Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Fusion centers report data access issues
(Washington Technology story)
Visualization tools assist maritime security
New visualization tools are helping the Coast Guard develop situational awareness at the Port of Miami, but more assistance is needed to track small boats and noncooperative vessels, according to congressional testimony given this week. The Homeland Security Department’s Directorate of Science and Technology is funding the Visualization Tools for Situational Awareness and Emergency Response program, also known as Viz Tools.
(Washington Technology story)
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Staying On Track
U.S. expands security rule for Canadians
(Canadian Press story)
First-responder network requirements issued
(Washington Technology story; NSPTC statement of requirements)
Bush administration to fund fusion centers
(Washington Technology story)
SBInet demo planned for northern border
The Homeland Security Department plans to showcase its SBInet border surveillance system in an upcoming Northern Border Demonstration in the Detroit and Great Lakes areas. Customs and Border Protection officials recently met with Canadian authorities, and separately with Michigan and Ohio law enforcement agents, to develop the plans for the first demonstration of the surveillance system along the Canadian border, DHS officials said. SBInet, which stands for Secure Border Initiative Network, is the department’s program to use radars, sensors, cameras and other technologies to create 24-hour networked surveillance system along the U.S. borders. Boeing Co., the prime contractor for SBInet, is installing the first 28-mile section along the Arizona-Mexico border.
(Washington Technology story)
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
$3B border security amendment dropped
(Washington Technology story)
Homeland Security’s high-tech gamble
(Federal Computer Week story)
DHS tries to coordinate anti-bomb efforts
Sometimes when he hears the telephone, Charlie Payne has a scary thought. "Every time my phone rings at an odd time, I wonder if it's started," he says. Payne, chief of the Office for Bombing Prevention at the Homeland Security Department, is referring to terrorist bombings in the United States. For all the attention on potential dirty bombs, biological agents and chemical weapons, the tactic government leaders most expect terrorists to use in this country is the conventional explosive. "The attack weapon of choice still is the IED," Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said at a Sept. 10 hearing before the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
(Government Executive story)
Chertoff in Iraq for Veterans Day
The ceremony took place at Camp Anaconda, some 50 miles north of Baghdad.
(Michael Chertoff bio)
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
Technology, integration fuel secure border opps
(Washington Technology cover story)
New technology for IDs?
(Government Computer News story)
New York DMV, DHS tout Real ID
(WXXA Albany report; DHS Real ID proposed guidelines)
DHS shows success in senior-level hiring
(Government Executive story)
Monday, October 29, 2007
ID card industry pushes for DHS work
Executives at identification card companies are intensifying their push for alternative technologies for the Homeland Security Department’s upcoming requirements for border crossing cards and drivers’ licenses. Representatives of the laser card and “smart card” industries told lawmakers on Oct. 18 that their products offer unique benefits and avoid shortcomings of the formats proposed by DHS for the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative border-crossing card and the Real ID Act of 2005 driver’s license standard. For the WHTI border crossing card, also known as the Pass card, DHS officials have said they intend to use long-distance radio frequency identification tags that can be read at 20 feet. A similar RFID tag is to be used in the hybrid WHTI-Real ID act identification card to be issued in three border states.
(Washington Technology story)
Chertoff's steps to discourage attacks
(Government Executive story)
Schneider fill-in DHS deputy secretary
President Bush on Oct. 18 tapped the Homeland Security Department's management chief to act as deputy secretary after Michael Jackson vacates the job next week. Paul Schneider, a former acquisition executive at the National Security Agency, has been Homeland Security's undersecretary for management since January. He will assume the acting position when Jackson departs Oct. 26. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff issued a statement saying he was "enormously pleased" by the selection of Schneider. "Paul has exhibited tremendous leadership and dedication as the undersecretary for management," Chertoff said. "He has the respect and admiration of staff and my full support."
(Government Executive story; DHS press release with Chertoff's statement)
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
USDA approves two animal ID systems
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service on Oct. 11 announced the approval of two new animal identification devices: a visual tag with radio frequency identification (RFID) from Leader Products and the first approved injectable transponder from Digital Angel. The devices carry an official animal identification number (AIN), which is used to identify individual animals as part of USDA’s National Animal Identification System (NAIS). USDA is technology neutral and supports a range of NAIS-compliant identification methods. All NAIS-compliant RFID devices are ISO-compliant and therefore, an ISO-compliant reader would read any of them.
(USDA press release; USDA NAIS homepage)
Friday, October 12, 2007
Chertoff to speak at IdentEvent
(ITAA Web site with registration information)