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Home Front: WoT
DHS unveils massive, fast-track border project
2006-01-30
h/t Polipundit - published 1/26

The Homeland Security Department today took the wraps off its ambitious plan to quickly gain control of the U.S. northern and southern borders by hiring a systems integration contract team to carry out the Secure Border Initiative (SBI).

DHS plans to request proposals in March and award a contract by Sept. 30 to deploy new technology as part of a comprehensive overhaul of security between ports of entry along the land borders.

SBI.net replaces the AmericaÂ’s Shield Initiative (ASI), the Border PatrolÂ’s more limited and now canceled plan to modernize the sensor networks along the borders. The fiscal 2006 budget includes $31 million for ASI, but plans that DHS officials announced today at the SBI.net industry day strongly suggested that the new project would cost much more.

Homeland Security deputy secretary Michael P. Jackson told an audience of hundreds of vendor representatives and federal employees gathered at the Ronald Reagan Building in Washington that secretary Michael Chertoff has tagged SBI as “ one of most important public policy priorities.”

He added, “The America’s Shield Initiative is dead, but its [impetus] has been strengthened, refined and renewed.” Jackson emphasized that “our objective is to have a procurement completed by the end of this fiscal year.”

After Jackson expressed DHSÂ’ desire to field proven systems rather than experimental projects, and to do so in an innovative fashion, the attendees heard from a whoÂ’s who of SBI.net officials, including Deborah Spero, acting commissioner for Customs and Border Protection; Kevin Stevens, the acting program director for SBI in Customs and Border Protection; SBI program executive director Greg Giddens; and John Ely, SBI procurement executive.

An overarching theme of the industry day was expressed by Jackson as SBI being the nation’s first comprehensive attempt to gain control of the southern border, a region characterized by one speaker as chaotic. “We have never had a credible plan to enforce the southern border,” said Jackson, who noted that political conditions now are aligned to permit a thoroughgoing approach to border management.

Spero emphasized that DHS has “an extremely aggressive and ambitious implementation schedule.” After DHS issues its proposal request in March, officials plan to hold a preproposal conference the following month to respond to questions from industry.

DHS plans to launch a Web site for SBI.net and post a transcript of the industry day presentations there. Officials said the department would release details about the Web site on the fedbizopps.gov Web site Jan. 30.

Giddens, who joined the SBI.net project from a previous assignment in the Coast Guard, said, “This is a signature effort for the department.” He emphasized the need to take a systems approach to the SBI.net project, and said that it would include several aspects, such as ending the “catch and release” approach to illegal border crossers, deterring cross-border crimes, strengthening employer compliance programs, removing incarcerated aliens and bolstering interior enforcement.

Attendees watched a PowerPoint presentation that depicted crowds of illegal aliens storming urban border crossings, assembling in long lines of trucks carrying border crossers and trudging in long columns along rural trails. The presentation showed how the geography of the southern border funnels illegal human migration into three main routes. When the Border Patrol floods enforcement resources into one illegal crossing zone, the human traffic displaces—sometimes hundreds of miles—to easier crossing sites, according to the Border Patrol.

SBI.net will have to use existing federal infrastructure as well as Border Patrol staff and their various kinds of equipment already in use, officials said. Officials encouraged the gathered vendors to consider innovative but proven technologies, such as satellite communications, to weave together a comprehensive method of managing border issues.

Those issues include human bondage, banditry targeted at border crossers, safety of border crossers and Border Patrol agents, border intrusions by thousands of violent criminal aliens and environmental degradation, among other problems, officials said.

Because SBI itself wonÂ’t begin until fiscal 2007, its funding likely will form a key part of the administrationÂ’s pending budget proposal for the department. Even as former DHS secretary Tom Ridge told his team that the U.S. Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator System would be the program by which the public would judge the departmentÂ’s success, it appears possible that the ambitious SBI.net project could become secretary ChertoffÂ’s hallmark.

SBI.net will use program offices in three separate DHS directorates: CBP, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Citizenship and Immigration Services. The department will draw on the efforts of 11,000 Border Patrol personnel, as well as other DHS staff, to stem the tide of illegal crossings that led to 1.2 million arrests at the borders last year, according to statistics presented at the industry day.

Jackson said that DHS expects vendors to form teams and to involve small businesses in their SBI proposals and added that some teams have been forming already. The industry day attendees included not only representatives of vendors large and small but also brokers who sought to form alliances among vendors, at a price.
Posted by:lotp

#11  So, uh, what's in the security check?

I won't bother if you're gonna get all picky 'n shit. I'll, um, free-lance, heh.
Posted by: .com   2006-01-30 22:16  

#10  How about a good old fashioned "moat" that connects the Gulf of Mexico with the Pacific Ocean. If your in the water you are toast.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom   2006-01-30 22:13  

#9  After a security check and successful completion of duties, you get a Barrett and a 200 lb case of 50 cal ammo. BATF will be directed to take care of the necessary paperwork with your respective state to allow your possession and use of same.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2006-01-30 21:54  

#8  Do I get a .50 Cal exemption and a Barrett for compensation? If so, I'm all over it
Posted by: Frank G   2006-01-30 21:50  

#7  Here is the signup form 7734:

Name-----------Specialty Skill-----------
__________________________________________

__________________________________________

__________________________________________

__________________________________________
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2006-01-30 21:34  

#6  Sign me up AP. Just so long as I get a couple o' shiny new automatic weapons that is. ;)
Posted by: AzCat   2006-01-30 21:29  

#5  Deacon Blues will handle the *ahem* chemical engineering.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2006-01-30 21:28  

#4  Contract it out to the Rantburg Security Consortium:

*3dc will take care of the electronics
*Heaven knows that we have enough programmers
*Autobartender will take care of instrumentation
*Frank G and I will handle the civil engineering
Concepts and implimentation, plus training by Old Spook and Old Patriot

*We have a ton of more talent I have not even mentioned.

We are ready to work, and we won't charge ya much, either.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2006-01-30 21:27  

#3  Who says the local communities and states along the border need wait for the federal initiative? It seems to me that, given the clear endpoint when the Feds will take over the effort, locals can invest money and manpower to cover the gap until then -- for their own safety, as well as the security of the nation. In fact, I really think they should bill the Mexican government for the costs incurred... not that Sr. Fox will pay, but trumpeting a monthly billing would be rather embarrassing for him, as well as establishing baseline costs for Homeland Security.
Posted by: trailing wife   2006-01-30 21:25  

#2  If Israel had such a border bureaucracy, Israelis would be extinct.
Posted by: Darrell   2006-01-30 21:17  

#1  Feh. Too damn many Powerpoint presentations, too few grim, determined folk with machine guns and orders to shoot to kill.
Posted by: Dave D.   2006-01-30 21:09  

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