President Establishes Office of Homeland
Security Summary of the President's
Executive Order The Office of Homeland Security & the
Homeland Security Council
The Office of Homeland Security
- Mission
& Management
- National
Strategy
- Detection
- Preparedness
- Prevention
- Protection
- Response
and Recovery
- Incident
Management
- Continuity
of Government
- Public
Affairs
- Legal
Authorities, Legislative Proposals
- Budget
Review
- Administration
- The
Homeland Security Council
Mission & Management
The President will establish the Office of Homeland
Security that will be headed by the Assistant to the President for
Homeland Security -- Governor Tom Ridge.
The mission of the
Office will be to develop and coordinate the implementation of a
comprehensive national strategy to secure the United States from
terrorist threats or attacks. The Office will coordinate the
executive branch's efforts to detect, prepare for, prevent, protect
against, respond to, and recover from terrorist attacks within the
United States.
National
Strategy
The Office will work with executive departments
and agencies, state and local governments, and private entities to
ensure the adequacy of the national strategy for detecting,
preparing for, preventing, protecting against, responding to, and
recovering from terrorist threats or attacks within the United
States and will periodically review and coordinate revisions to that
strategy as necessary.
Detection
The Office will identify
priorities and coordinate efforts for collection and analysis of
information within the United States regarding threats of terrorism
against the United States and activities of terrorists or terrorist
groups within the United States. The Office will also identify, in
coordination with the Assistant to the President for National
Security Affairs, priorities for collection of intelligence
outside the United States regarding threats of terrorism within the
United States. The Office will work with federal, state, and local
agencies to:
- facilitate collection from state and local governments and
private entities of information pertaining to terrorist threats or
activities within the United States;
- coordinate and prioritize the requirements for foreign
intelligence relating to terrorism within the United States of
executive departments and agencies responsible for homeland
security, and provide these requirements and priorities to the
Director of Central
Intelligence and other agencies responsible for collection of
foreign intelligence;
- coordinate efforts to ensure that all executive departments
and agencies that have intelligence collection responsibilities
have sufficient technological capabilities and resources to
collect intelligence and data relating to terrorist activities or
possible terrorist acts within the United States, working with the
Assistant to the President for National
Security Affairs, as appropriate;
- coordinate development of monitoring protocols and equipment
for use in detecting the release of biological, chemical, and
radiological hazards; and
- ensure that, to the extent permitted by law, all appropriate
and necessary intelligence and law enforcement information
relating to homeland security is disseminated to and exchanged
among appropriate executive departments and agencies responsible
for homeland security and, where appropriate for reasons of
homeland security, promote exchange of such information with and
among state and local governments and private entities.
Preparedness
The Office
of Homeland Security will coordinate national efforts to prepare for
and mitigate the consequences of terrorist threats or attacks within
the United States. In performing this function, the Office will work
with federal, state, and local agencies, and private entities to:
- review and assess the adequacy of the portions of all federal
emergency response plans that pertain to terrorist threats or
attacks within the United States;
- coordinate domestic exercises and simulations designed to
assess and practice systems that would be called upon to respond
to a terrorist threat or attack within the United States and
coordinate programs and activities for training federal, state,
and local employees who would be called upon to respond to such a
threat or attack;
- coordinate national efforts to ensure public health
preparedness for a terrorist attack, including reviewing
vaccination policies and reviewing the adequacy of and, if
necessary, increasing vaccine and pharmaceutical stockpiles and
hospital capacity;
- coordinate federal assistance to state and local authorities
and non-governmental organizations to prepare for and respond to
terrorist threats or attacks within the United States;
- ensure that national preparedness programs and activities for
terrorist threats or attacks are developed and are regularly
evaluated under appropriate standards and that resources are
allocated to improving and sustaining preparedness based on such
evaluations; and
- ensure the readiness and coordinated deployment of federal
response teams to respond to terrorist threats or attacks, working
with the Assistant to the President for National
Security Affairs, when appropriate.
Prevention
The Office will
coordinate efforts to prevent terrorist attacks within the United
States. In performing this function, the Office shall work with
federal, state, and local agencies, and private entities to:
- facilitate the exchange of information among such agencies
relating to immigration and visa matters and shipments of cargo;
and, working with the Assistant to the President for National
Security Affairs, ensure coordination among such agencies to
prevent the entry of terrorists and terrorist materials and
supplies into the United States and facilitate removal of such
terrorists from the United States, when appropriate;
- coordinate efforts to investigate terrorist threats and
attacks within the United States; and
- coordinate efforts to improve the security of United States
borders, territorial waters, and airspace in order to prevent acts
of terrorism within the United States, working with the Assistant
to the President for National
Security Affairs, when appropriate.
Protection
The Office will
coordinate efforts to protect the United States and its critical
infrastructure from the consequences of terrorist attacks. In
performing this function, the Office shall work with federal, state,
and local agencies, and private entities to:
- strengthen measures for protecting energy production,
transmission, and distribution services and critical facilities;
other utilities; telecommunications; facilities that produce, use,
store, or dispose of nuclear material; and other critical
infrastructure services and critical facilities within the United
States from terrorist attack;
- coordinate efforts to protect critical public and privately
owned information systems within the United States from terrorist
attack;
- develop criteria for reviewing whether appropriate security
measures are in place at major public and privately owned
facilities within the United States;
- coordinate domestic efforts to ensure that special events
determined by appropriate senior officials to have national
significance are protected from terrorist attack;
- coordinate efforts to protect transportation systems within
the United States, including railways, highways, shipping, ports
and waterways, and airports and civilian aircraft, from terrorist
attack;
- coordinate efforts to protect United States livestock,
agriculture, and systems for the provision of water and food for
human use and consumption from terrorist attack; and
- coordinate efforts to prevent unauthorized access to,
development of, and unlawful importation into the United States
of, chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, explosive, or
other related materials that have the potential to be used in
terrorist attacks.
Response and Recovery
The Office will coordinate efforts to respond to and
promote recovery from terrorist threats or attacks within the United
States. In performing this function, the Office shall work with
federal, state, and local agencies, and private entities to:
- coordinate efforts to ensure rapid restoration of
transportation systems, energy production, transmission, and
distribution systems; telecommunications; other utilities; and
other critical infrastructure facilities after disruption by a
terrorist threat or attack;
- coordinate efforts to ensure rapid restoration of public and
private critical information systems after disruption by a
terrorist threat or attack;
- work with the National Economic
Council to coordinate efforts to stabilize United States
financial markets after a terrorist threat or attack and manage
the immediate economic and financial consequences of the incident;
- coordinate federal plans and programs to provide medical,
financial, and other assistance to victims of terrorist attacks
and their families; and
- coordinate containment and removal of biological, chemical,
radiological, explosive, or other hazardous materials in the event
of a terrorist threat or attack involving such hazards and
coordinate efforts to mitigate the effects of such an attack.
Incident Management
The
Assistant to the President for Homeland Security will be the
individual primarily responsible for coordinating the domestic
response efforts of all departments and agencies in the event of an
imminent terrorist threat and during and in the immediate aftermath
of a terrorist attack within the United States and shall be the
principal point of contact for and to the President with respect to
coordination of such efforts. The Assistant to the President for
Homeland Security will coordinate with the Assistant to the
President for National
Security Affairs, as appropriate.
Continuity of Government
The
Assistant to the President for Homeland Security, in coordination
with the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs,
will review plans and preparations for ensuring the continuity of
the Federal Government in the event of a terrorist attack that
threatens the safety and security of the United States Government or
its leadership.
Public Affairs
The Office, subject to the direction of the White House
Office of Communications, shall coordinate the strategy of the
executive branch for communicating with the public in the event of a
terrorist threat or attack within the United States. The Office also
will coordinate the development of programs for educating the public
about the nature of terrorist threats and appropriate precautions
and responses.
Review of Legal
Authorities and Development of Legislative Proposals
The
Office will coordinate a periodic review and assessment of the legal
authorities available to executive departments and agencies to
permit them to perform the functions described in this order. When
the Office determines that such legal authorities are inadequate,
the Office will develop, in consultation with executive departments
and agencies, proposals for presidential action and legislative
proposals for submission to the Office of Management and
Budget to enhance the ability of executive departments and
agencies to perform those functions. The Office will work with state
and local governments in assessing the adequacy of their legal
authorities to permit them to detect, prepare for, prevent, protect
against, and recover from terrorist threats and attacks.
Budget Review
The Assistant to
the President for Homeland Security, in consultation with the
Director of the Office of
Management and Budget and the heads of executive departments and
agencies, will identify programs that contribute to the
Administration's strategy for homeland security and, in the
development of the President's annual budget submission, shall
review and provide advice to the heads of departments and agencies
for such programs. The Assistant to the President for Homeland
Security will provide advice to the Director on the level and use of
funding in departments and agencies for homeland security-related
activities and, prior to the Director's forwarding of the proposed
annual budget submission to the President for transmittal to
Congress, will certify to the Director the funding levels that the
Assistant to the President for Homeland Security believes are
necessary and appropriate for the homeland security-related
activities of the executive branch.
Administration
The Office of
Homeland Security will be directed by the Assistant to the President
for Homeland Security. The Office of Administration
within the Executive Office of the President shall provide the
Office of Homeland Security with such personnel, funding, and
administrative support, to the extent permitted by law and subject
to the availability of appropriations, as directed by the Chief of
Staff to carry out the provisions of this order.
Heads of
executive departments and agencies are authorized, to the extent
permitted by law, to detail or assign personnel of such departments
and agencies to the Office of Homeland Security upon request of the
Assistant to the President for Homeland Security, subject to the
approval of the Chief of Staff.
The
Homeland Security Council
The President's
Executive Order establishes a Homeland Security Council which
will be responsible for advising and assisting the President with
respect to all aspects of homeland security. The Council will serve
as the mechanism for ensuring coordination of homeland
security-related activities of executive departments and agencies
and effective development and implementation of homeland security
policies.
The Council will have as its members the
President, the Vice President, the Secretary of the Treasury,
the Secretary of Defense,
the Attorney
General, the Secretary of Health
and Human Services, the Secretary of Transportation,
the Director of the Federal
Emergency Management Agency, the Director of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, the Director of Central
Intelligence, the Assistant to the President for Homeland
Security, and such other officers of the executive branch as the
President may from time to time designate. The Chief of Staff, the
Chief of Staff to the Vice President, the Assistant to the President
for National
Security Affairs, the Counsel to the President, and the Director
of the Office of Management
and Budget also are invited to attend any Council meeting. The
Secretary of State,
the Secretary of Agriculture,
the Secretary of the Interior,
the Secretary of Energy,
the Secretary of Labor,
the Secretary of Commerce,
the Secretary of Veterans
Affairs, the Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency, the Assistant to the President for Economic
Policy, and the Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy shall
be invited to attend meetings pertaining to their responsibilities.
The heads of other executive departments and agencies and other
senior officials shall be invited to attend Council meetings when
appropriate.
The Council will meet at the President's
direction. When the President is absent from a meeting of the
Council, at the President's direction the Vice President may
preside. The Assistant to the President for Homeland Security will
be responsible, at the President's direction, for determining the
agenda, ensuring that necessary papers are prepared, and recording
Council actions and Presidential decisions.
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