Initial thoughts on the proposal:
The President's program for establishing a new Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) is a much more comprehensive and far
reaching proposal than similar recommendations made by the
Hart-Rudman Commission or Congressional legislation offered over
the course of the last year. The DHS as outlined by the President
will consolidate many more federal offices into the new agency,
completely removing the homeland security mission from numerous
departments and agencies. For example, the Department of
Transportation's (DOT) two homeland security branches, the
Transportation Security Agency (TSA) and the United States Coast
Guard (USCG) will both become part of the DHS and the DOT will
return to focusing on promoting safety in the transportation and
regulating the involved industries.
This President's proposal should result in new efficiencies, not new bureaucracy. The President's proposal will allow for the consolidation of redundant programs. The first responder assistance programs of the Department of Justice, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Health and Human Services will all be consolidated under the Emergency Preparedness and Response division of the DHS. Similarly, the cyber security functions of the FBI's National Infrastructure Protection Center and the Department of Commerce's Critical Infrastructure Assurance Office will be brought under one authority. In nearly every homeland security related function, fewer bureaucratic entities will be involved in policy implementation if the President's proposal is accepted. In fact, the President plans to fund and staff this new Department without increasing his budget request for Fiscal Year 2003 (the budget request will remain at $37.5 billion and the DHS will have just under 170,000 employees, equaling the sum of its parts)
As the DHS is developed, ensuring that its functions complement
the remaining other federal agencies instead of competing with them
will be vital. For example, the DHS's Intelligence Analysis and
Infrastructure Protection division must insure that terrorism
related information is fused and shared with other federal
agencies. DHS cannot result in the establishment of another
"stovepipe" that compartmentalizes intelligence as the CIA and FBI
have historically done. In addition, steps must be taken to ensure
that the non-homeland security functions of the agencies included
in the new DHS receive appropriate attention. The Emergency
Preparedness and Response division must be able to support
America's communities after natural disasters such as floods and
wild fires as FEMA has done for years and the Coast Guard must
continue to serve important maritime rescue functions.
On the Need to Retain OHS:
Even with this reorganization, an independent coordination
mechanism in the White House such as the Office of Homeland
Security will be vital. Even with the consolidation of most
homeland security functions into the Department of Homeland
Security, at a minimum the Department of Defense, Federal Bureau of
Investigation, and Central Intelligence Agency will still have
roles to play. DHS cannot serve this coordinating function while
competing with these agencies for budget resources. In addition,
DHS will not be able to function as the President's primary advisor
on homeland security issues. With statutory authority and Cabinet
status as a Department, DHS will have responsibility to Congress
and to its own bureaucracy. These responsibilities can clash with
its responsibility to provide the President independent advise.
A similar situation arose after the Departments of the Army and Navy were merged into the Department of Defense after World War Two. When the federal government was reorganized to meet the new strategic paradigm of the Cold War, the National Security Council (NSC) was established. The NSC was initially intended as a weak body designed to build consensus in Congress but due to its independence from Congress and the federal bureaucracy, subsequent Presidents were able to mold it into an important advising and coordinating mechanism that frequently settled disputes between important federal agencies such as the Department of Defense and the State Department.
Since the DHS will not absorb all the homeland security functions of the federal government, such a mechanism will continue to be necessary. President Bush was wise to retain the Office of Homeland Security (OHS), which was modeled on the NSC, as part of his proposal. Congress would be equally wise not to alter this provision of the President's proposal by eliminating OHS or turning it into a Czar's office with a statutory mandate and responsibilities to Congress.
On Congress's role:
Congress must match the President's vision and leadership by
reorganizing the Congressional Committee System. If the DHS has to
have its policies vetted by the 88 Congressional Committees and
Subcommittees that currently have responsibility for homeland
security many inefficiencies will remain. Time and tax dollars will
be wasted by having DHS officials consistently testifying in front
of Congress, while important legislation is log jammed in committee
due to legislative politics. Further, without a reorganization of
the Congressional Committees, Committee chairman are likely to
continue to put homeland security functions in other agencies over
which they have direct legislative and oversight responsibility
instead of in DHS, which they may not. Follies such as this
occurred frequently prior to September 11th, resulting in a federal
structure that maintained no less than half a dozen first responder
assistance programs in nearly as many federal agencies. The
President has twice shown his leadership in proposing to tackle the
inadequacies of the executive branch, first with the establishment
of OHS last October and now with his proposal to create the DHS.
Congress must now show its ability to lead and address the
inefficiencies of its own house.
Organizational Charts:
Michael
Scardaville, Policy Analyst for Homeland Security, The Kathryn
and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies.