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Coast Guard works to protect US from terrorist attack (detailed info)
Fox ^ | Feb. 7, 2004 | AP

Posted on 02/07/2004 11:18:41 PM PST by FairOpinion

The U.S. Coast Guard has its work cut out for it, as it tackles its new mission of protecting America from terrorist attack.

The Coast Guard has 361 ports to protect, 95-thousand miles of navigable waterways to defend and 20-thousand oceangoing vessels to keep an eye on.

On July first, it must begin enforcing new anti-terrorism rules mandated by the federal government.

To comply with the Maritime Transportation Security Act of 2002, the Coast Guard is focusing on what it considers the most likely maritime targets of a terrorist attack. It's identified nearly 12-thousand of them.

About 32-hundred of them are on shore, things like oil refineries, nuclear power plants and other sites that use or store hazardous materials. 8500 others are on the water ferries, barges and cargo ships.

To do its new job, the Coast Guard it is counting in part on new technologies, including a sophisticated vessel tracking system. But it's already run into problems with that.

A radio frequency it needs to help monitor the movements of thousands of ships was sold to a private company in 1998, over the Coast Guard's objections.


TOPICS: Front Page News
KEYWORDS: coastguard; homelandsecurity
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Sounds like a horrendous task!
1 posted on 02/07/2004 11:18:42 PM PST by FairOpinion
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To: FairOpinion
A radio frequency it needs to help monitor the movements of thousands of ships was sold to a private company in 1998 ???

I thought frequencies were allocated and owned by no one and licensed by the FCC ? Surely said license didn't have a T crossed or and I dotted somewhere in that agreement. What about national security title 18 loopholes 'n such ?

Stay Safe and Thanks for posting that !

2 posted on 02/07/2004 11:25:32 PM PST by Squantos (Salmon...the other pink meat !)
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To: Squantos
the gov can take it by immenant domain any time they want
3 posted on 02/07/2004 11:27:48 PM PST by Walkingfeather
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To: Squantos
"A radio frequency it needs to help monitor the movements of thousands of ships was sold to a private company in 1998, over the Coast Guard's objections."

==

I don't know how could they sell it, over the Coast Guard's objections. They usually keep frequencies the government wants to use.

I tried to find out more info, but couldn't with a quick search.

I wonder what company bought it.
4 posted on 02/07/2004 11:32:10 PM PST by FairOpinion (If you are not voting for Bush, you are voting for the terrorists.)
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To: Walkingfeather
I was thinking such could be done. All my battles for frequencies was a DOD effort so I don't know much of the legal routes or processes to sell or divy up the spectrum.

As you state. If it's National Security at stake.........commandeer it yesterday !

Stay safe !

5 posted on 02/07/2004 11:35:31 PM PST by Squantos (Salmon...the other pink meat !)
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To: FairOpinion
Dunno maybe tonkin gulf knows ?
6 posted on 02/07/2004 11:36:37 PM PST by Squantos (Salmon...the other pink meat !)
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To: Squantos
FCC should revoke MariTEL's licence

FCC also has the option to wait until 2004 before it rules on this case. If by that time MariTEL has failed to build out its infrastructure as it agreed to do when it purchased AIS1 and other marine mobile bands, FCC can revoke the licenses to the frequency bands it auctioned off in 1998. Given MariTEL’s current financial difficulties it is unlikely that it will make the 2004 deadline.

7 posted on 02/07/2004 11:38:28 PM PST by FairOpinion (If you are not voting for Bush, you are voting for the terrorists.)
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To: FairOpinion
I just pinged Tonkin Gulf Yacht Club also.......good find on the ManTel license........

Stay Safe !

8 posted on 02/07/2004 11:42:43 PM PST by Squantos (Salmon...the other pink meat !)
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To: Squantos
Looks like ManTEL bought it, but apparently there was a condition that they build up a system by 2004, or they lose it. I don't know if they succeeded in building up the system.

But in the document,where they talked about selling it to that company, they were also talking about how it will interfere with the Coast Guard, so why on earth did they sell it?!
9 posted on 02/07/2004 11:46:04 PM PST by FairOpinion (If you are not voting for Bush, you are voting for the terrorists.)
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To: FairOpinion
I meant MariTEL, of course.

http://www.maritelusa.com/

10 posted on 02/07/2004 11:46:49 PM PST by FairOpinion (If you are not voting for Bush, you are voting for the terrorists.)
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To: Squantos
Found a current update:

http://www.tucsoncitizen.com/breaking/020704ports.html

Feb. 7, 2004
Coast Guard's effort to protect ports from terrorists encounters obstacles

The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS - As the U.S. Coast Guard tackles its new, urgent mission of protecting America from terrorist attack, one of the tools it needs is a radio frequency to help monitor the movements and cargo of thousands of ships that enter the nation's ports each year.
But the Coast Guard is out of luck.

The Federal Communications Commission - over the Coast Guard's objections - sold the frequency at auction to a private company in 1998 for $6.8 million.

Now the Coast Guard wants a slice of the frequency back, calling it essential to its plans. The winning bidder, MariTEL Inc., says it can have it, maybe, for $20 million.

MariTEL bought the frequency fair and square, realizing at the time, even if the FCC didn't, just how valuable it was. Like any good entrepreneur, the company expects to profit from its investment, says Dan Smith, who, as MariTEL's president, supervises its two other employees.

The squabble over the radio frequency is just one of the obstacles the Coast Guard faces between now and July 1, the day it promises to enforce new anti-terrorism rules mandated by the federal Maritime Transportation Security Act of 2002.

With 361 ports to protect, 95,000 miles of navigable waterways to defend and 20,000 oceangoing vessels to keep an eye on, the Coast Guard is focusing on what it considers the nation's 11,700 most likely maritime targets of a terrorist attack.

About 3,200 of them are on shore: oil refineries, nuclear power plants, liquid natural gas facilities and hundreds of other waterfront sites that use or store hazardous materials.

The 8,500 others are on the water: ferries that carry tens of thousands of commuters to work in cities from Seattle to New York, barges and cargo ships that crisscross U.S. harbors and inland waterways, oceangoing tankers and freighters that bring in everything from oil and fertilizer to automobiles and bananas.

Oceangoing vessels are of special concern because they often pick up their cargos in countries where terrorists are born and arrive in U.S. ports after crossing lawless oceans where pirates still prowl. Container ships alone bring 16 million boxcar-sized containers a year to U.S. ports, and 95 percent of them are unloaded without ever being inspected.

It is to the water, not just to the skies, that America needs to be looking if it hopes to thwart the most devastating terrorist attacks, many in the maritime industry say.

"An airplane is fine if you want to take down the twin towers," says Dennis Bryant, a former Coast Guard lawyer who is now senior counsel with Holland and Knight, a major maritime law firm. "But if you want to bring a nuclear device into this country, you're going to have a hard time doing it by plane."

Nevertheless, the federal government has been spending about seven to 10 times more on aviation security than maritime security. For 2004, Congress has authorized the federal Transportation Security Administration to spend $3.8 billion on airport security and less than a half-billion for port security.

The reason for this is simple, says Bryant: Unlike airline passengers, cargo doesn't vote. Still, he says, "it's a big disparity that just doesn't seem to equate to the risk."

As every schoolchild in Halifax, Nova Scotia, learns, it doesn't take a nuclear device to create a maritime disaster of World Trade Center proportions.

On December 6, 1917, two ships, one of them carrying 2,500 tons of volatile chemicals bound for the Allied war effort in Europe, collided in Halifax harbor. The blast - believed to be the biggest man-made explosion known before the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima - killed nearly 2,000 of the city's 50,000 residents and leveled 1,630 homes, leaving 6,000 homeless. For miles around, nearly every window was blown out, and 250 survivors had to have eyes removed.

Modern explosives in a major port city could do far worse.

Protecting the waterfront from terrorism is a a vital new responsibility for the Coast Guard, which is more accustomed to drug interdictions and search and rescue missions. The Coast Guard acknowledges port security is a complex task but discusses it only in general terms, avoiding anything that might prove useful to the country's enemies.

To counter the terrorist threat, the Coast Guard says it is counting in part on new technologies, including a sophisticated vessel tracking system that uses the radio frequency the FCC sold.

It is also putting much of the onus for port security on private industry and on local and regional port authorities.

"Being a small service," says Capt. R. G. Sullivan, the Coast Guard's director of Homeland Security for the Port of New Orleans, "we can't do the job ourselves. We can be the coordinator, but we need to be partnering with owners and operators, with state and local law enforcement and other federal agencies."

Maritime experts agree the job is too big for the Coast Guard alone.

"At the end of the day, private companies are maintaining the fleet, private companies are putting the cargo on, private companies are moving the cargo off and private crew members are operating each vessel," says Gilman Louie, who runs In-Q-Tel, a venture capital firm that helps develop new technologies for U.S. intelligence agencies. "Without their cooperation, you're stuck with just looking for suspicious activity - and the ocean is a very big place."

Just deciding where the maritime industry is most vulnerable has not been easy. To help figure it out, the Coast Guard hired a private defense contractor, Northrup Grumman Mission Systems, to conduct assessments of security threats at 55 major ports at a cost of up to $1 million each.

The assessments are classified, but the Congressional General Accounting Office has reviewed some of them and declared that it has "concerns about the scope and quality."

While remaining purposely vague on specifics, the GAO reported last September that the assessment at one port seemed to have overlooked key facilities including railroads and a power plant. At another port, the GAO said, local Coast Guard personnel complained that a "survey instrument" being used in the assessment "referred to the wrong port" and that there were other concerns about "credibility."

The Coast Guard says it shared some of the concerns but believes they have been addressed.

Regardless of the outcome of the assessments, the Coast Guard is requiring companies and ships in every U.S. port to take steps to protect themselves.

Each of the 8,500 U.S-flagged ships and 3,200 port installations that the Coast Guard considers most at risk were required to submit security plans to the Coast Guard by Dec. 31 or face fines of up to $25,000.

Nevertheless, the Coast Guard says, as many as 700 of those ships and 300 of those port installations missed the deadline completely. The Coast Guard has not yet reviewed the plans that have been filed to determine whether they are adequate.

The Coast Guard announced Wednesday that it has begun issuing $10,000 fines to those who filed no plan at all. Port installations and ships that filed inadequate plans, the Coast Guard says, will be given a new deadline for correcting them.

Coast Guard spokeswoman Jolie Shifflet declined to name vessels and installations that missed the deadline, citing security concerns.

The next deadline is July 1, when the installations and ships must implement their security plans. The Coast Guard says it will try to review them all by then but the plans must be implemented by the deadline whether the Coast Guard has had time to approve them or not.

"It's unheard of," says Bryant, the former Coast Guard lawyer. "The industry has had other regulatory regimes come into place but these changes are happening virtually overnight - and it's very, very expensive."

Meanwhile, some maritime experts question the gaps in the Coast Guard's approach.

For one thing, boats under 65 feet, as well as most fishing and recreational craft, are exempt from carrying transponders that would allow them to be tracked electronically if and when the dispute over the radio frequency is resolved. Although prices are expected to fall, the equipment now costs between $5,000 and $10,000 per vessel.

Recreational boaters and the fishing industry lobbied for the exemption, but Channing F. Hayden Jr., the president of the Steamship Association of Louisiana, says it "makes no sense" in terms of security.

"You're basically exempting the same sized ships that blew up the Cole," he said, referring to the Oct. 12, 2000 suicide attack in Yemen that killed 17 sailors aboard the Navy destroyer.

The Coast Guard plan also exempts foreign-flagged oceangoing vessels from meeting the requirement of the Maritime Transportation Security Act of 2002. Although such vessels make up more than half the oceangoing ships entering U.S. ports, the Coast Guard says they are not covered by the law.

Instead, the Coast Guard says, foreign-flagged vessels are required to meet international security standards, which are supposed to be enforced in part by the countries whose flags they fly.

Many in Congress say the Coast Guard's interpretation of the law is wrong - that it was intended to apply to all vessels entering U.S. waters. A resolution to clarify Congress' intent is expected to come up for a vote this year.

Bryant says he understands why many in Congress are concerned. If a U.S.-flagged ship wants its security system approved by the Coast Guard, "it better be pretty good," he said. "If you're in Lagos, Nigeria, my personal view is that the security level there is not going to be anywhere near as stringent."

Regardless of whether foreign vessels ultimately come under U.S. standards, most are already required, by international standards, to carry transponders. However, the Coast Guard is a still a long way from being able to read their signals. The necessary equipment has been installed in only five of the country's 361 ports, Bryant says, but the Coast Guard expects to double that number by the end of the year.

Eventually, the Coast Guard hopes to install the equipment in about half of the nation's 25 busiest ports at a total cost of $62 million to $120 million. To date, however, Congress has authorized spending only $40 million on the system and President Bush has asked for only $4 million more in his budget package for 2005 that was proposed last Monday.

Maritime experts regard the system as an excellent navigational and safety tool, but some question its effectiveness as an anti-terrorism device.

"The way it's set up," Bryant said, "it's the master on each ship that inputs the ship's data - its name, speed, heading, cargo and country of origin. And if you're a terrorist you're just not likely to say you have a small nuclear device on board."

Furthermore, the device transmits information about the ship only when it has been switched on or has not been transferred to a decoy vessel. The Coast Guard, says Bryant, believes there are ways to tell when someone on board a ship "tries to dummy things up a bit" but that "it's still disconcerting that the person on board, who could well be your terrorist, inputs a good percent of the data."

Meanwhile, for the identification system to work at all, the Coast Guard still has to obtain the right to use a channel on the radio frequency that was sold to MariTEL in 1998.

The Coast Guard says it objected when the sale was proposed, saying two channels on the frequency were important to navigation. The FCC says it went ahead with the sale with the understanding that the Coast Guard and MariTEL would work out an arrangement - which they have failed to do. In a pre-Sept. 11 world, the FCC says, the frequency's importance to homeland security was not apparent.

Now that the Coast Guard is trying to get the frequency back, it has been dragging MariTEL's name through the mud, "telling everyone we're crooks," says Smith, the company's president. That has cost MariTEL business, he says, which is why the company is suing the Coast Guard for $267 million.

Smith says the company can't simply give the frequency back. Instead, MariTEL has made several proposals that the Coast Guard has rejected, he said. One offer was to sell the Coast Guard one channel for $20 million. Another offer was to allow the Coast Guard to use the channel while MariTEL collects a fee from every ship that transmits over it.

"It has nothing to do with patriotism," he says. "We've got over a thousand investors who put more than $85 million into this company," and he has a responsibility to protect their interests.

The FCC says hearings on the matter are being scheduled. Possible resolutions include anything from a negotiated settlement to the government to a voiding of the original sale.

Paul Rynhard, a spokesman for the Coast Guard, says a resolution is essential, adding that the Coast Guard's inability to use the same channels used by ships worldwide "would represent a major threat to homeland security."


11 posted on 02/07/2004 11:48:51 PM PST by FairOpinion (If you are not voting for Bush, you are voting for the terrorists.)
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To: FairOpinion
A radio frequency it needs to help monitor the movements of thousands of ships was sold to a private company in 1998, over the Coast Guard's objections.

I'll ask my husband about that in the morning.

12 posted on 02/07/2004 11:50:41 PM PST by Eva
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To: Eva
Also read #11 -- I found an updated article.
13 posted on 02/07/2004 11:52:04 PM PST by FairOpinion (If you are not voting for Bush, you are voting for the terrorists.)
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14 posted on 02/07/2004 11:53:36 PM PST by Consort
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To: Ramius
Pingpingping!
15 posted on 02/07/2004 11:55:22 PM PST by Rose in RoseBear (HHD [ ... FYI ... ])
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To: FairOpinion
why on earth did they sell it?!

Ask Klinton.

16 posted on 02/08/2004 12:06:25 AM PST by Indie (Hello boys! I'm baaaack!)
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To: FairOpinion
But in the document,where they talked about selling it to that company, they were also talking about how it will interfere with the Coast Guard, so why on earth did they sell it?!

Boy, back in 1998 some moron must have been the chief commander in charge.
17 posted on 02/08/2004 12:15:55 AM PST by Arkinsaw
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To: FairOpinion
What could be special about this one frequency? This tale doesn't pass the smell test.
18 posted on 02/08/2004 12:33:01 AM PST by Khan Noonian Singh
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To: Khan Noonian Singh
"In 1997 the World Radio Commission (WRC) dedicated 2 channels to a new maritime navigation and tracking instrument called ‘Automatic Identification System’ (AIS). The 2 Very High Frequency (VHF) channels dedicated to AIS worldwide were 87B and 88B. They center around 161.975 and 162.025 Mega Hertz (MHz) respectively. They were dubbed AIS1 and AIS2.

Another complication for the roll-out of AIS was that AIS2 was being used by other US Federal Agencies.

To accommodate these circumstances, USCG played a major role in setting standards for AIS capabilities. USCG forced the international standard setting organizations (IMO, ITU, IALA and IEC) to require AIS to be able to use channels other than AIS1 and AIS2 and to require that AIS be backwards compatible with an earlier version of the AIS standard that uses VHF Channel 70 to tell an AIS transponder to switch to different channels. The international community vehemently opposed these requirements because it made AIS much more complex and expensive than it needed to be. USCG prevailed though and now ‘frequency agility’ is part of the AIS standard.

USCG was able to resolve the AIS2 availability through internal US Government negotiations, but AIS1 availability remained a problem.

FCC, realizing that two marine mobile channels would be needed for AIS, required the winner of the auction of the 9 marine mobile frequency bands (MariTEL) to negotiate with USCG to accommodate AIS’ needs. FCC indicated that, if MariTEL and USCG were unable to come to terms, it would ‘re-visit’ the issue. "

etc.

Entire article here:

Here

19 posted on 02/08/2004 12:40:46 AM PST by FairOpinion (If you are not voting for Bush, you are voting for the terrorists.)
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
Ping!
20 posted on 02/08/2004 12:46:44 AM PST by JustPiper (D A M N I T O L Take 2 and the rest of the world can go to hell for up to 8 full hours)
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