Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
 
image
Home : Graphics On : Privacy Policy    Sign up for Email:
Search: 
 
image
Press Releases


October 10, 2003  
image
LIEBERMAN SAYS DHS AND DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION SHOULD WORK TO PREPARE SCHOOLS FOR TERRORIST ATTACKS
Study Finds Schools Excluded from Terrorism Preparation
 
WASHINGTON - Governmental Affairs Committee Ranking Member Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., said Friday the Administration has failed to deliver emergency planning guidance to America's schools and he called on the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Education to take adequate steps to ensure that schools are prepared for terrorist attacks.

"We must take every precaution to ensure that our nation's most valuable resource, our children, are safe in the event of a terrorist attack,” Lieberman wrote in a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge. "I encourage DHS to work with the education community to develop meaningful strategies that will better prepare American schools to understand their role in defending themselves from terrorist attacks, and to devise methods to ensure that this information is more accessible to those who need it."

A recent survey by the National Association of School Resource Officers found that more than 76 percent of school-based police officers feel their schools are not prepared adequately to respond to a terrorist attack, and over 71 percent say their schools' teachers, administrators, security personnel, and support staff have received no terrorism-specific training.

Lieberman wrote that schools are also concerned that proposed cuts to the Safe and Drug Free Schools and Office of Community Oriented Policing (COPS) programs, which fund many school safety officers, will exacerbate the problem.

DHS has teamed up with the Department of Education to provide an emergency planning website but NASRO officials contend that schools are largely unaware of this material.

Attached is Lieberman's letter:

October 10, 2003


The Honorable Tom Ridge
Secretary
U.S. Department of Homeland Security
Washington, D.C. 20528

The Honorable Rod Paige
Secretary
U.S. Department of Education
400 Maryland Avenue, SW
Washington, D.C. 20202

Dear Secretaries Ridge and Paige:

In our effort to defend our homeland, we must take every precaution to ensure that our nation’s most valuable resource, our children, are safe in the event of a terrorist attack. However, a recent report prepared by the National Association of School Resource Officers (NASRO) indicates that the Administration is not helping nearly enough to meet this responsibility.

NASRO conducted a survey of 728 police and resource officers based in American schools and found that more than 76 percent feel that their schools are not prepared adequately to respond to a terrorist attack. More than 51 percent of respondents' schools have no specific formal guidelines to follow when there is a change in the National Homeland Security Threat Advisory System. More than 71 percent of respondents surveyed reported that their schools’ teachers, administrators, security personnel, and support staff have received no terrorism-specific training. NASRO believes that federal, state and local, education and public safety agencies, as well as elected officials, should include schools in meaningful terrorism and homeland security planning.

The NASRO respondents also indicated that the U.S. Department of Education’s recently announced $38 million in emergency planning grants, to be distributed among 150 local education agencies, is inadequate. This finding is consistent with respondent reports of the significant gaps yet to be addressed in schools’ current emergency planning and training. School officers’ participating in the NASRO survey are also deeply concerned that proposed cuts to the Safe and Drug Free Schools program and the Office of Community Oriented Policing (COPS), which funded many school safety officers, will further exacerbate schools’ inability to adequately protect themselves.

In March, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) teamed up with the Department of Education to provide an emergency planning website, part of the Safe and Drug Free Schools initiative, that contains a planning document with the Administration’s suggestions on how to best prepare for an emergency. That site is www.ed.gov/emergencyplan. Unfortunately, however, NASRO believes that schools are largely unaware of this website. The association also believes that without updated material, the site is of little or no use to those officers on the front lines charged with protecting our children and teachers.

Additionally, according to a September 25, 2003, Newsday article, the New York City Council, Public Safety Committee expressed concerns that schools are not prepared to handle another terrorist attack. As a result, the City’s Police Department School Safety Division plans to create a new anti-terror task force to enhance area schools’ ability to protect themselves.

I encourage DHS and the Department of Education to work with the education community to develop meaningful strategies that will better prepare American schools to understand their role in defending themselves from terrorist attacks, and to devise methods to ensure that this information is more accessible to those who need it. To facilitate my own understanding of your efforts, I would appreciate your response to the following questions by October 31, 2003:

  • What are DHS and the Department of Education doing to address NASRO’s concerns that schools are unaware of the emergency planning website, and that without updated material the site will not be useful to officers on the front line charged with protecting our children and teachers?

  • What is DHS doing to address NASRO’s concerns that decreases in funding for programs such as the COPS program and Safe and Drug Free Schools, and the subsequent loss of many school safety officers, may expose faculty and student bodies to greater risk?

  • What steps can DHS and the Department of Education take to assist schools in training school based law enforcement officers (School Resource Officers), thus allowing them to train the staff and student leaders on a number of issues related to homeland security?

  • How can DHS foster enhanced information sharing between law enforcement and schools to allow more access to guidance already created by DHS and Education?

  • Does DHS plan to issue guidelines regarding how schools should respond to increases in the threat level under the terrorism advisory system? If so, when do you expect these guidelines to be issued?



  • What steps are being taken to address NASRO’s concern that the Department of Educator’s $38 million in emergency planning grants is inadequate?

    Thank you for your attention to this request. Again, I would appreciate a response to these questions by October 31, 2003.

    Sincerely,



    Joseph I. Lieberman
    Ranking Member
  •  
    ###
     
    Printable Version
     
    « previous Press Release next Press Release »
     

    1998 - 1999 - 2000 - 2001 - 2002 - 2003 - 2004 - 2005 - 2006 - 2007
    October 2003 Press Releases
    September   November   --   2002   2004  
     
    October 31 - McCain, Reed, DeWine, Lieberman to Offer Gun Show Background Check Amendment to Gun Immunity Bill

     
    October 30 - Dodd, Lieberman Announce Grants for Connecticut Fire Fighters

     
    October 30 - Lieberman Condemns Bush Administration Plan to Open Wilderness-like Lands to Oil and Gas Industry

     
    October 29 - Lieberman Queries DHS on Insecurity of Plum Island

     
    October 28 - Senators Question Weaknesses in Border Protection, Especially Risk Assessment of Cargo

     
    October 27 - Lieberman Mourns District's First Elected Mayor

     
    October 24 - Lieberman Seeks Investigation of Ricin Response

     
    October 24 - Senators Seek Investigation of Impact of CIA Agent's Exposure

     
    October 23 - Barbara Kennelly Post Office in Hartford Approved by Committee

     
    October 22 - D.C. Should Have More Control Over Its Own Money

     
    October 22 - Senators Question Excessive Reliance on Consultants for Proposed Outsourcing of Immigration Information Officers

     
    October 22 - Lieberman, Durbin: GAO Study Shows Federal Regulatory Process Still not Open to the Public

     
    October 21 - Federal Electronic Rulemaking Progresses, But More Work is Needed

     
    October 17 - DOD Privacy Protections Questioned by Bipartisan Trio
    Collection of JetBlue Passenger Information May Have Violated the Law

     
    October 17 - Lieberman to White House: Speed Up Document Production for September 11th Commission

     
    October 15 - Democrats Seek Security Training for Flight Crews

     
    October 15 - Lieberman Reacts to 9/11 Commission Decision to Subpoena Administration for Documents

     
    October 14 - Lieberman Pushes for Bio-Terror Preparedness on Second Anniversary of Senate Anthrax Attack

     
    October 10 current Press Release

     
    October 10 - Lieberman Questions Administration Commitment to Clean Air Litigation

     
    October 8 - Lieberman, Jeffords Seek Plans for Protection of Water, Other Vital Services

     
    October 8 - Lieberman, Dodd Announce Grants for Connecticut Fire Fighters

     
    October 3 - Sunshine for Iraqi Reconstruction Projects Included in Iraqi Spending Bill

     
    October 3 - Lieberman, Levin Introduce Improved Independent Counsel Law

     
    October 2 - Administration Preparing to Let Air Polluters Off Hook
     

    About the Committee | Hearings | Legislation & Nominations | Press | Issues | Subcommittees | Committee Documents | Related Links
    Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
    340 Dirksen Senate Office Building
    Washington, D.C. 20510