Pubdate: Mon, 07 Apr 2003
Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA)
Copyright: 2003 Richmond Newspapers Inc.
Contact:  http://www.timesdispatch.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/365
Author: MARILYN RAUBER, MEDIA GENERAL NEWS SERVICE

IS COAST GUARD SINKING?

In the past month, the Coast Guard gave mouth-to-snout resuscitation to a 
dog in Texas, airlifted a sick woman from Orlando, Fla., off a cruise ship, 
and detained two Iraqis on an oil tanker in the Delaware Bay.

In the Persian Gulf, the Coast Guard secured ports, escorted humanitarian 
aid to starving Iraqis, and captured a few fleeing Iraqi sailors who jumped 
ship.

Some members of Congress warn that the Coast Guard, whose main assignment 
these days is keeping America's 95,000 miles of coastline and waterways 
safe from terrorists, is in over its head.

The agency is so underfunded and underequipped that the nation's ports are 
vulnerable to a "catastrophic attack," said Sen. Ernest F. Hollings, D-S.C.

"Do we have more business than we have resources? Yes," the Coast Guard 
commandant, Adm. Thomas Collins, told a House panel last week. "We have 
challenges like never before to do all that America wants us to do."

Not only has the Coast Guard yet to arrest any terrorists on home turf - 
the two Iraqi sailors were allowed to leave with their Qatar-flagged tanker 
- - but a new report by the General Accounting Office said the war on 
terrorism is taking a toll on the war on drugs.

In the immediate aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks, the Coast Guard devoted 
91,000 "resource hours" - a measurement of equipment used on missions - to 
coastal security in the final three months of 2001. The number dropped to 
37,000 in the same period last year, but it was still much higher than the 
2,400 hours in the 1998 period.

Meanwhile, there was a 60 percent drop in the number of hours spent on drug 
interdiction in the final three months of last year compared with the same 
period in 1997, according to the GAO, Congress' investigative arm.

"Today, a majority of our tasking is on search and rescue and homeland 
security. We may not be focusing our efforts as much on those [other] 
missions," said Petty Officer Scott Carr, a Coast Guard spokesman at the 
Miami-based 7th District headquarters, which covers the Southeast coast and 
the Caribbean.

The Coast Guard received a $1 billion budget increase this year and has an 
active-duty force of 39,000, plus more than 4,000 called-up reservists. It 
insists it can do it all: Secure almost 400 ports, pick up illegal 
immigrants and illegal drugs, stop illegal fish catches, rescue boaters in 
distress.

On an average day, the Coast Guard reports, it saves 10 lives, answers 192 
distress calls, boards 144 vessels, catches 14 illegal immigrants and 
seizes 30 pounds of cocaine.

Since the nation was put on high "orange" alert March 17, the maritime 
force has increased its air and sea surveillance by 50 percent, conducting 
more than 3,000 patrols. Some units have started using bomb-sniffing dogs.

Recreational boaters along the East Coast this summer will find new 
restrictions on where they can go. Certain bridges and tunnels will be 
off-limits, and boaters will have to keep well away from cruise ships and 
naval vessels.

The Senate last week rejected a Hollings amendment to add $1 billion to 
President Bush's war supplemental spending bill to strengthen the Coast 
Guard and tighten port security. The vote was along party lines.

The White House said Bush's $75 billion supplemental budget already 
includes about $4 billion more for homeland security, including $2 billion 
for state and local measures. Bush also announced that starting this 
summer, the Coast Guard would receive the first of 700 new patrol boats.

Democrats say the extra money will permit the Coast Guard only to maintain 
current security levels.

The Coast Guard is behind schedule conducting basic port-by-port security 
assessments. Hollings claims these will not be completed until 2009 under 
the current pace of funding.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart