Structuring 21st century government for homeland defense
Report recommends new approaches to new problems
A report by Kennedy School of Government lecturer Elaine C. Kamarck, “Applying 21st Century Government to the Challenge of Homeland Security,” offers some specific recommendations: — Create a National Terrorism Intelligence Center within the FBI to fuse intelligence gathering capabilities of national security agencies with investigative resources of law enforcement — Increase protection at the borders with the establishment of a Border Patrol Agency — Provide market incentives for the development of vaccines or drug treatments that could be utilized in response to bio-terror attacks — Establish guidelines that allow for the use of “racial profiling” by law enforcement to isolate potential terrorist suspects; — Develop protocols allowing law enforcement access to data contained in the vast databases of the private sector to protect the nation from terrorists — Grant consular officials access to international crime and terrorist databases — Deputize state and local officials so they can arrest illegal aliens — Grant FEMA additional resources and allow it to act as the lead agency for preparing and coordinating federal, state, and local government response to terrorist events — Require all medium-to-large size American cities to develop an “all hazard” approach to emergencies The work was supported by a grant from The PricewaterhouseCoopers Endowment for the Business of Government.