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Security Bill Picks Up Ideas Of 9/11 Panel
By Gail Russell Chaddock, Christian Science Monitor
January 9, 2007
In a bid to fulfill campaign
promises, House Democrats are bringing to
the floor - without new hearings or, perhaps,
even the possibility of amendment - a sweeping
bill to implement more of the 9/11 commission
recommendations.
The bill includes new
directives for allocating more
homeland-security resources on the basis of
risk and threat assessment, requiring
inspection of all sea and air cargo, and adding
funding for the interoperability of first
responders. It also moves up reporting
deadlines for the department of Homeland
Security on work to improve aviation security,
terrorist trafficking, port security, and a
system to track foreign visitors.
"Let
us be the Congress that strongly honors our
responsibility to protect the American people
from terrorism," said Speaker Nancy Pelosi in
her acceptance speech last week. On the eve of
last November's elections, then-minority leader
Pelosi promised that Democrats would implement
all the 9/11 commission recommendations in
their first day in office.
But it
leaves out key provisions of that prestigious
panel that were considered and rejected in the
GOP-controlled Congress:
* It does not
take up panel recommendations to declassify the
top line of the intelligence budget.
*
It would not shift covert paramilitary
operations from the Central Intelligence Agency
to the Defense Department.
* It skirts
the lead recommendation of the 9/11 commission
for members of Congress: to dramatically reduce
the number of committees that claim oversight
over homeland security.
"In only their
first few days in the majority, House
Democratic leadership has already fallen short
on the key security promise they made to the
American people," chided Rep. Peter King of New
York, the ranking Republican on the Committee
on Homeland Security. "Republicans have already
enacted an overwhelming majority of the
recommendations, and the opening of the 110th
Congress was a terrific opportunity to finish
the job. Unfortunately, it is amounting to
nothing more than a missed
opportunity."
Others take a more
optimistic view. "The 108th Congress passed
half of the 9/11 commission reforms. The 109th
Congress did nothing. The 110th Congress seeks
to finish the job and pass all the remaining
reforms," says Timothy Roemer, a former 9/11
commissioner.
He praised Pelosi for
creating a new subcommittee in the House
Appropriations panel to include representatives
of both authorizing and spending committees.
"We recognize that congressional oversight is
one of the most difficult reforms yet and one
of the most important. It's a very important
step to tie intelligence oversight to the
budget," he adds.
A key recommendation
of the 9/11 commission was to allocate limited
homeland-security resources by setting
"risk-based priorities," rather than using a
formula based on population or political clout.
Democrats protested that rural states, such as
Wyoming, were awarded bigger grants per capita
than target cities like New York and Washington
in fiscal year 2006.
"Hard choices must
be made in allocating limited resources. The US
government should identify and evaluate the
transportation assets that need to be
protected, set risk-based priorities for
defending them, select the most practical and
cost-effective ways of doing so, and then
develop a plan, budget, and funding to
implement the effort," said the panel, known
officially as the National Commission on
Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, in
its final report in 2004.
In a nod to
the 9/11 commission recommendation to
streamline congressional oversight, House
Democrats are creating the House subcommittee
that includes both appropriators and
authorizers. But leaders of the Department of
Homeland Security still appear before dozens of
congressional panels.
"Gov. Tom Ridge
[former secretary of Homeland Security]
estimated that he spent at least 40 percent of
his time, maybe more, testifying before
Congress. The number of committees with
oversight has been reduced from 80 to 55," says
Al Felzenberg, former spokesman for the 9/11
commission.
"Of all our recommendations,
strengthening congressional oversight may be
among the most difficult and important," said
the 9/11 commission in its final report. "Few
things are more difficult to change in
Washington than congressional committee
jurisdiction and
prerogatives."
Meanwhile, the Senate is
also planning to take up a bill to implement
the 9/11 commission's recommendations as one of
its first pieces of legislation in the new
Congress. This will include enhanced screening
of containers and cargo in ships and planes at
the point of origin, improved security at
chemical and nuclear plants, and more resources
for first responders.
The bill also
calls for greater diplomacy and programs for
"enhancing the authority of moderates and
undermining violent extremists in the Middle
East." And it would call for securing "loose
nuclear materials" that terrorists could use to
build nuclear weapons or dirty bombs.