Row of Loosely Guarded Targets Lies Just Outside New York City
By DAVID KOCIENIEWSKI
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/09/nyregion/09homeland.html?ei=5094&en=382dc0
c5061a99a1&hp=&ex=1115697600&partner=homepage&pagewanted=print

KEARNY, N.J., May 7 - It is the deadliest target in a swath of industrial
northern New Jersey that terrorism experts call the most dangerous two miles
in America: a chemical plant that processes chlorine gas, so close to
Manhattan that the Empire State Building seems to rise up behind its storage
tanks.

According to federal Environmental Protection Agency records, the plant
poses a potentially lethal threat to 12 million people who live within a
14-mile radius.

Yet on a recent Friday afternoon, it remained loosely guarded and
accessible. Dozens of trucks and cars drove by within 100 feet of the tanks.
A reporter and photographer drove back and forth for five minutes, snapping
photos with a camera the size of a large sidearm, then left without being
approached.

That chemical plant is just one of dozens of vulnerable sites between Newark
Liberty International Airport and Port Elizabeth, which extends two miles to
the east. A Congressional study in 2000 by a former Coast Guard commander
deemed it the nation's most enticing environment for terrorists, providing a
convenient way to cripple the economy by disrupting major portions of the
country's rail lines, oil storage tanks and refineries, pipelines, air
traffic, communications networks and highway system.

Since 9/11, those concerns have only been magnified. Law enforcement
officials have warned of the need to prepare for an assault on one of the
four major chemical plants in the area or an attempt to ship nuclear or
biological weapons through its two port complexes.

Trying to safeguard more than 100 potential terrorist targets in two miles
surrounded by residential communities, industrial areas and commuter
corridors has proved a daunting challenge. Federal, state and local
officials have spent hundreds of millions of dollars to install gates,
roadblocks and security cameras and to provide additional patrols,
surveillance and intelligence operations.

But even those in charge of the effort say the job is incomplete, bogged
down by obstacles that are a microcosm of the nation's struggle against
potential terrorist threats.

After distributing tens of billions to state and local governments since
9/11, the federal Department of Homeland Security cut New Jersey's financing
this year to about $60 million from $99 million last year. Many security
experts have complained that the formula - which provides Montana with three
times as much money per capita as New Jersey - is guided more by politics
than by the likelihood of an attack.

Meanwhile, security at Newark Airport, while more rigorous and
time-consuming for passengers, has been marred by embarrassing breakdowns,
as screeners have repeatedly failed to prevent federal officials from
sneaking weapons and fake bombs onto planes.

The time and expense of screening shipping containers has slowed attempts to
tighten security at Port Newark and Port Elizabeth, where customs officials
say their radiation screening devices are ineffective and need replacement.

The private companies that own 80 percent of the most dangerous targets have
given varying degrees of cooperation, officials said, and the chemical
industry has effectively blocked attempts in Washington to mandate stricter
regulations.

As a result, many of the most crucial security tasks are left to local
police departments, some of which say they are too understaffed and poorly
equipped to mount a proper counterterrorism effort.

"They tell us to patrol, do this, do that, but don't give us the money or
equipment," said Sgt. Michael Cinardo of the Kearny Police Department, one
of several law enforcement agencies responsible for patrolling around the
chlorine plant.

He said the department requires patrol officers to stop by the plant at
least five times each shift.

Security against terrorism is a particularly sensitive issue in New Jersey.
More than 700 people killed on 9/11 lived there. And, in October 2001, the
first major bioterrorism attack on United States soil was launched from a
New Jersey post office when a series of anthrax-laced letters were mailed to
members of Congress and the news media. The State Health Department's
muddled response came to symbolize the nation's need to prepare itself to
face new threats.

Since then, New Jersey officials have spent more than $350 million in state
tax money on counterterrorism, building an apparatus that is run by seasoned
law enforcement experts and is generally well regarded.

New Jersey's Homeland Security Department, established in 2002, has helped
to train, coordinate and increase staffing at local law enforcement and
emergency medical agencies; assembled a 1,000-person task force to focus on
urban areas; and purchased boats, decontamination suits, radio systems and a
computerized intelligence network so federal agents and the New Jersey State
Police can share information with all 566 municipalities.

In the most dangerous two miles, they have erected concrete barriers outside
hospitals and office buildings and put fences along elevated highways that
pass chemical plants. The State Police patrol the skies, highways and
coastal waters, and federal officials have used various surveillance
techniques. On the New Jersey Turnpike, troopers try to check any vehicle
that stops for as little as five minutes.

But given the sheer number of vulnerable sites - three major oil and natural
gas pipelines, heavily traveled rail lines and more than a dozen chemical
plants - many security experts acknowledge that the response is inadequate.

In the months after 9/11, government officials routinely refused to discuss
the most mundane aspects of security, saying that they did not want to offer
inside information to potential enemies. Now, said Sidney J. Caspersen, the
director of the state's Office of Counterterrorism, there is more risk in
remaining silent.

"The terrorists already know what's out here," Mr. Caspersen said. "They
have been found with blueprints of our buildings, and a lot of the
information is available over the Internet or at a public library. The only
question is whether we will find a way to protect these targets before they
find a way to attack them."

The answer to that question will depend largely on the ability to operate
with limited money and a tangle of bureaucracies.

In several instances, counterterrorism money sent to the state has been used
for questionable purposes: the city of Newark spent $300,000 on two
air-conditioned garbage trucks, and New Jersey Transit has proposed using
$36 million in security money to overhaul the Hoboken Ferry terminal. Even
groups like Taxpayers for Common Sense say that places like New Jersey,
Houston and Long Beach, Calif., deserve more federal dollars.

As for the ports, the federal Homeland Security Department's inspector
general's office recently criticized the agency for directing much of its
$517 million in port security money to relatively low-risk sites in places
like Kentucky and Tennessee, and not giving enough to busy, vulnerable
facilities like Port Newark. Although the Port of New York and New Jersey
recently received an additional $42 million for counterterrorism efforts,
Port Newark lacks the up-to-date equipment now used to search cargo at ports
like Hong Kong.

"We put more resources into securing the average large bank in Manhattan
than we do for the entire security of Port Newark," said Stephen Flynn, a
former Coast Guard commander who is now a security analyst for the Council
on Foreign Relations and who conducted the study that first identified this
part of North Jersey as the nation's most terror-prone two miles. "That's
just irresponsible."

Some New Jersey officials have hoped that the newly appointed secretary of
homeland security, Michael Chertoff, will be sympathetic to the state's
situation because he is a native of Elizabeth. But when he visited New
Jersey during a terror drill last month, Mr. Chertoff was noncommital about
restoring cuts.

"Frankly, it's not a matter of spending a great lot of money," he said.
"It's a matter of taking resources we have and having a plan in place so we
use them effectively."

New Jersey officials say that the cuts will force them to reduce
surveillance of possible targets, cancel training sessions for first
responders and counterterrorism experts, and forestall the purchase of
equipment to detect chemical, nuclear or biological agents. The state has
said it will also have to scale back plans to fortify storage facilities and
rail lines near the Pulaski Skyway, an area known as "chemical alley."

Even if New Jersey were to receive more money, however, its counterterrorism
effort would still face other difficulties.

At Newark Airport, which handles 32 million passengers a year, the federal
government and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey have spent tens
of millions of dollars on high-tech baggage screening equipment, more guards
and other security improvements. But Transportation Security Administration
employees failed to detect weapons or fake bombs in about a quarter of the
81 tests conducted between last June and September. In December, when a
machine detected a simulated explosive, baggage screeners lost track of it
and it was loaded onto a flight to Holland.

Meanwhile, even less has been done to secure the nation's greatest
vulnerability to terror attacks, its 15,000 chemical plants, 123 of which
pose a threat to at least 1 million people, according to the Environmental
Protection Agency. A spokeswoman for the Chemistry Council, an industry
group representing 150 of the nation's largest chemical plants, said its
members had already invested $2 billion in improved security and were
working with Congress to establish federal safety guidelines.

"We want to work with the Department of Homeland Security and Congress to
make these plants safer in a way that works for everyone," Kate McGloon, the
spokeswoman, said.

Michelle Petrovich, a Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman, said
agency officials had visited more than half the nation's 300 most dangerous
plants and urged the companies to enhance perimeter security and switch to
less hazardous chemicals and processes. As a result, Ms. Petrovich said, she
believes North Jersey is "one of the safer areas because it has received the
most attention in terms of protective measures."

But Richard A. Falkenrath, a former deputy homeland security adviser to the
White House, said that effort has done little to make the public safer.
"Saying that you're doing something doesn't mean you're actually making a
difference," said Mr. Falkenrath, who recently testified before Congress,
urging tighter regulation of the chemical industry.

Since 2001, at least two major efforts to bolster chemical plant security
have been stalled, in part by industry lobbyists.

The latest proposal to tighten security at chemical plants, which appears to
be gaining support in Congress, would establish safety guidelines. But
Senator Jon S. Corzine said that it is only a half measure because it would
not mandate that plants in densely populated areas stop using highly
dangerous chemicals like chlorine gas and switch to more benign
alternatives, like sodium hypochlorite. The plants use such chemicals to
make antiseptics for water purification plants.

For those who live in the shadow of these plants, there is little
expectation that the federal government will mount a more vigorous security
response.

Carolyn M. Chapluske of Kearny, who has lived in North Jersey all her life,
said, "People pay taxes and deserve to be protected. But they probably
won't. It's just the way things work."



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