PRESS RELEASE

NATIONAL ICON SECURITY FUNDING NOT TIED TO THREAT LEVEL

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Washington, DC — In a new report, the Government Accountability Office
validated many of the concerns raised by former U.S. Park Police Chief Teresa
Chambers for which she was ultimately fired one year ago. GAO found that the
security, resource and planning limitations that Chief Chambers addressed in
2003 have not improved, according to Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility
(PEER).

In the report, entitled “Actions Needed to Better Protect National Icons
and Federal Office Buildings from Terrorism” and issued earlier this week,
GAO found that –

  • National Park Service “law enforcement staff is already spread thin,”
    with officers having to leave “their permanent parks to supplement the
    icon park forces, leaving many other parks with a diminished protection;”
  • The Department of Interior, the parent agency for the Park Service, lacks
    a plan for linking threat level to requested funding, thus Interior remains
    incapable of prioritizing the security trade-offs that it must make; and
  • Interior lacks a transparent decision-making process that allows the public,
    Congress and other agencies, such as the Department of Homeland Security,
    to realistically assess its needs.

Firing Chief Chambers for her public comments certainly did not enhance Interior’s
decision-making transparency. Significantly, GAO found top agency officials
reflecting the same doubts expressed by former Chief Chambers about “whether
the department will have a sustained level of staff and funding resources for
security initiatives” and “about their ability to implement further
security enhancements that they believe are needed.”

“This latest GAO report is déjà vu all over again,”
stated PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch, noting that the U.S. Park Police has
fewer sworn officers that it did on September 11, 2001. “If Interior insists
on shooting the messengers, as it did with Chief Chambers, it will never hear
the message.”

While GAO noted that there had been improvements in Interior’s performance
since the September 11th attacks, those improvements were last chronicled in
2002 under Chief Chambers’ watch. Although GAO transmitted its recommendations
for improvement to Interior for their review, the report concludes that, “Interior
did not comment on [GAO’s] conclusions and recommendations.”

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Read the GAO
Report, “Actions Needed to Better Protect National Icons and Federal Office
Buildings from Terrorism”

Look
at developments in the case of U.S. Park Police Chief Teresa Chambers

and
www.honestchief.com

Phone: 202-265-7337

962 Wayne Avenue, Suite 610
Silver Spring, MD 20910-4453

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Environmental Responsibility

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