Pubdate: Mon, 08 Oct 2001 Source: The Post and Courier (SC) Copyright: 2001 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 INVEST IN THE COAST GUARD Coast Guard officials reacted with hurt pride to a recent audit report finding grave deficiencies in staffing, training, equipment and overall readiness in the search and rescue program. But the study, by the Transportation Department inspector general, comes at an opportune time for an agency that has suffered for years under tight budget constraints. The audit, pressure from the Senate, and the new national emphasis on homeland security should all play a role in transforming the Coast Guard. The Coast Guard budget now before Congress provides the service an opportunity to address serious weaknesses in all its programs. The Senate version provides nearly $600 million more for the agency than last year, in line with the audit's recommendation for greater investment in all phases of Coast Guard operations, from deepwater patrols to communications to boating safety and search and rescue. Inspector General Kenneth Mead of the Transportation Department recently testified that the Coast Guard's procurement budget, alone, must increase by at least $15 billion over the next 20 years in order to replace aging and ineffective systems ranging from deep water, high-endurance cutters to 41-foot boats to the National Distress System. Mr. Mead oversaw the new audit, which was requested by Congress following the fatal 1997 Morning Dew sailboat accident in Charleston Harbor. According to our Washington reporter Steve Piacente, the Coast Guard challenged some of the audit's findings as outdated, overly technical, not reflective of recent changes, and unduly alarmist. The service is famous for its "can do" attitude, as reflected in its motto, Semper Paratus - always ready. But it is no denigration of the Coast Guard to point out its crying need for new investment. The new audit "confirms the observations I've made in recent years," Sen. Ernest F. Hollings told our reporter. The South Carolina Democrat is chairman of the Commerce Committee, and a strong proponent of the need to strengthen both the Coast Guard and port security. In singling out the Coast Guard's maritime safety programs, including search and rescue, as in need of "substantial modernization," Sen. Hollings has put his finger on a major problem. In recent years the Coast Guard's leadership has placed great emphasis on the need to improve its deepwater operations. Important as these are to drug interdiction and monitoring ships entering U.S. waters, there is a real danger that they have overshadowed more mundane but also equally basic Coast Guard functions. The neglect of National Distress System modernization has been one result. As the National Transportation Safety Board pointed out after the Morning Dew tragedy, the Coast Guard cannot monitor all maritime frequencies or get reliable direction finding with the equipment it has available. So far the agency has resisted interim measures, pinning its hopes on a lengthy competitive process for getting the "right" new system. Funding constraints combine with this approach to keep pushing NDS modernization into the future. But this year Senate appropriators, at the request of Sen. Hollings, have agreed to warn the Coast Guard that NDS deserves top priority and a fast track, at the peril of reduced appropriations for deepwater modernization. The post-Sept. 11 focus in the administration and Congress on homeland security should also serve as a catalyst to highlight the budgetary and management shortcomings of the Coast Guard and meet the agency's critical needs. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh