[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 144 (Thursday, September 22, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Page S6035]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION AND MARITIME SECURITY ACT
Mr. BOOKER. Mr. President, yesterday I joined my colleagues Senators
Nelson, Thune, and Fischer in introducing the Surface Transportation
and Maritime Security Act. The security of our Nation's ports and rail
and surface transportation systems is critical to the daily lives of
Americans, as well as to the health of our national economy. I thank my
colleagues for joining together on this important legislation and hope
that it leads to improved safety for our country.
This legislation comes months after the tragic attack on the Brussels
metro and airport which killed 35 and injured over 300, and it comes
just days after explosives were detonated in New Jersey and New York,
threatening the lives of thousands. The sad reality is that attacks
like these occur, and we must do more to protect our citizens.
The fact is mass transit and rail systems are challenging to secure.
Meeting this challenge requires us to have a strategy in place that
recognizes the evolving threats to surface networks and puts sufficient
resources in place to match those risks. Currently, less than 2 percent
of the Transportation Security Administration's, TSA, budget and staff
are dedicated to protecting surface transportation networks. While the
Federal role has been to support and oversee State and local efforts to
secure transit and other surface networks, we need to ask ourselves
whether we are doing enough to protect passengers.
The Surface Transportation and Maritime Security Act requires the TSA
Administrator to implement risk-based security plans for surface
transportation in order to ensure resources are being driven to the
most high-risk places. The bill directs TSA to conduct careful analysis
to consider risks and provide mitigation strategies using information
from global terrorist attacks. Additionally, I thank my colleagues for
working with me to include language to the bill that will authorize
more bomb-sniffing canines to be utilized to deter threats in our
railroad networks and surface transportation. The bill also helps
improve the screening of maritime workers and includes further measures
to reform and improve port security. The bill includes several other
important provisions that will yield new data to help inform future
security needs. The bill is a product of compromise with my colleagues,
and we will also need to work with our appropriator colleagues to
ensure TSA has the resources to take these important security measures.
Again I thank my esteemed colleagues for partnering together on this
legislation.
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