In search of safe harbor



Similar documents
HOMELAND DEFENSE AND SECURITY GRADUATE EDUCATION

Regional Maritime Law Enforcement Training Center

Application of Technology to Create an Integrated, Multidisciplinary Approach to Safe and Secure Ports

Department of Homeland Security Information Sharing Strategy

Capacity building for Maritime Domain Awareness in East Africa

Unit 4: NIMS Communications and Information Management

Port of Long Beach 1249 Pier F Avenue Long Beach, CA (562)

Unit 4: NIMS Communications and Information Management

Hearing before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. Homeland Security and Intelligence: Next Steps in Evolving the Mission

GAO PORT RISK MANAGEMENT. Additional Federal Guidance Would Aid Ports in Disaster Planning and Recovery. Report to Congressional Committees

Homeland Security Education: The Current State. The Naval Postgraduate School, Center for Homeland Defense and Security

Business Continuity Roadmap -One Port s Approach. - Rich Baratta, ARM, ABCP Director, Risk Management Port of Long Beach

The Nationwide Automatic Identification System Newsletter Issue #1 3 rd Quarter FY 2007

GAO MARITIME SECURITY. Vessel Tracking Systems Provide Key Information, but the Need for Duplicate Data Should Be Reviewed

Relationship to National Response Plan Emergency Support Function (ESF)/Annex

Los Angeles Port Police Maritime Law Enforcement Training Center

Maritime Domain Management System

Cyber Security Research and Development: A Homeland Security Perspective

Statement of. Mike Sena. President, National Fusion Center Association. Director, Northern California Regional Intelligence Center (NCRIC)

United States Coast Guard Auxiliary Telecommunications Workshop. USCG Auxillary Communications 1

Cyber Incident Annex. Cooperating Agencies: Coordinating Agencies:

Missouri s Homeland Security Program Overview

Maritime Information Services of North America and Marine Exchange of Puget Sound at

FY07 Homeland Security Grants. Dallas City Council Public Safety Committee Briefing November 19, 2007

EXECUTIVE DIRECTIVE NO. 18

About the Port. Created as an act of state legislation Five member cities. Coronado. San Diego. Coronado. National City.

PORT SECURITY ADVANCE COPY. 26 Experts from OSD, USCG, DHS, Port Authorities, A Timely and Informative CONFERENCE on

DISASTER RECOVERY PLANNING FOR CITY COMPUTER FACILITIES

Implanting Large Security Systems in Seaports

STATE OF MARYLAND Strategy for Homeland Security

Rapid Response, Total Support. Homeland Security Solutions that Keep America Safe

The. Who, What, When, Where, of Port Security. A Resource Guide for Your Use Today and In the Future. by Thomas O Brien, Ph.D.

Commonwealth of Virginia Personal Identity Verification-Interoperable (PIV-I) First Responder Authentication Credential (FRAC) Program

DHS Department of Homeland Security

Gary, thank you for that kind introduction and for hosting this very important gathering.

RealityVision & The Port of Los Angeles Improving Security Responsiveness at the Nation s Busiest Cargo Port

COAST GUARD Observations on Progress Made and Challenges Faced in Developing and Implementing a Common Operational Picture

REPORT TO CONGRESS ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE FY 2003 INTEROPERABLE COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT GRANT PROGRAM

Performs the Federal coordination role for supporting the energy requirements associated with National Special Security Events.

Composite Enterprise Architecture: The Direction of FEMA s EA

OEMC Four Core Missions

April 15, Re: Docket Number USCG Dear Captain Tucci,

INSPECTOR GENERAL DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 4800 MARK CENTER DRIVE ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA

The Next Generation of Interoperability

U.S. Coast Guard Biometric Enabled Identity Program. Provide consistent and repeatable maritime safety and security throughout our nation.

Maryland Fire Chiefs Statewide ALERT Network. The dictum by which the Maryland Fire Chiefs Association functions.

Coordinated Operation Capability Using Scalable C2

Future Force and First Responders: Building Ties for Collaboration and Leveraged R&D

NAVAL SEA SYSTEMS COMMAND STRATEGIC BUSINESS PLAN

POS. Marine Terrorism Response (MTR) Project. AAPA Security and Safety Seminar July 27-29, 29, Rod Hilden Chief Security Officer PORT OF SEATTLE

Massachusetts Department of Fire Services Implementation Plan for State and Local Level National Incident Management Systems (NIMS)

Integrating the customer experience through unifying software - The Microsoft Vision

Cyber Incident Annex. Federal Coordinating Agencies. Coordinating Agencies. ITS-Information Technology Systems

Cornell University PREPAREDNESS PLAN

Panel Session: High Impact Workforce Initiatives Redefine the Government Information Security Workforce

A Tipping Point The Fight for our Nation s Cyber Security

INTEGRATED COMMUNICATION AND TRANSPORTATION EFFICIENCY SOME STUDY CASES 2. EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS: A VITAL NATIONAL RESOURCE

Navy Contributions to Identity Management

TESTIMONY OF ZOË BAIRD, PRESIDENT, MARKLE FOUNDATION CHAIRMAN, TASK FORCE ON NATIONAL SECURITY IN THE INFORMATION AGE

Statement of. Thomas A. Allegretti President & CEO The American Waterways Operators

BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AND TRANSPORTATION. Sheena Connolly Open Roads Consulting

Managing Cyber Risks to Transportation Systems. Mike Slawski Cyber Security Awareness & Outreach

Sustaining Regional Collaboration in Planning for Operations. in the Baltimore Region

State of the Art Observations: Maritime Information Systems

About the Port Authority

I-95 Corridor Coalition

2015 Michigan NASCIO Award Nomination. Cyber Security Initiatives: Michigan Cyber Disruption Response Strategy

To the Men and Women of the Coast Guard:

FY2010 CONFERENCE SUMMARY: HOMELAND SECURITY APPROPRIATIONS

PORT OF SAN FRANCISCO STRATEGIC PLAN. To increase the volume of cargo shipping. To efficiently manage and improve all Port property.

Seaborne Attack Impact at Transportation, Energy, and Communication Systems Convergence Points in Inland Waters

REMARKS BY HOMELAND SECURITY SECRETARY MICHAEL CHERTOFF TO THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF PORT AUTHORITIES. Press Release

Office of Homeland Security

Dept of Homeland Security Office for Domestic Preparedness

W H I T E P A P E R. Hub and Spoke Approach to Computer-Aided Dispatch

Liability Management Evolving Cyber and Physical Security Standards and the SAFETY Act

Maritime Domain Awareness: Mapping, Tracking, and Visualization

Preventing and Defending Against Cyber Attacks October 2011

Jacksonville Port Authority: Fire and Rescue Marine Fire Station #40, Jacksonville, Florida

Pacific Northwest Marine Domain Awareness Project

CNO: Good morning and thank you for being here. Today we are releasing the results of the investigation into the

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts State Homeland Security Strategy

a GAO GAO HOMELAND SECURITY Effective Regional Coordination Can Enhance Emergency Preparedness

NEXT-GENERATION HOMELAND SECURITY

Preventing and Defending Against Cyber Attacks June 2011

Julie Pullen, CSR Director Stevens Institute of Technology

Lesson 1: What Is the National Incident Management System (NIMS)? Summary of Lesson Content

Critical Infrastructure Security and Resilience

Final Exam for: IS-700.a: National Incident Management System (NIMS) An Introduction

Cyber Security Research and Development a Homeland Security Perspective

White Paper. Ten Points to Rationalize and Revitalize the United States Maritime Industry

Matthew M. Blizard. Page 1. Matthew M. Blizard

Modeling and Simulation (M&S) for Homeland Security

State of Ohio Homeland Security STRATEGIC PLAN

NIMS Study Guide. Lesson One: What Is the National Incident Management System (NIMS)? What is NIMS?

NATIONAL CENTER FOR MARITIME AND PORT SECURITY (NCMPS)

I-95 Corridor Coalition. Best Practices for Border Bridge Incident Management Executive Summary

H. R. ll IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES A BILL

For Official Use Only. Springfield-Greene County, Missouri Multi-Year Training and Exercise Plan (TEP) July 27, For Official Use Only

Preventing and Defending Against Cyber Attacks November 2010

Transcription:

Program Securing the nation s ports represents one of the most complicated undertakings in homeland because of the high volume of traffic and large number of parties involved. Timely, accurate data sharing is at the heart of the challenge. At the federal level, port falls under the government s maritime domain awareness () initiative. That effort seeks to create a common operating picture that federal, state and local agencies with maritime responsibilities can share. The and departments spearhead the interagency effort, which also involves the Transportation Department. Locally, ports have their own priorities. The job at this level also calls for the cooperation of multiple parties, including port employees, terminal operators, shipping companies and truckers. Most ports are near urban areas, so adjacent police, fire and emergency services agencies also come into play. Data sharing permeates at all levels. Relevant data must be collected from varied, put together in a meaningful way and made available to the appropriate parties. To make all that happen, it is necessary to identify key stakeholders and data, put cooperative agreements into place, and assemble the technical means for culling and distributing data., GAO says s Commerce versus This is very complex, said Zachary Tumin, executive director of the Leadership for a Networked World Program at Harvard University s John F. Kennedy School of Government. There are very different missions and very different organizations involved here. They all see part of the picture, but none of them see all of the picture. Anthony Cresswell, interim director of the Center for in Government, said efforts such as extend beyond technical considerations. It s not just about getting databases to communicate or establishing data standards, he said. That is important, but all the bits and pieces of the technology are embedded in a very complicated policy framework and business process. Federal agencies and local port authorities are making progress in maritime, but many challenges remain, including obtaining the cooperation of stakeholders, managing cross-boundary efforts and building incident response capabilities. 1 2 3 4 5 Next

Program A virtual information grid Maritime got increased attention after the 2001 terrorist attacks, but still greater emphasis came in 2004 with National Presidential Directive 41 and Presidential Directive 13. Those directives set policy guidelines for securing the seaboard and gave rise to the National Strategy for Maritime. The National Plan to Achieve Maritime Domain Awareness is one of eight plans that fall under the national. The plan describes a series of information-sharing priorities including creation of a virtual information grid extending across federal, state, local and international agencies. The plan was published in 2005. That same year, a community of interest (COI) began to form around the issue of sharing maritime data. The community first focused on automatic identification system (AIS) data. AIS lets ships communicate identity and location information, but such data exists in multiple locations, impeding a unified view. The Coast Guard, Navy and DOT all have AIS information., GAO says s Commerce versus Each has some data on their world, said Tumin, who wrote a 2007 case study. How do they bring together [data] to provide a shared set of facts about the world and a shared set of facts about the domain? Tumin s paper identified a number of data silos, including the Navy s Automatic Identification System Rapid Deployment Capability Shipboard program, the Coast Guard s emerging National Automatic Identificati on System, and Maritime Safety and Information System for U.S. Naval Forces Europe, run by DOT s Volpe Center. is not the core issue in encouraging various parties to share, said Bruce Brown, special assistant to DOD s deputy chief information officer. Ninety percent of the problem is cultural, he said. To bridge the cultural and data divide, the parties embraced the COI methodology. In the DOD context, a COI pursues a particular data-sharing problem and focuses on producing results quickly. Let s start small and move quickly and get some quick wins, Tumin said, describing the COI approach. That s very effective in cross-boundary environments.

Program The COI got under way with the Navy and Coast Guard providing executive sponsorship. The focus then shifted to technology. The group chose service-oriented architecture as the technical underpinning for sharing AIS data. The goal was to share an infrastructure and Web services rather than linking data through one-off, point-to-point integrations. A company called Solers is using the Information Systems Agency s Net-Centric Enterprise Services, said Trey Rhiddlehoover, the company s director of Global Information Grid solutions. The Arlington, Va.-based company has a contract with the Navy s Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center. DISA s Net-Centric Enterprise Services aims to provide a SOA-based mechanism for data sharing. The ability to publish data through a shared infrastructure helped the COI keep costs in check and accelerate results. We re doing it rapidly and economically, Brown said, adding that the effort cost less than $1 million. The AIS task, known as Spiral 1 in COI circles, was completed in 2006. Spiral 2, completed earlier this year, launched value-added services that took advantage of the data made available through Spiral 1. One such service data, GAO says s Commerce versus augmentation was created to add more information to the AIS data. That information doesn t necessarily include a ship s call sign, for instance, but the augmentation system is designed to tap authoritative for that kind of information, Rhiddlehoover said. Tumin said SOA and COI approaches worked well together. This was a perfect storm of a methodology to rapidly develop innovation and a technology that was supportive of it, he said. Portside activities As federal efforts advance, individual ports are also taking on and data-sharing issues. Since 9/11, ports have really made tremendous progress in improving their posture, said Ted Langhoff, director of the port and cargo practice at Unisys Federal Systems. He said prevention and detection measures have been the primary port pursuit during the past five years. Those measures cover everything from fences to radar and other more sophisticated systems. But now, ports are beginning to tackle incident response and recovery,

Program Response and recovery efforts require cross-organizational collaboration and data dissemination. Ports generally operate in large population centers, Langhoff said, so if a major event happens in a port, it s going to have an impact on the surrounding community and critical infrastructure. The focus [is] on really thinking through what kind of event could occur and how best to respond to it. Langhoff also cited emergency notification systems as a technology of interest to ports seeking to beef up incident response. When an event occurs, such systems can help get information to the individuals affected. But he said deployment in port settings can prove challenging because of the large number of stakeholders. Langhoff cited as examples truc rivers and terminal operators who work in the port community but aren t port employees. Port officials must find a way to enroll all the relevant parties in a system. Erin Phelps, director of the enterprise solutions practice at Ciber, said ports are interested in more system integration and response capabilities., GAO says s Commerce versus Ciber provided an interoperable communication system for Port Freeport, Texas, as part of the integrator s Harbor and System. The system lets the port coordinate with local police, fire departments and other first responders, Phelps said. Another element of emergency response is a so-called blue-force tracking system that let ports keep tabs on the location of and emergency response units. In February, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa announced that the city s port would receive $3.4 million in state homeland grants to build an electronic blue-force tracking system. According to the city, it will let command and dispatch centers see where police cars, boats and other equipment are located at all times. Global Positioning System units in a vehicle-mounted or handheld radio are usually used to report blue-force locations. Langhoff cited the potential to combine blue-force tracking data with Coast Guard AIS information. That fusion would enable a port to display the location of police and emergency units in addition to vessels in the port s vicinity. He said the combination of blue-force and AIS data is more than theoretical, but to our knowledge no one is actually doing this. Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next

Program Expanded sharing As ports work with immediately adjoining jurisdictions, they also look to collaborate and share data on a regional level. DHS is funding and encouraging regional solutions for information sharing, Phelps said. More and more regional consortiums are being established. She cited as an example the Port of New Orleans and four others that have banded together with various agencies in and around those ports. The Lower Mississippi River Port Wide Strategic Council was launched in 2006 to undertake joint projects. In addition, the Virginia Port Authority wants to establish a regional consortium in the Norfolk area, Phelps said. Another dimension of expanded data sharing involves cooperation between public- and private-sector entities. Candice Wright, in a 2007 thesis she prepared at the Naval Postgraduate School, identified the public/private linkage as lacking in port. One evident gap in the port collaborative fabric is the incorporation of private stakeholders as a partner in securing the homeland and critical infrastructure, particularly in the areas of prevention, response and recovery, she wrote., GAO says s Commerce versus Finally, maritime data sharing across all tiers of government remains a future prospect. Rhiddlehoover said COI is doing a good job of horizontal access across federal agencies but hasn t yet focused on including state agencies and port authorities. We want to work on that, he said. Previous 1 2 3 4 5