LARGO, Md. - Baltimore Mayor Martin O'Malley said Wednesday that
if he is elected governor he will consolidate state homeland
security agencies in one Prince George's County office as a
first step in curing what he calls lack of "leadership and
vision" in the department.
"The frustrating thing for citizens is we talk about homeland
security, but we don't act on it," he said. "It's not rocket
science."
O'Malley's plan would bring into a single office a slew of
agencies that are now scattered around the state - from
the Maryland Emergency Management Agency in Reisterstown, to the
Governor's Office of Crime Control and Prevention in Baltimore,
to the homeland security business incubator in Annapolis.
"We need to consolidate these offices, locate them centrally
in Prince George's County and make real strides to improve
homeland security," said O'Malley, a Democrat.
Henry P. Fawell, a spokesman for Republican Gov. Robert L.
Ehrlich, said that he had no official response to the mayor's
remarks, but suggested it is still too early for O'Malley to be
making such comments.
"He is the mayor of Baltimore, and he should focus on cleaning
up his failing education system and murder rates before he
lectures other counties on public safety," Fawell said.
Lt. Gov Michael S. Steele was in the audience during
O'Malley's remarks at the Greater Prince George's Business
Roundtable luncheon but was not asked for a rebuttal, nor did he
offer one. Steele addressed the group before O'Malley spoke.
Domestic security has reemerged a hot issue recently, both
nationally and in Maryland, as both Republicans and Democrats
have attacked the proposed sale of port operations in six states
to a company controlled by the United Arab Emirates.
Ehrlich, a Republican, has expressed concern over the
prospect of a government-owned company gaining control of the
Seagirt Marine Terminal in the Port of Baltimore.
O'Malley, co-chair of the United States Conference of Mayors
Homeland Security Task Force, has become a national figure on
the issue by repeatedly lambasting President Bush on homeland
security issues and, most recently, the port deal.
He reiterated his stance Wednesday, saying he was "dead-set
opposed to turning (the port's operations) over to a foreign
government." He floated the ideas of using National Guard troops
to assist in the port's security operations and enacting a
clause in the contract to end the state's relationship with the
current stevedore company, Peninsular & Oriental Steam
Navigation Co.
The consolidation of the state agencies would benefit
homeland security operations in Maryland, O'Malley said, by
fostering better communication and taking advantage of all the
federal homeland security money available.
The Washington Post reported that between 2002 and 2004, the
Washington area did not spend $120 million of the $145 million
available in federal grants. That 17 percent spending rate was
the lowest in the nation.
"We're in the nation's capital and we were already subjected
to terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, but we're still dead last in
using federal homeland security dollars," O'Malley said. "We
can't afford to leave money on the table, we're too vulnerable."
Federal funds could go towards installing a closed circuit
television network at metro stations and in neighborhoods to
help local police forces curb drug activity and other crime. It
would similar to the one used in London to identify the subway
bombers of July 7, O'Malley said
Prince George's was chosen for the site for his proposed
homeland security office, O'Malley said, because it is between
the state's urban areas.
"A consolidated homeland security office in Prince George's
would create a needed link between Baltimore, Washington and
Annapolis," he said. "Prince George's is an untapped asset that
could grow if we located the office here."
O'Malley's running mate, Delegate Anthony G. Brown, D-Prince
George's, agreed that the county's economy could benefit greatly
from the move.
"There's a lot of potential in Prince George's
County, but a lot of it has gone overlooked," he said. "The
location is great, the planning is great, but where are we in
execution?"
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