Port Security Faces Funding Abyss

Sept. 14, 2004
Not long after terrorists hijacked jetliners and killed thousands of people in the terror attacks of 2001, the United States was hit with a sobering realization

NORFOLK, Va. -- Not long after terrorists hijacked jetliners and killed thousands of people in the terror attacks of 2001, the United States was hit with a sobering realization -- that an even worse cataclysm might yet come.

Take, for instance, a "dirty" nuclear bomb: Such a crude device could be made with radioactive material and traditional explosives, and it could enter the country via a truck-sized container on a merchant ship. It could detonate in a big city and kill tens of thousands, far more than the number of dead that September morning three years ago.

Nevertheless, an important element in preventing such a scenario -- shoring up security at public and private terminals nationwide -- has a long way to go. The Maritime Transportation Security Act -- passed by Congress in 2002 to make terminal sites more secure -- suffers from a fundamental flaw: It has no financing mechanism, and nobody wants to pick up the tab for improvements the act requires.

The Coast Guard has estimated that upgrading the nation's maritime sites and vessels to meet the law will cost about $7.3 billion between 2003 and 2012. But the $491 million in grants Congress has issued to ports and vessels to improve security in the past three years -- about $163 million a year on average -- won't come close to meeting the 10-year cost estimates if the spending patterns continue. For many sites, the new costs include adding security personnel, new access-control methods, fencing and high-tech surveillance systems, and periodic reviews.

The port industry -- the terminals, vessels and factories that ship goods out of the ports -- contend it's the federal government's responsibility to make up the difference. But the Bush administration says the industry should foot most of the bill. Congress has yet to find a way to pay for the requirements that it put in place two years ago.

The result: Three years after Sept. 11, 2001, there's still no telling when the anti-terrorism initiatives to shore up security at ports will be paid for. At the current spending levels, it would take 44 more years to meet what the act requires by 2012. "In other words, at this rate, the United States will put a man on Mars before it achieves effective port security," Joseph F. Bouchard said. He's the retired commander of Norfolk Naval Station and now works for ZelTech, a Hampton company helping to integrate the Virginia Port Authority's security program.

Other possible scenarios of terrorist attacks include taking control of a large ship and crashing it into a bridge; sneaking into the country by merchant ship; blowing up a vessel carrying volatile fuel vapors to cause environmental disaster; seizing control of a passenger ferry; and crashing into a Navy vessel.

To resist such events, the country has sought a three-pronged approach in the past few years: More patrols of harbors and vessels by the Coast Guard; better cargo inspecting and monitoring of incoming crews by customs and immigration officials; and better security at the terminals, factories and vessels themselves.

The Coast Guard -- the lead agency in port security and now part of the Department of Homeland Security -- has received billions more from the federal government since Sept. 11, 2001, and is spending thousands more hours a year on the security. It's increased security patrols in harbors and has been boarding high-risk vessels to check for security before they enter ports. Every ship approaching the coast, such as the 200 that come into Hampton Roads every month, has to submit a notice of arrival -- complete with cargo and crew information -- 96 hours before arrival. That allows the Coast Guard time to decide whether it needs to board the ship to inspect it or even ride along with it into the harbor.

The Customs Service -- now incorporated into Homeland Security in the Customs and Border Protection division -- also has been revamped substantially. A computer program once used mostly to track containers carrying narcotics has been altered to fight terrorism. The system comes up with risk factors for each container -- based on things like country of origin, exporter and carrier -- and helps decide which container to inspect

.

Terminal and vessel security, the third leg of the three-legged stool, is a tall order. By their nature, port sites offer easy access from the water. They're typically near large population centers. And thousands of people from all walks of life work there. Congress wants to make sure the sites and vessels have enough security personnel, gates, fencing, lighting, surveillance and video systems for security. And they also need to upgrade in the next few years to accommodate new transportation worker cards that use fingerprinting or other biometrics.

Each was to submit a security plan to the Coast Guard by last Dec. 31 and, after Coast Guard approval, began abiding by the plan, starting July 1. About 3,147 sites nationwide -- including about 70 in Hampton Roads -- have to abide by the new rules, as do about 9,000 ships and vessels.

Some federal money has come. Since 2002, Congress has given out about $491 million in grants. The Virginia Port Authority oversees Norfolk International Terminals, Portsmouth Marine Terminal and Newport News Marine Terminal. It's received about $9 million in three grants, covering part of the more than $25 million it says it needs for security in the next few years. The VPA has used the money for, among other things, radiation portals, surveillance cameras, an access-control system and a new command and control center. But more demand for grants is on the way -- and soon. Many small port sites didn't even realized until late last year that they had to abide by the security regulations. They're just now applying for grants. The Coast Guard can issue fines of up to $25,000 for sites that aren't following their plans, and initial compliance inspections are under way now.

Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge has argued that the maritime industry needs to pay for making its sites more secure. The president's budget proposal submitted to Congress earlier this year gave another indication of where the administration stands: The proposal, for fiscal 2005 that begins in October, contained $46 million for the port-security grant program -- only about 12 percent of what the industry says it needs each year to pay the costs -- and didn't offer any other financing.

The Senate has since upped that to $150 million and the House to $125 million, with the difference between the chambers to be ironed out in conference committee.

Those who say the industry needs to step up to pay the security costs say the new measures can be good for traditional business reasons, like preventing theft and tracking products. And with the federal budget deficit growing, they say, the government can pay only so much.

"It would be nice to think the federal government would pick up the entire tab, but realism has to kick in," said Coast Guard Rear Adm. Sally Brice-O'Hara, commander of District 5, which includes Hampton Roads.

"It has to be a shared solution."

But the American Association of Port Authorities -- an industry lobbying group -- argues that because fighting terrorism is a national effort, the whole country should chip in, providing grants out of federal coffers.

"If you look at the finances at most of states with ports -- like Virginia, California and New York -- none of these states can afford this unfunded mandate," said Bouchard of Zeltech.

"This is saying, 'You, citizens of Virginia, will pay for the security of the citizens of the Midwest.'

"And we have a fundamental complaint about that."

Some port sites and carriers have decided to go it alone, unilaterally collecting a security fee to begin paying for port security and meet the federal requirements.

Maersk Sealand -- the world's largest container carrier that does strong business at Portsmouth -- said that beginning Oct. 2, it would charge shippers a $6-a-container security fee.

But many ports say they won't add such a fee on their own.

If Hampton Roads sites institute such a fee without a national rate, the theory goes, the local port could lose cargo shipments to Savannah, Ga.; New York-New Jersey; Baltimore; or other East Coast ports that still don't have such fees.