Homeland Security: First Responders' Ability to Detect and Model Hazardous Releases in Urban Areas Is Significantly Limited.GAO-08-180 June 27, 2008 First responders are responsible for responding to terrorist-related and accidental releases of CBRN CBRN Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear CBRN Caribbean Basin Radar Network materials in urban areas. Two primary tools for identifying agents released and their dispersion and effect are equipment to detect and identify CBRN agents in the environment and plume models to track the dispersion of airborne releases of these agents. GAO reports on the limitations of the CBRN detection equipment, its performance standards and capabilities testing, plume models available for tracking urban dispersion of CBRN materials, and information for determining how exposure to CBRN materials affects urban populations. To assess the limitations of CBRN detection equipment and urban plume modeling for first responders' use, GAO met with and obtained data from agency officials and first responders in three states. While the Department of Homeland Security Noun 1. Department of Homeland Security - the federal department that administers all matters relating to homeland security Homeland Security executive department - a federal department in the executive branch of the government of the United States (DHS DHS Department of Homeland Security (USA) DHS Department of Human Services DHS Department of Health Services DHS Demographic and Health Surveys DHS Dirhams (Morocco national currency) ) and other agencies have taken steps to improve homeland defense, local first responders still do not have tools to accurately identify right away what, when, where, and how much chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear (CBRN) materials are released in U.S. urban areas, accidentally or by terrorists. Equipment local first responders use to detect radiological and nuclear material cannot predict the dispersion of these materials in the atmosphere. No agency has the mission to develop, certify, and test equipment first responders can use for detecting radiological materials in the atmosphere. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. DHS, chemical detectors are marginally able to detect an immediately dangerous concentration of chemical warfare agents. Handheld detection devices for biological agents are not reliable or effective. DHS's BioWatch program monitors air samples for biothreat agents in selected U.S. cities but does not provide first responders with real-time detection capability. Under the BioWatch system, a threat agent is identified within several hours to more than 1 day after it is released, and how much material is released cannot be determined. DHS has adopted few standards for CBRN detection equipment and has no independent testing program to validate whether it can detect CBRN agents at the specific sensitivities manufacturers claim. DHS has a mission to develop, test, and certify first responders' CB detection equipment, but its testing and certification cover equipment DHS develops, not what first responders buy. Interagency studies show that federal agencies' models to track the atmospheric release of CBRN materials have major limitations in urban areas. DHS's national TOPOFF TOPOFF Top Officials (US national-level terrorism exercise) exercises have demonstrated first responders' confusion over competing plume models' contradictory results. The Interagency Modeling and Atmospheric Assessment Center (IMAAC), created to coordinate modeling predictions, lacks procedures to resolve contradictory predictions. Evaluations and field testing of plume models developed for urban areas show variable predictions in urban environments. They are limited in obtaining accurate data on the characteristics and rate of CBRN material released. Data on population density, land use, and complex terrain are critical to first responders, but data on the effects of exposure to CBRN materials on urban populations have significant gaps. Scientific research is lacking on how low-level exposure to CBRN material affects civilian populations, especially elderly persons, children, and people whose immune systems are compromised. Categories: Homeland Security, Agency missions, Biological research, Biological warfare biological warfare, employment in war of microorganisms to injure or destroy people, animals, or crops; also called germ or bacteriological warfare. Limited attempts have been made in the past to spread disease among the enemy; e.g. , Chemical agents, Chemical warfare, Data collection, Data integrity, Emergency preparedness, Federal/state relations, First responders, Hazardous materials emergency response, Hazardous substances, Health hazards, Homeland security, Laboratories, Operational testing, Performance management, Policy evaluation, Program management, Protective equipment, Public health, Radiation exposure hazards, Research and development, Risk assessment, Risk management, Security threats, Standards, Strategic planning, Terrorism, Terrorists, Test equipment, DHS BioWatch program, Interagency Modeling and Atmospheric Center (IMACC IMACC Independent Mitigation and Cleaning/Conservation Network IMACC Illinois Mathematics Association of Community Colleges IMACC Intermediate Maintenance Activity Coordination Center ) |
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