Governors Release Homeland Security Guide
The National Governors Association (NGA) has released A Governor's Guide to Homeland Security, which should serve as a primer for governors still trying to determine their homeland security roles and responsibilities. The guide was released via teleconference by Delaware Gov. Ruth Ann Minner and Nevada Gov. Jim Gibbons, NGA co-lead governors for homeland security.
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The guide contains practical advice for governors on how to organize their states to prepare for and respond to hazards of all kinds effectively. It shares information and guidance on how to approach issues such as mutual aid, information sharing, obtaining assistance from the military and protecting critical infrastructure. Last published in 2002, the guide includes a significant amount of new and updated information.
“As the chief executives of our states, governors are
responsible for the safety and security of our citizens and
ensuring our states are adequately prepared for emergencies and
disasters of all types and sizes – from widespread power
outages and hazardous materials spills to catastrophes on the scale
of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and Hurricane
Katrina,” said Minner. “This guide focuses on areas
governors must immediately be aware of, as well as the resources
they are most likely to rely on during the initial response to an
incident.”
The content of the guide is based on the experiences of governors
who have managed during crises and draws on lessons learned by
states. Among the highlights, the guide:
- Emphasizes that emergency preparedness and homeland security must be a priority of all governors;
Recommends governors set priorities and develop the structures and systems required to support those priorities; and
Stresses the need for cooperation among the state and local officials – within and among states – who will be expected to play a role in emergency response.
“This guide addresses one of the most difficult questions
facing our nation's governors, ‘Are we prepared to respond to
an emergency incident, whether it is man-made or a natural
disaster?'” Gibbons said. “As the threats to our
country become more complex, we must increase our efforts to work
cooperatively across state lines and further our knowledge and
understanding of those practices that have proven successful in
other states. The Governor's Guide to Homeland Security will
provide each governor across the nation with proactive
recommendations for emergency readiness, ensuring that each state
is prepared to address a number of potential
emergencies.”
As part of their efforts to secure their states in the event of
an attack or other emergency, such as a natural disaster, the
governors sent a letter to Congressman John M. Spratt Jr.,
chairman, and Congressman Paul Ryan, ranking minority member, of
the House Budget Committee, asking them to consider “adequate
budget authority to reequip Army and Air National Guard units
returning from abroad.”
Calling the National Guard units “an integral part of the
war on terror and a core component of state emergency and disaster
response plans,” the letter noted that National Guard
equipment often is taken abroad for use in military operations and
left behind for use by other units. “Unless this equipment is
replaced in a timely fashion, the ability of our guard units to
train for future military actions or respond to citizens' needs in
an emergency is greatly diminished.”
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