2 October 1998
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Excerpts from HR105-736.
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[DOCID: f:hr736.105]From the House Reports Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov] 105th Congress Report HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 2d Session 105-736 _______________________________________________________________________ STROM THURMOND NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 1999 ---------- CONFERENCE REPORT to accompany H.R. 3616 September 22, 1998.--Ordered to be printed [Snip] TITLE XIV--DOMESTIC PREPAREDNESS FOR DEFENSE AGAINST WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION Sec. 1401. Short title. Sec. 1402. Domestic preparedness for response to threats of terrorist use of weapons of mass destruction. Sec. 1403. Report on domestic emergency preparedness. Sec. 1404. Threat and risk assessments. Sec. 1405. Advisory panel to assess domestic response capabilities for terrorism involving weapons of mass destruction. SEC. 1401. SHORT TITLE. This title may be cited as the ``Defense Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Act of 1998''. SEC. 1402. DOMESTIC PREPAREDNESS FOR RESPONSE TO THREATS OF TERRORIST USE OF WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION. (a) Enhanced Response Capability.--In light of the continuing potential for terrorist use of weapons of mass destruction against the United States and the need to develop a more fully coordinated response to that threat on the part of Federal, State, and local agencies, the President shall act to increase the effectiveness at the Federal, State, and local level of the domestic emergency preparedness program for response to terrorist incidents involving weapons of mass destruction by utilizing the President's existing authorities to develop an integrated program that builds upon the program established under the Defense Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Act of 1996 (title XIV of Public Law 104-201; 110 Stat. 2714; 50 U.S.C. 2301 et seq.). (b) Report.--Not later than January 31, 1999, the President shall submit to Congress a report containing information on the actions taken at the Federal, State, and local level to develop an integrated program to prevent and respond to terrorist incidents involving weapons of mass destruction. SEC. 1403. REPORT ON DOMESTIC EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS. Section 1051 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1998 (Public Law 105-85; 111 Stat. 1889; 31U.S.C. 1113 note) is amended by adding at the end the following new subsection: ``(c) Annex on Domestic Emergency Preparedness Program.--As part of the annual report submitted to Congress under subsection (b), the President shall include an annex which provides the following information on the domestic emergency preparedness program for response to terrorist incidents involving weapons of mass destruction (as established under section 1402 of the Defense Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Act of 1998): ``(1) Information on program responsibilities for each participating Federal department, agency, and bureau. ``(2) A summary of program activities performed during the preceding fiscal year for each participating Federal department, agency, and bureau. ``(3) A summary of program obligations and expenditures during the preceding fiscal year for each participating Federal department, agency, and bureau. ``(4) A summary of the program plan and budget for the current fiscal year for each participating Federal department, agency, and bureau. ``(5) The program budget request for the following fiscal year for each participating Federal department, agency, and bureau. ``(6) Recommendations for improving Federal, State, and local domestic emergency preparedness to respond to incidents involving weapons of mass destruction that have been made by the advisory panel to assess the capabilities of domestic response to terrorism involving weapons of mass destruction (as established under section 1405 of the Defense Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Act of 1998), and actions taken as a result of such recommendations. ``(7) Additional program measures and legislative authority for which congressional action may be required.''. SEC. 1404. THREAT AND RISK ASSESSMENTS. (a) Requirement To Develop Methodologies.-- The Attorney General, in consultation with the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and representatives of appropriate Federal, State, and local agencies, shall develop and test methodologies for assessing the threat and risk of terrorist employment of weapons of mass destruction against cities and other local areas. The results of the tests may be used to determine the training and equipment requirements under the program developed under section 1402. The methodologies required by this subsection shall be developed using cities or local areas selected by the Attorney General, acting in consultation with the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and appropriate representatives of Federal, State, and local agencies. (b) Required Completion Date.--The requirements in subsection (a) shall be completed not later than one year after the date of the enactment of this Act. SEC. 1405. ADVISORY PANEL TO ASSESS DOMESTIC RESPONSE CAPABILITIES FOR TERRORISM INVOLVING WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION. (a) Requirement for Panel.--The Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Attorney General, the Secretary of Energy, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, and the Director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, shall enter into a contract with a federally funded research and development center to establish a panel to assess the capabilities for domestic response to terrorism involving weapons of mass destruction. (b) Composition of Panel; Selection.--(1) The panel shall be composed of members who shall be private citizens of the United States with knowledge and expertise in emergency response matters. (2) Members of the panel shall be selected by the federally funded research and development center in accordance with the terms of the contract established pursuant to subsection (a). (c) Procedures For Panel.--The federally funded research and development center shall be responsible for establishingappropriate procedures for the panel, including procedures for selection of a panel chairman. (d) Duties of Panel.-- The panel shall-- (1) assess Federal agency efforts to enhance domestic preparedness for incidents involving weapons of mass destruction; (2) assess the progress of Federal training programs for local emergency responses to incidents involving weapons of mass destruction; (3) assess deficiencies in programs for response to incidents involving weapons of mass destruction, including a review of unfunded communications, equipment, and planning requirements, and the needs of maritime regions; (4) recommend strategies for ensuring effective coordination with respect to Federal agency weapons of mass destruction response efforts, and for ensuring fully effective local response capabilities for weapons of mass destruction incidents; and (5) assess the appropriate roles of State and local government in funding effective local response capabilities. (e) Deadline to Enter Into Contract.--The Secretary of Defense shall enter into the contract required under subsection (a) not later than 60 days after the date of the enactment of this Act. (f) Deadline for Selection of Panel Members.--Selection of panel members shall be made not later than 30 days after the date on which the Secretary enters into the contract required by subsection (a). (g) Initial Meeting of the Panel.-- The panel shall conduct its first meeting not later than 30 days after the date that all the selections to the panel have been made. (h) Reports.--(1) Not later than 6 months after the date of the first meeting of the panel, the panel shall submit to the President and to Congress an initial report setting forth its findings, conclusions, and recommendations for improving Federal, State, and local domestic emergency preparedness to respond to incidents involving weapons of mass destruction. (2) Not later than December 15 of each year, beginning in 1999 and ending in 2001, the panel shall submit to the President and to the Congress a report setting forth its findings, conclusions, and recommendations for improving Federal, State, and local domestic emergency preparedness to respond to incidents involving weapons of mass destruction. (i) Cooperation of Other Agencies.--(1) The panel may secure directly from the Department of Defense, the Department of Energy, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Justice, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or any other Federal department or agency information that the panel considers necessary for the panel to carry out its duties. (2) The Attorney General, the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of Energy, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and any other official of the United States shall provide the panel with full and timely cooperation in carrying out its duties under this section. (j) Funding.--The Secretary of Defense shall provide the funds necessary for the panel to carry out its duties from the funds available to the Department of Defense for weapons of mass destruction preparedness initiatives. (k) Compensation of Panel Members.--(1) Members of the panel shall serve without pay by reason of their work on the panel. (2) Members of the panel shall be allowed travel expenses, including per diem in lieu of subsistence, at rates authorized for employees of agencies under subchapter 57 of title 5, United States Code, while away from their homes or regular place of business in performance of services for the panel. (l) Termination of the Panel.--The panel shall terminate three years after the date of the appointment of the member selected as chairman of the panel. (m) Definition.--In this section, the term ``weapon of mass destruction'' has the meaning given that term in section 1403(1) of the Defense Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Act of 1996 (50 U.S.C. 2302(1)). [Snip] Domestic emergency response program The budget request included $246.2 million for key Department of Defense programs to counter paramilitary and terrorist threats involving weapons of mass destruction, including $99.1 million for the domestic emergency response preparedness program as follows: $49.9 million for the Department of Defense to prepare and enhance Federal, state and local response capabilities to terrorist incidents involving weapons of mass destruction (WMD), and $49.2 million for the Department of the Army for the Reserve Components' participation in domestic emergency preparedness and response to the terrorist use of weapons of mass destruction. The House bill would authorize a decrease of $28.5 million for the Reserve Components' participation in WMD domestic preparedness, including $14.6 million for military personnel, $7.0 million for operation and maintenance, and $6.9 million for the procurement of contamination avoidance equipment. The Senate amendment would authorize the budget request for domestic emergency preparedness for the Department of Defense and the Department of the Army. In addition, the Senate would recommend the transfer of the mission, function and resources for the Defense domestic emergency preparedness program to the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA). The conferees agree to authorize the budget request for countering paramilitary and terrorist WMD threats and for the DOD andthe Department of the Army for the WMD domestic emergency response program. Authorization of Reserve Components' participation in WMD domestic emergency preparedness and response is discussed in Title V of this report. Additionally, specific adjustments to program elements for countering paramilitary and terrorist WMD threats are discussed elsewhere in the report on the individual projects which are included in the program. The conferees are aware that a National Coordinator has been appointed by the President, pursuant to the direction contained in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1997 (Public Law 104-201), whose responsibilities shall include operational oversight of the Federal government's security and counterterrorism efforts, to include domestic emergency preparedness and response to the terrorist use of WMD. The conferees have included a provision in Title XIV of this report that would require the President to increase the effectiveness of the domestic emergency preparedness program and to submit a report to Congress by January 31, 1999 outlining the actions taken to increase the effectiveness of the program. In addition, the conferees direct that the report submitted by the President on January 31, 1999 include information on the efforts to meet the challenge of limiting the damage and manage the consequences of the terrorist use of WMD, as outlined in Presidential Decision Directive (PDD) 62. The conferees understand that the intent of PDD 62 is to create a new and more systematic approach to fighting the threat of the terrorist use of WMD. The report should outline the role and obligations of the National Coordinator in overseeing the relevant policies and programs in the U.S. Government, the responsibility of the National Coordinator to the Congress, implementation of recommendations on budgets for counter- terrorism programs and the coordination and development of guidelines necessary for crisis management. The conferees request that the President's report identify requirements for any additional fiscal year 1999 funds that may be required to implement actions taken to increase the effectiveness of the domestic emergency response program. The conferees endorse the direction contained in the Senate report (S. Rept. 105-189) requiring the Secretary of Defense to report to the congressional defense committees on the use of the DOD stockpile of vaccines, medical supplies and protective gear in a domestic WMD emergency, and the availability of vaccines, antiserums and antidotes in other Federal entities that could also be used. In addition, the President's report to Congress should discuss the advisability of establishing regional stockpiles of both emergency protective gear and vaccines that could be available for emergency use by Federal, state and local responders in the event of a terrorist event using WMD. [Snip] Title XIV--Domestic Preparedness for Defense Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Legislative Provisions Adopted Defense against weapons of mass destruction (secs. 1401-1405) The Department of Defense forwarded with its fiscal year 1999 budget request a number of legislative provisions to expand the ability of the Department of Defense to respond to domestic terrorist activity and the potential use by terrorists of weapons of mass destruction on U.S. territory. The House bill contained a series of provisions (Title XIV) that would express the findings of Congress regarding the threat of terrorist use of weapons of mass destruction and the need to enhance domestic preparedness to respond to such incidents (sec. 1402), would direct the President to increase the effectiveness of the domestic emergency preparedness program and to report by January 31, 1999, the actions taken to develop an integrated program for such response (sec. 1411), would provide for an annual report on the program and recommendations for its improvement (sec. 1412); and would require the assessment of the threat and risk of terrorist employment of weapons of mass destruction against cities and other local areas (sec. 1413). The House bill would also establish an Advisory Commission to Assess Domestic Response Capabilities for Terrorism Involving Weapons of Mass Destruction to provide recommendations to the President and the Congress for improvements in Federal, State, and local domestic emergency preparedness (secs. 1421-1429). The Senate amendment contained no similar provisions. The conferees agree that there is a need to improve domestic emergency preparedness to respond to the threat of terrorist use of weapons of mass destruction in the United States. The conferees are also aware that nearly 40 Federal departments and agencies are involved in combating terrorism (including the Departments of Justice, Defense, Energy, Health and Human Services, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency), and are concerned that the efforts of the Federalgovernment to enhance domestic preparedness to respond to an incident involving weapons of mass destruction are hampered by incomplete interagency coordination and by the overlapping jurisdictions and missions of the various Federal departments and agencies. As a consequence, the conferees are concerned that state and local emergency response agencies are often presented with different and/or competing requirements and program priorities from the responsible Federal agencies. The conferees are also aware of the actions taken by the President in Presidential Decision Directive 62, pursuant to direction contained in section 1441 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1997 (Public Law 104-201), to establish the office of the National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection and Counter-Terrorism to oversee policies and programs in these areas. However, the conferees are not aware of specific actions that have been taken to insure an integrated, interagency program for improving domestic emergency response to the potential terrorist threat. The conferees are concerned that the Congress is not being kept adequately informed of the activities of the National Coordinator and the status of efforts undertaken to implement the responsibilities of the Office, pursuant to direction contained within section 1442 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1997. The conferees direct the National Coordinator to provide the congressional defense committees with a report by March 1, 1999 on the status of activities and efforts undertaken to coordinate policy and countermeasures against the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. The conferees agree to provisions that would require the President (sec. 1411) to increase the effectiveness of the domestic emergency preparedness program at the Federal, State, and local levels by establishing an integrated program built upon the program established under the Defense Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Act of 1996, and to submit a report to Congress by January 31, 1999 that outlines the actions taken in this regard. The conferees also agree to a provision (sec. 1412) that would amend the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1998 (Public Law 105-85) to include an annex to the report on oversight of counterterrorism and antiterrorism activities of the Federal government, submitted by the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, that would include information on the Federal government domestic emergency response program, and any recommendations for improving Federal, state and local domestic emergency response. Further, the conferees agree to a provision (sec. 1413) that would require the Attorney General, in consultation with the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and representatives of other Federal agencies and departments, and state and local agencies, to develop and test methodologies for assessing the threat and risk of terrorist employment of weapons of mass destruction against cities and local areas. Information from such assessments could be used to help determine the training and equipment requirements necessary for an effective domestic emergency response program. Finally, the conferees agree to a provision (sec. 1421) that would require the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Attorney General, the Secretary of Energy, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, and the Director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency to enter into a contract with a federally funded research and development center to establish a panel to assess the capabilities for domestic response to terrorism involving weapons of mass destruction and to report to the President and the Congress recommendations for improvements in Federal, state, and local domestic emergency preparedness for such response. The conferees emphasize the guidance in the provision that the membership of the panel be drawn from private citizens with knowledge and expertise in emergency response matters, and direct that the recommendations of the local emergency response community be sought in the selection of the members of the panel. Elsewhere in this Act, the conferees have included a provision (sec. 511) that would provide expanded authority for use of the Reserve Components to respond to domestic emergencies involving the use of weapons of mass destruction.