A year after the creation of the Department of Homeland
Security, the leadership of the House of Representatives continues
to ponder whether it needs a permanent committee to oversee the
department. It should stop pondering. The answer is yes.
Without such a committee, meaningful congressional oversight of
the mammoth department is impossible. Consider this: When Congress
took up the legislation that would create the Department of
Homeland Security, it was referred to 12-count 'em, 12-standing
committees in the House. The White House let out a sigh of relief.
It had identified 14 full-time committees and 25 subcommittees as
having jurisdiction, as well as 10 of the 13 House appropriation
committees.
The new department, drawn as it is from 22 federal agencies, never
will be truly free of multiple bosses. But Congress can and must
act to limit its own organizational inefficiencies. Otherwise,
we'll continue to see absurdities such as two different committees
referring the same legislation to the full floor, others conducting
redundant oversight hearings and others over-analyzing
everything.
The task, though obviously needed, won't be easy to accomplish.
Various responsibilities for domestic security continue to touch
every federal agency and cut across national programs.
Although security can and will remain a cooperative government
effort, we need a Homeland Security Committee to draw together the
disparate players and agencies, infuse them with a common
institutional culture and set of priorities and assess and set the
priorities for what it takes to make our nation safe.
The same thinking went into the 1947 National Security Act, which
consolidated key assets into one big, powerful organization and
created the means to orchestrate the new Department of Defense's
efforts with other federal activities. Large, centralized
organizations have drawbacks, the most obvious being managing a
vast bureaucracy. But they bring a variety of benefits as well,
including unity of purpose, a wealth of capabilities, economies of
scale and a common culture.
The easy work has been done in terms of consolidating the various
agencies that make up the new department. What's left is tougher.
We're down to creating the nuts and bolts of a new department-what
to do with the people, how to handle acquisition and whether and
how to integrate information technologies. Oversight of these
activities requires a full-time, dedicated committee in both houses
of Congress.
The House Select Homeland Security Committee has demonstrated the
value of centralizing oversight. The committee held productive
hearings and rapidly assembled a capable staff with the energy,
expertise and dedication that make for good oversight. Recently,
the committee approved legislation that would help with funding for
first-responders. This is the kind of leadership a true, full
committee could show on these issues.
The global war against terrorism will go on for an extended period
of time. The Department of Homeland Security must be there, ready
to protect Americans today, tomorrow and 25 years from now. We need
a Congress properly organized for that. What we don't need is too
many cooks working on the broth, too many departments and
committees with jurisdiction over this aspect of homeland security
or that. The whole purpose of creating the department was to merge
functions, change cultures and better focus the government on the
task at hand.
Cohesive oversight is a good place to start.
James Jay
Carafano is senior research fellow in defense and homeland
security at The Heritage Foundation (heritage.org), a
Washington-based research institute.
Distributed nationally on the UPI wire