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TESTIMONY
OF
JAMES S. GILMORE, III
CHAIRMAN
ADVISORY PANEL TO ACCESS DOMESTIC RESPONSE
CAPABILITIES FOR TERRORISM INVOLVING
WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION
BEFORE
THE
HOUSE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE
MILITARY PROCUREMENT SUBCOMMITTEE
NOVEMBER
14, 2002
Mister
Chairman, Ranking Member, and Members of the
Subcommittee, I am honored to be here today.
I come before you as the Chairman of the
Advisory Panel to Assess Domestic Response
Capabilities for Terrorism Involving Weapons of
Mass Destruction.
Thank you for the opportunity to present
the views of the Advisory Panel.
The
Advisory Panel was established by
Section 1405 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1999,
Public Law 105-261 (H.R. 3616, 105thCongress,
2nd Session) (October 17, 1998).
That Act directed the Advisory Panel to
accomplish several specific tasks.
It said:
The
panel shall--
1.
Assess Federal agency efforts to enhance
domestic preparedness for incidents involving
weapons of mass destruction;
2.
Assess the progress of Federal training
programs for local emergency responses to
incidents involving weapons of mass destruction;
3.
Assess deficiencies in programs for
response to incidents involving weapons of mass
destruction, including a review of unfunded
communications, equipment, and planning
requirements, and the needs of maritime regions;
4.
Recommend strategies for ensuring
effective coordination with respect to Federal
agency weapons of mass destruction response
efforts, and for ensuring fully effective local
response capabilities for weapons of mass
destruction incidents; and
5.
Assess the appropriate roles of State and
local government in funding effective local
response capabilities.
That
Act required the Advisory Panel to report its
findings, conclusions, and recommendations for
improving Federal, State, and local domestic
emergency preparedness to respond to incidents
involving weapons of mass destruction to the
President and the Congress three times during
the course of the Advisory Panel's
deliberations-on December 15 in 1999, 2000,
and 2001.
The
Advisory Panel's tenure was extended for two
years in accordance with Section 1514 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2002 (S. 1358, Public Law 107-107, 107th
Congress, First Session), which was signed into
law by the President on December 28, 2001.
By virtue of that legislation, the panel
is now required to submit two additional
reports-one on December 15 of this year, and
one on December 15, 2003.
Leadership
of the Subcommittee
Let
me again commend this panel, and especially its
distinguished Chairman, the gentleman from
Pennsylvania, Mr. Weldon, for your continuing
leadership in bringing these issues involving
homeland security and combating terrorism before
the U.S. Congress and the American people.
Many will not remember, as we on the
Advisory Panel remember so well, that this
subcommittee and its Chair were well into these
issues long before the attacks of last
September, including the foresight to establish
and then to extend the tenure of the Advisory
Panel for an additional two years.
Panel
Composition
Mr.
Chairman, as I usually do on occasions like
this, please allow me to pay special tribute to
the men and women who serve on our panel.
This
Advisory Panel is unique in one very important
way. It
is not the typical national "blue ribbon"
panel, which in most cases historically have
been composed almost exclusively of what I will
refer to as "Washington Insiders"-people
who have spent most of their professional
careers inside the Beltway.
This panel has a sprinkling of that kind
of experience-a former Member of Congress and
Secretary of the Army, a former State Department
Ambassador-at-Large for Counterterrorism, a
former senior executive from the CIA and the
FBI, a former senior member of the Intelligence
Community, the former head of a national academy
on public health, two retired flag-rank military
officers, a former senior executive in a
non-governmental charitable organization, and
the head of a national law enforcement
foundation.
But what truly makes this panel special
and, therefore, causes its pronouncement to
carry significantly more weight, is the
contribution from the members of the panel from
the rest of the country:
-
Three
directors of state emergency management
agencies, from California, Iowa, and
Indiana, two of whom now also serve their
Governor's as Homeland Security Advisors
-
The
deputy director of a state homeland security
agency
-
A
state epidemiologist and director of a state
public health agency
-
A
former city manager of a mid-size city
-
The
chief of police of a suburban city in a
major metropolitan area
-
Senior
professional and volunteer fire fighters
-
A
senior emergency medical services officer of
a major metropolitan area
-
And,
of course-in the person of your
witness-a former State governor
These
are representatives of the true "first
responders"-those heroic men and women who
put their lives on the line every day for the
public health and safety of all Americans.
Moreover, so many of these panel members
are also national leaders in their professions:
our EMS member is a past president of the
national association of emergency medical
technicians; one of our emergency managers is
the past president of her national association;
our law officer now is president of the
international association of chiefs of police;
our epidemiologist is past president of her
professional organization; one of our local
firefighters is chair of the terrorism committee
of the international association of fire chiefs;
the other is chair of the prestigious national
Interagency Board for Equipment Standardization
and InterOperability.
Read
our reports and you will understand what that
expertise has meant to the policy
recommendations that we have made, especially
for the events of last year.
Those
attacks continue to carry much poignancy for us,
because of the direct loss to the panel.
Ray Downey, Department Deputy Chief and
chief-in-charge of Special Operations Command,
Fire Department of the City of New York a friend
of the Chairman and known to this subcommittee
and others like it throughout the Congress,
perished in the attack on the New York World
Trade Center.
Although we continue to miss Ray's
superb advice, counsel, and dedication to these
issues, we trust that Ray knows that we are
carrying on in the tradition that he helped us
to establish.
Our
Continuing Mission
Mr.
Chairman and Members, this Advisory Panel
continues to work hard to develop the best
possible policy recommendations for
consideration by the President and the Congress.
Now, of course, people and organizations
are coming out of the woodwork, claiming to be
all manner of "experts" in homeland
security. At the same time, this panel is toiling away, seeking neither
fame nor credit for its work, simply trying to
find some rational and feasible solutions to
many problems and challenges that still face us.
Observations
about Terrorism Preparedness
In
the course of our deliberations, the Advisory
Panel has been guided by several basic
observations and assumptions that have helped to
inform our conclusions and policy
recommendations for improving our preparedness
to combat terrorism.
First,
all terrorism is "local," our at least will
start locally.
That fact has a lot to do, in our view,
with the emphasis, the priorities, and the
allocation of resources to address requirements.
September 11 and the subsequent anthrax
attacks were further proof of that basic
assumption.
Second,
a major attack anywhere inside our borders will
likely be beyond the response capabilities of a
local jurisdiction, and will, therefore, require
outside help-perhaps from other local
jurisdictions, from that jurisdiction's state
government or multiple state resources, perhaps
from the Federal government, if the attack is
significant enough to exhaust other resources.
That principle was likewise validated
last September.
Given
those two factors, our approach to combating
terrorism should be from the "bottom
up"-with the requirements of State and local
response entities foremost in mind.
We
note that we have many existing capabilities
that we can build on in an "all-hazards"
approach, which can include capabilities for
combating terrorism.
Our
thorough research and deliberations have also
led us to observe that there is great
apprehension among States and localities that
some Federal entity will attempt to come in and
take charge of all activities and displace local
response efforts and expertise.
That
was not and likely could not, because of the
actual circumstances in New York, have been the
case in September.
But all events may not unfold in that
fashion.
Based
on a significant amount of analysis and
discussion, we have been of the view that few if
any major structural or legal changes are
required to improve our collective efforts; and
that the "first order" challenges are policy
and better organization-not simply more money
or new technology.
With
respect to Federal efforts, two years ago we
concluded that, prior to
an actual event, no one cabinet department or
agency can "supervise" the efforts of other
federal departments or agencies.
When an event occurs, response will be
situational dependent; federal agencies can
execute responsibilities within existing
authority and expertise, but under established
"Lead Federal Agency" coordinating processes
The
chart attached to this testimony is an attempt
to depict graphically the magnitude of the
problem and the necessary interrelationships
that must exist among entities at the local,
State, and Federal levels.
It shows that integration must exist both
vertically and horizontally among various
functions and the agencies that have
responsibilities for executing those functions.
It also emphasizes our view that
simplistic categories such as "crisis
management" and "consequence management"
do not adequately describe the full spectrum of
functions or responsibilities.
Support
for Panel Activities and Reports
Mr.
Chairman, it also says something about the
foresight of this committee that you directed in
legislation that analytical and other support
for the Advisory Panel would be provided by a
Federally Funded Research and Development
Center. We have been exceptionally fortunate to have that support
provided by The RAND Corporation.
The breadth and depth of experience at
RAND in terrorism and policy issues across a
broad spectrum have made possible the panel's
success in accomplishing its mandate.
Its assessments of federal programs, its
case studies and hundreds of interviews across
the country and around the world, its seminal
work in surveying state and local response
entities nationwide, its facilitation of our
discussion-leading to near unanimity of
members on this broad spectrum of
recommendations, its work in drafting reports
based on our extensive deliberations, all have
combined to make this effort a most effective
and meaningful one.
Our
Reports
In
our first three reports, the advisory panel has,
through its assessments and recommendations,
laid a firm foundation for actions that must be
taken across a broad spectrum of threats in a
number of strategic and functional contexts to
address this problem more effectively.
First
Report-Assessing the Threat
The
Advisory Panel produced a comprehensive
assessment in its first report of the terrorist
threat inside our borders, with a focus on
chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear
(CBRN) weapons.
The very thorough analysis in that report
can be summarized:
The
Panel concludes that the Nation must be prepared
for the entire spectrum of potential terrorist
threats - both the unprecedented
higher-consequence attack, as well as the
historically more frequent, lesser-consequence
terrorist attack, which the Panel believes is
more likely in the near term. Conventional
explosives, traditionally a favorite tool of the
terrorist, will likely remain the terrorist
weapon of choice in the near term as well. Whether smaller-scale CBRN or conventional, any such
lower-consequence event-at least in terms of
casualties or destruction-could, nevertheless,
accomplish one or more terrorist objectives:
exhausting response capabilities, instilling
fear, undermining government credibility, or
provoking an overreaction by the government.
With that in mind, the Panel's report urges a
more balanced approach, so that not only
higher-consequence scenarios will be considered,
but that increasing attention must now also be
paid to the historically more frequent, more
probable, lesser-consequence attack, especially
in terms of policy implications for budget
priorities or the allocation of other resources,
to optimize local response capabilities.
A singular focus on preparing for an
event potentially affecting thousands or tens of
thousands may result in a smaller, but
nevertheless lethal attack involving dozens
failing to receive an appropriate response in
the first critical minutes and hours.
While
noting that the technology currently exists that
would allow terrorists to produce one of several
lethal CBRN weapons, the report also describes
the current difficulties in acquiring or
developing and in maintaining, handling,
testing, transporting, and delivering a device
that truly has the capability to cause "mass
casualties."
We
suggest that that analysis is still fully valid
today.
Second
Report-Toward a National Strategy for
Combating Terrorism
By
the second year, the Advisory Panel shifted its
emphasis to specific policy recommendations for
the Executive and the Congress and a broad
programmatic assessment and functional
recommendations for consideration in developing
an effective national strategy.
The
capstone recommendation in the second report was
the need for a comprehensive, coherent,
functional national strategy:
The President should develop and
present to the Congress a national strategy for
combating terrorism within one year of assuming
office. As part of that recommendation, the panel identified the
essential characteristics for a national
strategy:
-
It
must be truly national in scope, not
just Federal.
-
It
must be comprehensive, encompassing the full
spectrum of deterrence, prevention,
preparedness, and response against
domestic and international threats.
-
For
domestic programs, it must be responsive
to requirements from and fully coordinated
with state and local officials as
partners throughout the development and
implementation process.
-
It
should be built on existing emergency
response systems.
-
It
must include all key functional domains-intelligence,
law enforcement, fire services, emergency
medical services, public health, medical
care providers, emergency management, and
the military.
-
It
must be fully resourced and based on measurable
performance.
Of
course, the Panel recognizes that in light of
September 11, 2001 this objective has been
difficult to achieve.
However, the principles contained within
this strategy and their requirements remain the
same.
The
Second Annual Report included a discussion of
more effective Federal structures to address the
national efforts to combat terrorism.
We determined that the solutions offered
by others who have studied the problem provided
only partial answers.
The Advisory Panel attempted to craft
recommendations to address the full spectrum of
issues. Therefore,
we submitted the following recommendation:
The President should establish a
senior level coordination entity in the
Executive Office of the President.
The characteristics of the office
identified in that recommendation included:
-
Director
appointed by the President, by and with the
advice and consent of the Senate, at
"cabinet-level" rank
-
Located
in the Executive Office of the President
-
Authority
to exercise certain program and budget
controls over those agencies with
responsibilities for combating terrorism
-
Responsibility
for intelligence coordination and analysis
-
Tasking
for strategy formulation and implementation
-
Responsibility
for reviewing State and local plans and to
serve as an information clearinghouse
-
An
interdisciplinary Advisory Board to assist
in strategy development
-
Multidisciplinary
staff (including Federal, State, and local
expertise)
-
No
operational control
We
included a thorough explanation of each
characteristic in our Second Annual Report.
For instance, we determined that this
office should have the authority to direct the
creation, modification, or cessation of programs
within the Federal Interagency, and that it have
authority to direct modifications to agency
budgets and the application of resources.
We also recommended that the new entity
have authority
to review State and geographical area strategic
plans and, at the request of State entities, to
review local plans or programs for combating
terrorism for consistency with the national
strategy.
Although
not completely structured around our
recommendations, the model for the creation of
the Office of Homeland Security came from this
recommendation.
To
complement our recommendations for the federal
executive structure, we also included the
following recommendation for the Congress:
The
Congress should establish a Special Committee
for Combating Terrorism-either a joint
committee between the Houses or separate
committees in each House-to address authority
and funding, and to provide congressional
oversight, for Federal programs and authority
for combating terrorism.
The philosophy behind this
recommendation is much the same as it is for the
creation of the office in the Executive Office
of the President.
There needs to be a focal point in the
Congress for the Administration to present its
strategy and supporting plans, programs, and
budgets, as well as a legislative
"clearinghouse" where relevant measures are
considered.
We recognize that Congress is still in
the process of working towards this objective.
In
conjunction with these structural
recommendations, the Advisory Panel made a
number of recommendations addressing functional
requirements for the implementation of an
effective strategy for combating terrorism.
The recommendation listed below are
discussed thoroughly in the Second Annual
Report:
Enhance
Intelligence/Threat Assessments/Information
Sharing
-
Improve
human intelligence by the rescission of that
portion of the 1995 guidelines, promulgated by
the Director of Central Intelligence, which
prohibits the engagement of certain foreign
intelligence informants who may have previously
been involved in human rights violations
-
Improve Measurement and Signature
Intelligence (MASINT) through
an expansion in research, development, test, and evaluation (RDT&E) of
reliable sensors and rapid readout capability
and the subsequent fielding of a new generation
of MASINT technology based on enhanced RDT&E
efforts
-
Review statutory and regulatory
authorities in an effort to strengthen
investigative and enforcement processes
-
Improve
forensics capabilities to identify and warn of
terrorist use of unconventional weapons
-
Expand
information sharing and improve threat
assessments
Foster
Better Planning/Coordination/Operations
-
Designate
the senior emergency management entity in each
State as the focal
point for that State for coordination with
the Federal government for preparedness for
terrorism
-
Improve collective planning among
Federal, State, and local entities
-
Enhance coordination of programs
and activities
-
Improve
operational command and control of domestic
responses
-
The
President should always designate a Federal
civilian agency other than the Department of
Defense (DoD) as the Lead Federal Agency
Enhance
Training, Equipping, and Exercising
-
Improve training through better
coordination with State and local jurisdictions
-
Make exercise programs more
realistic and responsive
Improve
Health and Medical Capabilities
-
Establish
a national advisory board composed of Federal,
State, and local public health officials and
representatives of public and private medical
care providers as an adjunct to the new office,
to ensure that such issues are an important part
of the national strategy
-
Improve health and medical
education and training programs through actions
that include licensing and certification
requirements
-
Establish standards and protocols
for treatment facilities, laboratories, and
reporting mechanisms
-
Clarify
authorities and procedures for health and
medical response
-
Medical
entities, such as the Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations,
should conduct periodic assessments of medical
facilities and capabilities
Promote
Better Research and Development and Create
National Standards
-
That
the new office, in coordination with the Office
of Science and Technology Policy, develop a
comprehensive plan for RDT&E, as a major
component of the national strategy
-
That
the new office, in coordination with the
National Institute for Standards and Technology
(NIST) and the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) establish
a national standards program for combating
terrorism, focusing on equipment, training, and
laboratory processes
Third
Report-For Ray Downey
Our
Third Annual Report to the President and the
Congress builds on findings and recommendations
in our First and Second Annual Reports delivered
in 1999 and 2000.
It reflects a national strategic
perspective that encompasses the needs of all
three levels of government and the private
sector. It
seeks to assist those who are dedicated to
making our homeland more secure. Our recommendations fall into five categories:
ü
Empowering
State and Local Response by ensuring the men
and women on the front line of the war against
terrorism inside our borders have the tools and
resources needed to counter the murderous
actions of terrorists;
ü
Enhancing
Health and Medical Capacities, both public
and private, to help ensure our collective
ability to identify attacks quickly and
correctly, and to treat the full scope of
potential casualties from all forms of terrorist
attacks;
ü
Strengthening
Immigration and Border Controls to
enhance our ability to restrict the movement
into this country, by all modes of
transportation, of potential terrorists and
their weapons and to limit severely their
ability to operate within our borders;
ü
Improving
Security Against Cyber Attacks and
enhancing related critical infrastructure
protection to guard essential government,
financial, energy, and other critical sector
operations against attack; and
ü
Clarifying
the Roles and Missions for Use of the Military for
providing critical and appropriate emergency
response and law enforcement related support to
civilian authorities.
State
and Local Response Capabilities
-
Increase and accelerate the
sharing of terrorism-related intelligence and
threat assessments
-
Design training and equipment
programs for all-hazards preparedness
-
Redesign Federal training and
equipment grant programs to include sustainment
components
-
Increase funding to States and
localities for combating terrorism
-
Consolidate Federal grant program
information and application procedures
-
Design Federal preparedness
programs to ensure first responder
participation, especially volunteers
-
Establish an information
clearinghouse on Federal programs, assets, and
agencies
-
Configure Federal military
response assets to support and reinforce
existing structures and systems
Health
and Medical Capabilities
-
Implement the AMA Recommendations
on Medical Preparedness for Terrorism
-
Implement the JCAHO Revised
Emergency Standards
-
Fully resource the CDC Biological
and Chemical Terrorism Strategic Plan
-
Fully resource the CDC Laboratory
Response Network for Bioterrorism
-
Fully resource the CDC Secure and
Rapid Communications Networks
-
Develop standard medical response
models for Federal, State, and local levels
-
Reestablish a pre-hospital
Emergency Medical Service Program Office
-
Revise current EMT and PNST
training and refresher curricula
-
Increase Federal resources for
exercises for State and local health and medical
entities
-
Establish a government-owned,
contractor-operated national vaccine and
therapeutics facility
-
Review and recommend changes to
plans for vaccine stockpiles and critical
supplies
-
Develop a comprehensive plan for
research on terrorism-related health and medical
issues
-
Review MMRS and NDMS authorities,
structures, and capabilities
-
Develop an education plan on the
legal and procedural issues for health and
medical response to terrorism
-
Develop on-going public education
programs on terrorism causes and effects
Immigration
and Border Control
-
Create an intergovernmental border
advisory group
-
Fully integrate all affected
entities into local or regional "port security
committees"
-
Ensure that all border agencies
are partners in intelligence collection,
analysis, and dissemination
-
Create, provide resources for, and
mandate participation in a "Border Security
Awareness" database system
-
Require shippers to submit cargo
manifest information simultaneously with
shipments transiting U.S. borders
-
Establish "Trusted Shipper"
programs
-
Expand Coast Guard search
authority to include U.S. owned-not just
"flagged"-vessels
-
Expand and consolidate research,
development, and integration of sensor,
detection, and warning systems
-
Increase resources for the U.S.
Coast Guard for homeland security missions
-
Negotiate more comprehensive
treaties and agreements for combating terrorism
with Canada and Mexico
Cyber
Security
-
Include private and State and
local representatives on the interagency
critical infrastructure advisory panel
-
Create a commission to assess and
make recommendations on programs for cyber
security
-
Establish a government funded,
not-for-profit entity for cyber detection,
alert, and warning functions
-
Convene a "summit" to address
Federal statutory changes that would enhance
cyber assurance
-
Create a special "Cyber Court"
patterned after the court established in FISA
-
Develop and implement a
comprehensive plan for cyber security research,
development, test, and evaluation
Use
of the Military
-
Establish a homeland security
under secretary position in the Department of
Defense
-
Establish a single unified command
and control structure to execute all military
support to civil authorities
-
Develop detailed plans for the use
of the military domestically across the spectrum
of potential activities
-
Expand training and exercises in
relevant military units and with Federal, State,
and local responders
-
Direct new mission areas for the
National Guard to provide support to civil
authorities
-
Publish a compendium of statutory
authorities for using the military domestically
to combat terrorism
-
Improve the military full-time
liaison elements in the ten Federal Emergency
Management Agency region
Status
of Our Recommendations
Mr.
Chairman and Members, I can tell you that,
according to our most recent count, of the 79
major policy recommendations mad by the Advisory
Panel to date, 64 have now been adopted in whole
or in major part.
Having said that, there are others that
continue to need to be addressed, and some that
could still use additional resources or policy
direction.
Our
Current Deliberations
· That
each House of the Congress establish
a separate authorizing committee and related
appropriation subcommittee with jurisdiction
over Federal programs and authority for
Combating Terrorism/Homeland Security.
To
the extent that I have not done so in my
previous remarks, let me offer a few additional
comments in a couple of these areas.
First, we must develop processes that
help us understand better how we set priorities
for homeland security.
We must answer some fundamental questions
about preparedness, including the overarching
one: "Preparedness for what?"
Without a firm grasp on how to answer
that question, how will we know that we have out
priorities set forth correctly, and that the
expenditure of scarce resources at every level
of government is appropriate.
A more educated and enlightened
assessment of the threats we face is critical to
answering that basic question.
An
integral part of that issue is the absolute
necessity to have national standards for how
entities at all levels of government and in the
private sector train, equip, and plan for, and
then coordinate responses to attacks.
We are still a long way from having any
standards for a variety of these issue related
to homeland security.
Mr.
Chairman, in the panel's second report,
submitted in December of 2000, we addressed this
issue head on.
We did so in the context of our
recommendation at that time for the creation of
an office in the White House, very similar but
not exactly like the Office of Homeland Security
(OHS) headed by my friend Tom Ridge.
We called it the National Office for
Combating Terrorism, rather than "Homeland
Security."
We would have placed some very specific
responsibilities in that Office and in other
entities for the development of national
standards and for processes for research,
development, test, and evaluation (RDT&E) to
further the implementation of those standards.
Those recommendations are worth
repeating.
(To avoid any confusion, the references
to the "National Office" and "Assistant
Director" are to the specific construct that
we recommended in 2000, not to anything that
currently exists in OHS).
We said in 2000:
"Improve
Plans for Research, Development,
Test and Evaluation for Combating Terrorism
"The
national strategy developed by the National
Office for Combating Terrorism must contain a
clear set of priorities for RDT&E.
The program and budget authority of that
office must be exerted to ensure effective
application of Federal funds devoted to this
purpose.
"The
White House Office of Science & Technology
Policy should play a major role in the effort.
We recommend that the Assistant
Director for RDT&E and National Standards of
the National Office for Combating Terrorism
either enter into a formal relationship with
OSTP or have appropriate members of the OSTP
staff detailed to the National Office for
Combating Terrorism on a rotational basis.
"Wide
varieties of equipment that have potential
application for combating terrorism are
available from commercial vendors.
Nevertheless, many local responders have
told us that some equipment they purchased does
not meet the specifications described by the
vendor. At
present, no viable program is in place for
testing and evaluating the effectiveness of
equipment for combating terrorism.
We
recommend that the Assistant Director for RDT&E
and National Standards develop equipment testing
protocols and continue
to explore the prospect of financial support
from vendors for equipment live agent test and
evaluation, leading to Federal certification.
"We
recommend that the Assistant Director for RDT&E
and National Standards develop, as part of the
national strategy, a comprehensive plan for
long-range research for combating terrorism;
this should include better coordination among
the National Laboratories.
The focus of those efforts by National
Laboratories should be dual- or multi-purpose
applications.
"The
National Office for Combating Terrorism should
also integrate other indirect, yet applicable,
research and development projects into its
information-dissemination process.
For example, the Deputy Directorate for
Operations (Combating Terrorism) within the
Joint Staff provides executive seminars on its Best
Practices Study for anti-terrorism and force
protection. This program also collects information on "commercial off
the shelf" resources and equipment to support
its anti-terrorism mission.
These studies and resources may not
directly relate to policy and standards for
combating terrorism at the State and local level
but may well contribute to State and local
preparedness.
"The
top priorities for targeted research should be
responder personnel protective equipment (PPE);
medical surveillance, identification, and
forensics; improved sensor and rapid-readout
capability; vaccines and antidotes; and
communications interoperability.
"Develop
National Standards for Equipment,
Training, and Laboratory Processes
"One
of our basic assumptions is that no single
jurisdiction is likely to be capable of
responding to a major terrorist attack without
outside assistance.
That leads to the inescapable conclusion
that the development of national standards is a
critical element of any national plan.
Firefighters or EMS technicians in the
jurisdiction where an attack takes place must
not be concerned that responders from other
jurisdictions, providing "mutual
assistance," will arrive with equipment of a
different standard than local responders, even
at risk of becoming casualties themselves.
"We
recommend that the Assistant Director for RDT&E and National
Standards in the National Office for
Combating Terrorism establish a national
standards program for combating terrorism,
focusing on equipment, training, and laboratory
processes. The fundamental objectives
for equipment standards will be nationwide
compatibility, and dual-/ multi-purpose
applications.
For training, they will be
interdisciplinary curricula, and training
exercises based on realistic scenarios.
For laboratories, the focus should be
clear, strict protocols for identification,
forensics, and reporting.
The ultimate goal of the national
standards program should be certification of the
specific equipment, training, or laboratory and
a recapitulation of certifications in a
"Consumers Digest," for use by response
entities nationwide.
"We
recommend that the National Institute for
Standards and Technology (NIST) and the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
be designated as Federal "co-lead agencies"
for the technical aspects of standards
development.
The Executive Branch and the Congress
should provide resources for the development of
national standards, and Congress should be
presented with a detailed budget request for
that purpose at the earliest opportunity. In addition, the Interagency "Board for Equipment
Standardization and InterOperability should be
subordinated to the National Office for
Combating Terrorism.
"The
Federal co-lead agencies should develop
certification standards in coordination with
appropriate Federal agencies and with advice
from State and local response entities,
professional organizations that represent
response disciplines, and private and
quasi-public certifying entities."
Mr.
Chairman, those functions that we recommend now
almost two years ago still need to be performed,
now obviously more urgently that before.
Unfortunately, we are still a long way
from achieving any coherence in standards and
testing, especially for "first responder"
equipment and communications capability. It is still the case that the only "standards" available
are what vendors say are the capabilities of
their wares. We continue to need something like an "underwriters
laboratory" for a wide variety of protective
equipment and communications.
We have before and will again recognize
the efforts of the Interagency Board for
Equipment Standardization and InterOperability,
National Personal Protective Technology
Laboratory (in the Chairman's home state of
Pennsylvania) and the Technical Support Working
Group. Those
efforts will not, however, be nearly enough, at
least not at the level of current resources.
For
training, the panel is encouraged that the
majority of Federal training programs, at least
those currently in FEMA and DOJ, will apparently
be combined in the new DHS.
Nevertheless, other Federal
agencies-EPA, DOE, DoD, DHHS as
examples-will continue to conduct training
that will need to conform to a set of national
training standards.
That effort has not yet been undertaken,
but it should be required on an urgent basis.
Conclusion
Thank
you again for this opportunity.
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