Coast Guard Response to NTAS
One reader sent me a copy of a Marine Safety Information Bulletin (MSIB) (I'm sorry I don't have a link for the document) published by the Captain of the Port for New Orleans on April 29th describing how MTSA covered facilities and vessels should adapt their approved security plans to the new NTAS pending specific changes to 33 CFR 101.
That MSIB provided the following policy guidance:
“1. MARSEC levels will continue to have the meaning defined by 33CFR101.105It also provides an abbreviated change procedure for approved security plans to reflect the change from the HSAS to NTAS system:
“2. All references to the HSAS in 33CFR101 are obsolete and will no longer be used.
“3. The three MARSEC levels will continue to be used as before, except as follows. If the Secretary of Homeland Security issues an NTAS alert, the Commandant will adjust the MARSEC level if appropriate based on commensurate risk, any maritime nexus, and/or CCG consultation with the Secretary of Homeland Security.”
“Pending future regulatory changes to 33CFR101, pen and ink changes in place of submission of a formal amendment per 33CFR104.415, 105.415, and 10.415 (sic) are authorized until the plan is next revised and submitted for review.”Flexible Response
It is nice to see a regulatory agency exercising this type of flexibility in response to changes in the regulatory environment. Of course, the Coast Guard is also a military organization and the military has always favored this kind of response to changing conditions, allowing local commanders to respond to changing situations while the bureaucratic processes catch up. This is why the MSIB comes from the Captain of the Port rather than the Commandant.
It is extremely unlikely that ISCD, under any Director, would ever provide that sort of command flexibility to their Regional commanders of the CFATS inspection force. It doesn’t have the long history, tradition and training that the Coast Guard has that provides the institution the ability to allow such responsiveness.
In the mean time, CFATS facilities are going to have to try to figure out what to do with their site security plans. Do they address the current RBPS 13 guidance on enhanced security with an adaptation for the NTAS similar to what I wrote in my RBPS 13 revision blog? Or do they take the risk that DHS and their chemical security inspectors will not accept references to the NTAS because it isn’t mentioned in the Guidance document?
I think that CFATS facilities can count on the intelligence of the inspectors to understand that security requires some measure of flexibility. If they can’t, we have bigger problems than can be solved by a document revision. Besides, DHS is required by Congress to allow individual facilities a certain measure of flexibility in determining what security measures are used to secure the facilities.