[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 101 (Tuesday, June 23, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4542-S4543]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NEFFENGER CONFIRMATION
Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, yesterday I missed Senate rollcall vote No.
217, the nomination of Peter V. Neffenger, of Ohio, to be an Assistant
Secretary of Homeland Security, because of flight delay issues due to
weather. Had I been here, I would have voted in favor of this
nomination.
I support the Senate's confirmation last night of Coast Guard VADM
Peter V. Neffenger who was confirmed to be the next Administrator of
the Transportation Security Administration, TSA.
The TSA has been without Senate-confirmed leadership for too long.
John Pistole, the previous TSA Administrator, announced on October 16,
2014, that he would be resigning in December. Since the end of 2014,
the TSA Administrator position has been vacant. In January, I along
with Ranking Member Nelson, and Senators Ayotte, Cantwell, and Fischer,
called on President Obama to send us a qualified, experienced, and
dedicated individual to serve as TSA Administrator. Unfortunately,
President Obama did not nominate Admiral Neffenger until April 28,
2015, over 6 months after John Pistole informed the administration that
he would be leaving. I was disappointed at the length of time it took
for the President to send us a qualified nominee. Even the New York
Times editorial page, normally quite deferential to the President,
expressed the opinion that ``the Obama Administration has been
disturbingly slow to give the TSA strong leadership at the top.''
By comparison, the Senate has very rapidly moved the Neffenger
nomination, despite two separate committees being involved with his
formal vetting. Since the TSA was transferred to the Department of
Homeland Security, the Senate has abided by an understanding that TSA
Administrator nominees would be vetted by the Commerce Committee, which
has primary jurisdiction over TSA, and also by the Homeland Security
and Governmental Affairs Committee, which oversees the Department of
Homeland Security where TSA is organizationally housed. Some could
[[Page S4543]]
say that this protocol could lend itself to unnecessary delay. However,
Admiral Neffenger received three votes in less than 3 weeks, first by
the Commerce Committee on June 4, 2015, the second one on June 15,
2015, by the Homeland Security Committee, and last night when he was
confirmed by a vote of 81 to 1. So the Senate has moved swiftly to
confirm this important nomination, in comparison to the time the Obama
administration has taken to send the Senate a qualified nominee.
While I am disappointed at the length of time it took for the
President to send the Senate a qualified nominee, I applaud the
President's selection of Admiral Neffenger to be the next TSA
Administrator. Admiral Neffenger has served ably and well for 34 years
in the U.S. Coast Guard, rising through the ranks to become the Vice
Commandant when the Senate confirmed him last year for that
distinguished position.
During an assignment to Mobile, AL, he helped to lead the multi-
agency response to the 1993 Amtrak Sunset Limited train derailment into
a remote waterway in the Mobile River Delta, which killed 47 people.
Admiral Neffenger also has substantial experience serving right here in
the Senate, having been a Coast Guard fellow and detailee for 3 years
at the Senate Appropriations Committee.
Admiral Neffenger also served as Deputy National Incident Commander
for the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. In that role, Admiral Neffenger
coordinated and led over 50,000 people from Federal, State, and local
agencies, tribal representatives, non-governmental organizations, and
the private sector throughout five Gulf Coast States in the clean-up
and response effort. Clearly, Admiral Neffenger has the requisite
background and experience to lead reforms at the TSA.
Admiral Neffenger has proven himself as a leader, and the TSA is an
agency in dire need of strong, capable leadership. In May, the
Department of Homeland Security's Inspector General testified in the
House of Representatives that, ``[u]nfortunately, although nearly 14
years have passed since TSA's inception, we remain deeply concerned
about its ability to execute its important mission.'' Then, earlier
this month, news broke that undercover investigators from the Inspector
General's office had penetrated TSA security checkpoints while carrying
illegal weapons or simulated bombs on 67 of 70 attempts. In other
words, TSA failed 95 percent of the time to prevent illegal weapons or
simulated bombs from being smuggled through TSA security checkpoints.
This is unacceptable, and it is clear that the Inspector General is
right to be concerned about TSA's ability to execute its important
mission in a rapidly changing threat environment.
TSA has also experienced a number of other troubling failures about
which I have written to the agency. I have been concerned about the
TSA's oversight of Secure Identification Display Area, SIDA, badges at
the Nation's airports. In December 2014, it was revealed that a Delta
ramp agent in Atlanta allegedly used his SIDA badge to bypass TSA
security and facilitate an interstate gun smuggling operation via
commercial aircraft. TSA's response to my letter of inquiry about its
oversight of SIDA badges stated that TSA does not issue or manage SIDA
badges and that this responsibility falls to airport operators--which
raised even more concerns about TSA's awareness about lost SIDA badges
at our Nation's airports.
Another issue I have raised with TSA relates to the potential
security gaps in its PreCheck initiative raised in reports by the
inspector general. On January 28, 2015, the inspector general released
an unclassified summary of a classified report concluding that PreCheck
is a positive step towards risk-based security screening as a concept,
but that TSA needs to modify its PreCheck vetting and screening
processes and improve its PreCheck communication and coordination. The
Department of Homeland Security Office of the Inspector General report
also stated that, ``TSA did not concur with all recommendations and all
recommendations remain open.''
In response to the conclusions and recommendations, I wrote to TSA
along with Ranking Member Nelson on March 25, 2015, asking a series of
questions about potential security gaps in TSA PreCheck. TSA responded
to this letter on April 14, 2015, but the issue of potential security
gaps in PreCheck and other expedited screening initiatives must still
be addressed as TSA seeks to continue these initiatives, let alone
expand them.
Admiral Neffenger's proven leadership throughout the course of his
service in the U.S. Coast Guard will undoubtedly afford valuable
perspective in his role as TSA Administrator. Admiral Neffenger
understands the need for TSA to continuously evolve to meet the
challenges presented by an ever-changing threat environment. Obviously,
the TSA is an agency that needs a strong leader who will bring cultural
change to the agency. I am hopeful that Admiral Neffenger can be a
leader who can fundamentally reform the TSA. He has a heavy burden, but
I believe he is capable of shouldering that burden and I pledge to work
with him and my colleagues here in the Senate to see that those changes
occur.
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