Bill would bring increased Homeland Security money
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Alicia Robinson
Local police and firefighters will get more federal funding with less
red tape if a bill written by Rep. Chris Cox makes it through all the
hoops.
The Faster and Smarter Funding for First Responders Act would
scrap the current funding formula for the Department of Homeland
Security’s terrorism preparedness money in favor of a subjective
method in which funding would be based on an area’s risk level. A
community with a nuclear plant or major sea port, for example, would
get more money than a rural area with no likely terrorist targets.
“We spend billions of dollars each year on intelligence,” Cox
said. “What this bill will do is use what we learn about terrorist
capabilities and intentions and match it with what we are leaning
about domestic vulnerabilities.”
The current formula divides 40% of the available money equally
between all 50 states, and the other 60% is doled out to states based
on population. In 2003, California received $482.5 million, which
worked out to $13.74 per resident, while Rhode Island was given $37.2
million, but with its much smaller population that divided up to
$33.20 per person.
“California has much at stake in this bill, because on a per
capita basis, we receive less funding for homeland security than any
other state,” Cox said.
Cox’s bill also aims to get rid of bureaucratic red tape that
keeps funding from getting to communities. The Department of Homeland
Security would set clear terrorism preparedness standards to
determine what police and fire departments and other agencies would
reasonably need to respond to a terrorist threat.
“Conceptually it sounds like it’s a smarter thing,” Newport Beach
Fire Chief Tim Riley said of the bill. “Any time a congressman talks
about bypassing red tape to get the dollars down to the local level
we support that.”
Riley said his department and other Orange County agencies have
developed a fairly cooperative system to apply for homeland security
dollars, so he thinks they’ve been getting their fair share. He hoped
that Cox’s bill would mean fewer strings attached to money that is
doled out, however.
“It makes it pretty frustrating when someone tries to come in and
tell you what your needs are and how to spend your money,” he said.
While the current formula means a windfall for small states while
big states go begging, Cox said, his bill doesn’t simply reverse
that. If California gets more money under the new bill, it will be
because it has high-risk terrorist targets and large vulnerable
population centers, he said.
The next step in the bill’s progress is approval by the House
judiciary committee, which could happen as soon as next week. Cox
said it could come to the House floor for a vote before congress’
July 4 recess, and it could reach President Bush’s desk later this
year.
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