Denver To Host Clear's Planned Resurrection
Registered Traveler provider Clear plans to relaunch security-screening lanes this fall at Denver International Airport, the first airport to reaffirm plans to host the program whose previous owners abruptly shuttered it last summer and subsequently spiraled into bankruptcy.
Clear said it expects to begin enrollment for the recalibrated program in August, charging $179 for annual access, but would honor membership terms for Clear members spurned by the predecessor company's shutdown.
Denver International already has an installed base of some 20,000 such local members, who under the bankruptcy purchase agreement can opt out from having their data transferred to the new owners.
IQueue, a venture that includes registered traveler provider FLO Corp. and biometric identification firm Cogent Inc., announced a commitment to launch similar lanes in Indianapolis.