http://www.boston.com/news/local/rhode_island/articles/2007/01/04/providence
_added_to_fed_anti_terror_grant_program/ 

 

Providence added to fed anti-terror grant program

By Devlin Barrett, Associated Press Writer  |  January 4, 2007

WASHINGTON --Four U.S. cities, including Providence, will get a fresh
infusion of federal anti-terror grant money, and four others will be cut off
from such grants, under a new government list of urban areas considered at
serious risk of attacks and eligible to share $747 million.

The list obtained Thursday by The Associated Press shows the other newly
eligible cities are El Paso, Texas; Norfolk, Va.; and Tucson, Ariz.

The cities that were cut from the list of 45 metropolitan areas are Toledo,
Ohio; Baton Rouge, La.; Louisville, Ky.; and Omaha, Neb.

The Homeland Security Department has come under intense scrutiny for its
decisions in the Urban Area Security Initiative, or UASI, which is the only
pool of federal money designed to go to localities based solely on their
risk of terror attacks.

Officials in New York and several other major cities were furious last year
when the agency announced major cuts to their funding while sending millions
of dollars to places like Omaha and Louisville, which are generally
considered to face less risk of terrorism.

The agency may officially announce the decision as early as Friday, though
the designations do not yet come with fixed dollar amounts. Those are
expected later this year, most likely in May, after the government has
reviewed the cities' grant applications.

Under the program, DHS awards money not just to an individual city, but to
the entire metropolitan area.

This year, DHS chose to lump together New York City and northern New Jersey
into a single area. Last year, the agency kept them separate, giving money
directly to Jersey City and Newark.

While the agency did cut four cities from the list, it spared several others
that were warned in 2006 that they might be cut off. Those spared cities
were Las Vegas, Nev., Buffalo, N.Y., Oklahoma City, Okla.; Tampa, Fla.; San
Diego, Calif.; Sacramento, Calif.; and Phoenix, Ariz.

The UASI list also does not include a smaller, separate pot of grant money
to protect urban infrastructure, like public transit systems. An
announcement on that money is expected next week.

The actual UASI payments vary widely from place to place, and even year to
year. In the 2005 budget year, for example, Los Angeles received $65
million, while Jacksonville, Fla. got $6.9 million.

Since the Sept. 11 attacks cities like New York and Washington have received
the lion's share of the UASI money, but city officials protested furiously
last May when funding for each was cut by 40 percent.

The program was launched after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and
has since been the focus of yearly wrangling between the Bush administration
and some in Congress who want a larger share of federal largesse to be
distributed based solely on risk.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said Thursday he was concerned New York might
be put at a disadvantage by having to split its share of funding with
northern New Jersey.

"This could spell trouble. If they give out one pot of money to two areas,
we cannot let that translate into fewer dollars," said Schumer.

The new Democratic majority in Congress, sworn in Thursday, has pledged to
revise grant spending to distribute billions of federal anti-terror grants
based on risk. The House is expected to take up such legislation next week
as part of a package based on the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission. 

 



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