A full 365 days of homeland security
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Alicia Robinson
Although cake and candles don’t appear to have been involved, Rep.
Chris Cox recently celebrated the one-year anniversary of the
creation of the Department of Homeland Security.
As chairman of the U.S. House of Representative’s committee on
homeland security, Cox has been intimately involved with the
department’s activities from the start, and he said he’s pleased with
the progress that’s been made to date in increasing the nation’s
security.
“It’s truly impressive to see how much has been accomplished in a
mere 12 months,” he said. “Just a year ago, there was no such thing
as the Homeland Security Department.”
One big advancement Cox cited is the sharing of more intelligence
than ever before among different levels of government and law
enforcement. The department is now in cooperation with 22 countries
to screen two-thirds of all cargo bound for the U.S., and plans are
in place to have 80% of incoming cargo screened by the end of this
year, Cox said.
“We recognized that once suspicious cargo makes it into a U.S.
port, it’s too late,” he said.
All noncitizens of the U.S. now must offer biometric
identification -- usually a fingerprint -- when entering the country,
and airports are screening 100% of checked luggage, he said.
Since Sept. 11, 2001, the federal government has given out more
than $8 billion in grants to emergency responders for equipment and
training. Cox said the next big initiative for the department would
be overhauling the way it disburses funding to states and counties to
get homeland security dollars to them faster and with less red tape.
“I think without question that America is safer today than it was
a year ago,” he said. “We have made enormous progress and we’ve
covered a lot of ground in just one year, but we still have miles to
go.”
Congressman backs presidential vetoes that save
Cox is sending a clear message to President George W. Bush that he
and his colleagues will unite behind any presidential vetoes of bills
that require unnecessary spending.
He’s even put it in writing, and as of Tuesday, he had convinced
107 House members to sign a letter to Bush stating their support for
any veto of superfluous spending bills. Sustaining a veto requires
146 House members. Among the letter’s signatories is Rep. Dana
Rohrabacher.
A news release on the House Policy Committee website notes that
Cox wrote a similar letter in 2002 that was signed by 150 House
members.
Asteroids deserve more attention from amateurs
Perhaps hoping to establish another line of defense against stray
space objects, the House on Wednesday passed a Rohrabacher-sponsored
bill to encourage amateur astronomers to discover and track
near-Earth asteroids.
The congressman’s office announced the approval of House
Resolution 912 creating the Charles “Pete” Conrad Astronomy Awards --
named for the third man to walk on the moon -- and directing NASA to
make awards of $3,000 to astronomers for their research.
“Asteroids deserve a lot more attention from the scientific
community,” Rohrabacher said in a statement. “The first step is a
thorough tracking of all sizable Near Earth Objects, and H.R. 912 is
a modest step toward this goal.”
As chairman of the House Space and Aeronautics Subcommittee,
Rohrabacher has warned colleagues in the past of asteroids that could
collide with the earth. In 1998, he chastised then-President Bill
Clinton for ending an Air Force Program that would develop technology
to rendezvous with asteroids and gather data from them.
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