to remove their shoes, belts, coats or unpack their laptop computers when going through the faster PreCheck lines.

To qualify for the program, travelers can either be invited through an airline loyalty rewards program or can apply directly to the TSA and pay an $85 fee.

"As we have had more people signed up for TSA PreCheck, we'll be tapering back on those that we include on a random basis," TSA Administrator John Pistole said.

GUESTS TO PICK ROOM FROM HOTEL FLOOR PLAN

Thanks to digital technology, hotel guests have the power to reserve a room, check in, order room service and look up nearby restaurants or clubs, all with a few keystrokes on a laptop or mobile device.

Hilton Worldwide, one of the largest hotel operators in the world, now plans to give guests even more booking options. By the end of the year, Hilton said, it will allow guests to pick their room from a floor plan at more than 4,000 hotels from 11 brands.

Hilton added this option for good reason: 37 percent of business travelers said getting a bad room location was the most frustrating part of booking a room, according to a Hilton survey.

The new service might eliminate getting stuck with a room next to the noisy banquet hall and instead put you in a room overlooking the pool.

DIFFERENT PASSENGERS PAY DIFFERENT FARES

On a recent vacation trip to Canada, Gina Kano couldn't help thinking that she probably paid more for her ticket than other passengers on the plane.

"And there is no way to know why," the marketing executive from Los Angeles said. "Is it just luck? When there is no logical reason, it's very annoying."

A new study has confirmed what Kano and many airline travelers have long suspected: On any given flight, passengers can pay twice as much as others in the same cabin section, and even as much as eight times more.

The study, based on millions of airfares analyzed by the travel-planning site Hopper.com, looked a several domestic flights taken in early May, including a United Airlines flight from Los Angeles International Airport to Las Vegas. On that flight, one-way fares ranged from less than $200 to more than $1,600 for coach seats.

The study also found that some airlines have a greater mix of prices than others. To gauge the disparity, Hopper calculated the percentage of fares that varied from the base fare on that flight.

Fares varied the least on Spirit Airlines (5 percent) and Virgin America (15 percent), while larger carriers such as United Airlines had 18 percent variability, according to the study.

The prices seem to vary less on flights to popular vacation destinations, such as Hawaii, because leisure travelers are more sensitive to price and are quick to cancel a trip if airfares are too high, said Patrick Surry, Hopper's chief data scientist.

Meanwhile, flights to popular business destinations such as Washington or Chicago have greater price variability because business travelers must make those trips regardless of price, he said.

But Surry said further studies are needed to determine why prices vary so much between flights and airlines.

"This is something we'll be digging into in more detail," he said.

Travel on 08/24/2014

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