KAHULUI, Maui (AP) — Kahului Airport on Maui has completed its second phase of its thermal screening project meant to combat the spread of the coronavirus.
The screening uses thermal imaging and facial recognition technology to pinpoint people with a temperature of 100.4 degrees or higher.
Dual lens cameras have been installed at all arrival gates and TSA checkpoints in the airport. When phase three is completed, the cameras will be able to track travelers with high body temperatures so contact tracers can stop and screen them before they leave the airport.
Maui Airports District Manager Marvin Moniz says he expects phase three to be completed before the end of the year.
The technology is being implemented at all five of Hawaii’s main airports.
In response to growing privacy concerns, Moniz said the images are erased every 30 minutes. There are also signs throughout the airport that alert travelers about the thermal screening cameras.
“It’s not recorded, it’s just like a queue,” said Maui District Assistant Airport Superintendent Larry Miller. “It’s not permanently stored.”
Moniz said the airport is using the system to flag people, even before the third phase starts. He said personnel from the American Medical Response and the Kahului Airport Aircraft Rescue and Fire Fighting Unit are currently tasked with testing passengers who are flagged for high temperatures.
“If you have a temperature of 100.4, a tracker or tracer will pull you aside,” Moniz said. “They check out the individual and consult with the Department of Health to determine what the next step is for that passenger.”
He said those who have been flagged so far using the cameras include a person who had a kidney infection and another with an ear infection.