CRIME FW: [Infragard_unsecured] Daily Report 08/13/02

From: George Heuston (GeorgeH@private)
Date: Wed Aug 14 2002 - 07:50:56 PDT

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    State will promote cybersecurity guidelines.  The State Department is
    endorsing the development of a "culture of security" as described in the
    Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's (OECD) new
    guidelines for protecting information systems. The OECD, an economic
    analysis agency in Paris, was founded after World War II to coordinate
    international development and is supported by the US, Western Europe,
    Australia, Canada, and Japan.  In recent years, however, the European Union,
    the Association of South East Asian Nations, and the G-7, a group of seven
    leading democratic economies, have overshadowed it.  The State Department
    said it will encourage businesses, the public, and governments to use the
    guidelines to bolster IT security.  It is currently developing outreach
    plans to promote the guidelines. (Government Computer News, 12 Aug)
    
    Government creates new Washington evacuation plan.  The federal government
    has created a new procedure for evacuating federal employees in Washington,
    DC in the case of terrorist attacks. The protocol, which took effect in May,
    tells who can decide to evacuate federal employees from agencies and how the
    government will communicate the decision to employees and to city and state
    agencies that would be affected by a mass exodus of civil servants from
    Washington. Under the new process, evacuation decisions will be made jointly
    by the heads of three agencies: Office of Personnel Management (OPM), the
    General Services Administration and the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
    Officials will then notify the White House, Office of Homeland Security,
    Secret Service, and a host of state and local agencies, including the mayor
    of the District of Columbia and the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit
    Authority, which runs the Metro subway system. Media outlets will also be
    tapped to broadcast evacuation announcements, a step that means officials
    will not have to personally contact every state and local agency that could
    be affected by an evacuation. Certain scenarios may require officials to
    inform agencies before alerting the media, according to Scott Hatch, OPM's
    director of communications.  Agency heads can still disregard closure
    announcements under the new protocol, although most followed OPM's lead when
    the agency released federal employees on 11 September. (Govexec.com, 9 Aug)
    
    Fearing theft, US plans to relocate nuclear fuel.  The US is moving toward
    shipping tons of bomb-grade plutonium and uranium out of a laboratory in New
    Mexico, according to Energy Department officials. Experts said it would be
    the first time the government has moved nuclear weapons fuel to reduce the
    risk of terrorists stealing it. The plutonium and uranium would be moved
    from an area near Los Alamos Nuclear Laboratory to the Nevada Test Site, 90
    miles outside of Las Vegas. The director of Los Alamos wrote on 28 June to a
    deputy administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration that
    the laboratory supported moving the material as "the best overall decision
    to meet the post-September 11th challenges for the long-term security of
    nuclear activities."  (New York Times, 12 Aug)
    
    Transportation Secretary Mineta announces $8.9 million in grants for South
    Carolina airports . Secretary of Transportation Norman Y. Mineta announced
    $8.9 million in federal grants for South Carolina airports on 11 August.
    These grants will help South Carolina airports maintain the highest levels
    of safety, security, and efficiency in the years ahead. Rep Lindsey Graham
    said "Transportation infrastructure is a very important consideration for
    businesses contemplating building a new plant or factory in our state.  If
    we want to continue being competitive in attracting new business, we've got
    to have efficient and secure transportation systems in place. These grants
    will help ensure the airports in our state are ready to meet the
    transportation needs of our communities and state in the years ahead."
    (Department of Transportation, 11 Aug)
    
    Pipeline safety: initiatives finally moving.  A Bush administration official
    responsible for pipeline safety enforcement acknowledged that the Office of
    Pipeline Safety's record is not good.  A study in 2001 by The Austin (Texas)
    American-Statesman found that the agency was understaffed and underfunded,
    and that oil and gas pipelines across the nation lose an average of at least
    6.7 million gallons daily. Congress is now beginning to take action to
    remedy the apparent weaknesses in pipeline-safety regulation.  Legislation
    has passed both the House and Senate that better protects the public and the
    environment from accidents related to unsafe oil and gas pipelines.  If
    signed into law, the result would mean more frequent inspections and stiffer
    penalties for those companies that don't pass. (PowerMarketers.com, 11 Aug)
    
    Water's flow from private hands.  Private companies may begin to take on
    operations at aging municipal water systems, as well as play new roles in
    storing, managing and transferring water, and sell water outright from farms
    to cities.  Farmers too may increasingly forgo crops and instead sell water
    to cities, and coastal cities may begin to invest in costly desalination
    plants to turn seawater into tap water, and recycled gray water will be
    employed to green lawns and agricultural lands. The Metropolitan Water
    District of Southern California, the largest wholesale water supplier in the
    nation, is engaged in an almost perpetual search for new sources of drinking
    water.  It has agreed to a preliminary deal that would use the aquifer
    beneath desert farms to store surplus water pumped from the Colorado River
    via a still-to-be-constructed $150 million, 35-mile pipeline.  The pipeline
    will be used during wet years and the water sold back to the district during
    dry ones. The company would also mine its own "native" water and sell it to
    the water district.  (Washington Post, 12 Aug)
    
    Tainted water puts New Jersey towns on alert.  The discovery in recent years
    of a new form of radium in underground water supplies is forcing towns
    throughout New Jersey to spend millions of dollars to remove the element
    from public drinking water. Throughout New Jersey public water suppliers are
    shutting down contaminated wells and drilling new ones; constructing
    radium-treatment plants; buying water from outside sources; and, in some
    cases, supplying customers with bottled water, as well as building removal
    systems.  Eric Evenson of the US Geological Survey said radium has been the
    focus of government studies throughout the country and that recent actions
    by New Jersey go a long way toward protecting the public health.
    (Philadelphia Inquirer, 11 Aug)
    
    California on heightened security alert after potential threat to Golden
    Gate Bridge .  On Sunday, 11 August, state and federal law enforcement
    agencies boosted security patrols on and around the Golden Gate Bridge after
    officials learned of a potential terrorist threat. The bridge was placed on
    a "super-heightened" state of alert. Specific details of the threat or the
    source of the threat are not available.  (Associated Press, 12 Aug)
    
    
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