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Chertoff ♥s NY

Sec. Chertoff has an op-ed in the New York Times today headlined “New York, You’re Still No. 1″ that defends the Department of Homeland Security’s decisions on homeland security grants. In the column, he makes the same litany of points that he’s been making since last week:
timessquare.jpg

  • NYC is still #1 in funding;
  • Total funding was cut this year by Congress;
  • This isn’t really a cut, since it’s consistent with the three-year average for NYC;
  • UASI funds are really for investment, not operating expenses;
  • Helping other cities helps NYC;
  • The ‘NYC has no monuments’ line is somewhat misleading; and
  • We peer-reviewed the results with outside experts.

All these talking points are factually correct — but they’re also largely beside the point. I’ve expressed concern about the decisions that DHS made primarily based on three complaints: (1) material problems with data quality, (2) the need for subjectivity when you’re talking about NYC and DC, given the extent to which they are vastly more at risk than any other American cities; and (3) the way in which the DHS explanation for NYC belittles the world-class capabilities of the NYPD. As Brookings scholar Michael O’Hanlon noted in the WSJ over the weekend, “rather than blame New York for a purportedly poor grant application, as some DHS officials have done this week, we should be praising the city for progress in homeland security efforts to date — and asking other cities to emulate the Big Apple.“
Sec. Chertoff doesn’t really address these issues in his piece. I like Chertoff, and I know that he’s in a difficult spot on this issue, stuck between the wrath of the NY congressional delegation if he stands firm and charges of politicization and a negative reaction from other cities if he changes the allocation. Nevertheless, I think he needs to get out of PR mode and acknowledge that this decision did not live up to his own high standards for risk management, discuss the unique nature of NYC and DC in the nation’s risk profile, and listen to constructive criticism about how to improve the allocation process.
– Christian Beckner, cross-posted from Homeland Security Watch

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Margaret Hope June 7, 2006 at 10:30 am

Chertoff’s PR piece in today’s NY Times has this to say about Mount Rushmore: “while important symbolically [it] would have fewer human and economic consequences in case of an attack.” In truth, in a midwinter attack on Rushmore, there would be no human victims and God knows how little economic consequences. It is laughable to compare a big carved rock with the New York Stock Exchange building. The whole Republican Conservative administration has proven beyond doubt that they are as politically corrupt as the Communist party under Yeltsin and all other Communist presidents of the USSR.

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Erik Midtskogen June 7, 2006 at 1:24 pm

This latest episode is completely consistent with what we all know by now about the PNAC crowd that currently controls our Federal Government. On the topic of spending tax dollars on things that provide meaningful, concrete benefits to the lives of average Americans they are penny-pinchers to a fault. And yet, when the topic of discussion is the latest round of tax breaks for billionaires, suddenly we’re “on track” to reduce our record defecit, and defecits don’t matter anyway.
The only thing these people are consistent about is looking out for the interests of the vastly wealthy.

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