If power companies
invested in infrastructure like the Department of Homeland Security
fights terrorism, then a resident in New York City wouldn't be able
to run a hairdryer but every cowboy in Bozeman, Mont., could light
up a stadium.
Because of the rules set by Congress, Homeland Security provides
every state with a guaranteed minimum amount of grants regardless
of risk, need or how they support national priorities and the goal
of making all Americans safer.
Today, Congress has an opportunity to reform the system. But it is
not clear that it will choose security over politics.
Homeland security is a strategic problem which requires a strategic
solution. And the strategy is simple: not every need is worth
funding; the greatest priorities and risks must be addressed first
-- period.
The mission of the Department of Homeland Security is first and
foremost to prevent another September 11. It isn't to subsidize
local fire stations so they can buy health club memberships like
they did in Massachusetts and other places.
A dollar spent on preventing the next terror attack is vastly
superior to spending dollars on recovering in the aftermath of an
attack. That's not to say that some spending on preparing to
respond to an attack is not prudent. Our government can never
guarantee that every terrorist can be stopped. However, we can't
build a sound national preparedness system simply by writing
checks.
Yet, sadly, this common sense principle is often overlooked by
members of Congress more interested in cheery press releases that
trumpet how much cash they have garnered for the voters back
home.
The first place where Congress gets it wrong is insisting that an
ever greater portion of the Homeland Security Department's budget
be handed out in grants to state and local governments and private
sector companies, which already get more than 10% of it.
Furthermore, grants to state and local governments are allocated
based on a formula that guarantees every state with an equal
minimum amount of funds -- 0.75% of all grant money allocated --
regardless of risk or need. As a result, rural, less populated
areas often receive a disproportionate amount of money. Wyoming
gets $37.74 per capita while California and New York get less than
$5.50.
The underlying theory behind this all-state-minimum formula is that
terrorists could strike anywhere.
At one level, that's true. People often forget that the biggest
terrorist biological attack in U.S. history happened in rural
Oregon where a religious cult spiked the local salad bars so folks
in the town would be too sick to vote an upcoming election.
But it is not true that the best way to protect each state is to
given them a big chunk of federal tax dollars to spend as they
please. In fact, that strategy will make Americans less safe. By
trying to protect everywhere, Congress ensures that we protect
nowhere adequately.
And pretending that all states are equally vulnerable and deserve
the same amount of funding under protects high-risk states, while
over funding low-risk states is a waste of homeland security
dollars.
Accordingly, reform of these grants is a worthy and urgent
priority. In the name of security, we should get rid of the
requirement that every state gets part of the homeland security
money. And, to the extent that state minimums are included, the
minimums should be kept low, in order to provide maximum funding to
areas of greatest risk.
The good news is that some in Congress share this view. Last May,
the House passed a bill that would change the criteria used to
distribute funding. Under this bill, most states would get a 0.25%
of the available first responder dollars -- instead of 0.75
percent. More importantly, the bill decreases the base amount of
the current formula provided to states while increasing the portion
of funds distributed exclusively based on risk. It does not go far
enough, but it is certainly a good start.
The bad news is that the Senate just passed a bill that would only
slightly decrease this minimum to 0.55%. Worse, it would increase
the amount of funding to which this formula applies. That would
result in an increased percentage of the funding being tied up in
state minimums, in short, being spent without regard to risk and
need.
Leading this fight are rural states and the states of the upper
Midwest. They worry that altering the grant formula to have funding
distributed based on risk could reduce their funding.
Because the details of how risks will be defined are not yet
decided -- agriculture could be an important element for instance
-- reduced funding for rural areas is not a foregone
conclusion.
But that's not the point. Nor is it that moving to a risk based
system would mean that some states would see their level of funding
decrease. Winners and losers in this situation aren't counted by
dollars that are brought home by congress members to their states
or districts. Winners and losers in this life or death matter are
determined by how effectively homeland security money is used to
reduce the risk of terrorism.
The reallocation of federal money based on risk assessment does
not preclude state governments from augmenting homeland security
spending inside their borders. States and local communities should
be in charge of most of their preparedness efforts. That would
guarantee a more cost effective use of the money.
It took five years for terrorists to plan the 9/11 attacks. It
took three years for them to plan the bombings in Madrid, Spain.
And who knows how long it took them to plan the bombing in
London.
The terrorists aren't going anywhere. Right now, in some basement
or cave they could be beginning planning for an attack that will
take place five years from now. We need - the people need --
strategic security for the long-term.
Congress should fix the grant program, so that we have adequate
security five years from now -- not throw around resources on
wasteful programs, pushing up the budget deficit and making the
nation weaker - just to bring home some homeland security
pork.
Veronique de Rugy is a research scholar at the American
Enterprise Institute and James
Carafano, is senior fellow for National Security and
Homeland Security at the Davis Institute for International Studies
at the Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in Tech Central Station