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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Karen Lawrence who wrote (60179)12/6/2002 12:47:02 PM
From: Karen Lawrence  Respond to of 281500
 
Anti Terror measures further eroding deteriorating economy
Heavy Security Squeezing Cities
cbsnews.com
WASHINGTON, Dec. 5, 2002

Police officers, like these New York City cops, are increasingly devoting time to counter-terrorism. (AP)

"For 13 months, they have been doing these additional duties without any reimbursement or assistance from federal and state officials."
Michael Guido,
Mayor of Dearborn, Mich.

What If Ports Were A Target?


If dirty bombs or terrorist thieves struck the nation's freight and cargo system, the economy would be among the victims, a recent drill showed.

Federal agencies, port officials and private firms participated in a recent exercise that tested their response to scenarios involving dirty bombs at LA's port and Minneapolis' rail hub and a suspected terrorist trying to steal cargo in Georgia.

The drill revealed a lack of coordination and communication, participants say. Public officials moved to close ports and borders, but private companies resisted. Then it took longer than expected to reopen ports.

An eight-day port closure led to a 92-day backlog of shipping, at a cost of $58 billion as ships were stranded, produce rotted, sales were lost and plants shut down.

President Bush signed a bill last month requiring the nation's 361 seaports to develop security plans. He is to submit a plan for funding that effort within six months. AP






(CBS) City officials are growing frustrated that they haven't gotten promised federal help to pay workers on the front line of homeland security like police and firefighters, and a new survey of city officials reflects those concerns.

A fourth of cities report having problems meeting their public safety needs while addressing homeland security issues, while half of big cities reported they're finding it tougher to perform their expected public safety role.

Karen Anderson, president of the National League of Cities and mayor of Minnetonka, Minn., said: "Fifteen months after the attacks on the nation, the cost of local homeland security continues to be met with local resources, not federal."

Workers in the police and fire departments have been doing their regular duties and taking on additional responsibilities, said Mayor Michael Guido of Dearborn, Mich., who is co-chair of a task force on homeland security for the National League of Cities.

Guido, a Republican serving in a nonpartisan role as mayor, said local elected officials are getting frustrated.

"For 13 months, they have been doing these additional duties without any reimbursement or assistance from federal and state officials," Guido said. The initial proposal on homeland security included $3.5 billion in funding for first responders.

"It sends a very bad message to local government," the mayor said. "They come home and praise them for doing a great job but when it comes time to fund those activities, Congress does not follow through."

Congress is expected to consider the proposal again early next year.

A third of cities, and almost two-thirds of large cities, reported shifting money and moving personnel to cover city needs. Cuts in services or projects were expected by a fourth of all cities and almost four in 20 larger cities, defined as those with populations of 100,000 or more.

Nearly 4,000 city leaders were gathering in Salt Lake City Thursday through Saturday to discuss homeland security, the economy and other issues.

Boston Mayor Thomas Menino, president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, joined the local cry for financial help Wednesday. Delays in congressional passage of budget measures threaten hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funding to cities and states, including local law enforcement block grants, he said.

Menino was reacting to a recent letter from the Justice Department indicating that federal funds for some grant programs will be delayed until federal appropriations bills are resolved.

That decision, he said, "leaves city budgets — already pinched by recession and homeland security spending — in even worse shape."

Congress ended its recent session without taking final action on the 13 appropriations bills that fund ongoing government services. The federal government is running on a temporary budget that funds programs at last year's levels.

The cities' problems are compounded by budget problems at the local, state and federal level, Guido said.

A recent report by the National Governors Association said states — squeezed by lower taxes because of economic trouble and higher costs from Medicaid — are in their worst fiscal straits since World War II, facing a collective budget shortfall of some $40 billion.

New York City, the city most affected by last year's terrorist attacks, has received federal disaster money to help defray some costs. But that didn't prevent a budget crisis that saw some taxes rise 18.5 percent last week, as the budget was slashed $850 million.



To: Karen Lawrence who wrote (60179)12/7/2002 2:48:36 AM
From: D. Long  Respond to of 281500
 
The ruling concluded that the Court has the right to review the government conclusion as to whether Padilla is an "enemy combatant". The judge upheld Bush's right as Commander in Chief to designate "enemy combatants" irrespective of US citizenship.

Derek