Video Provision
        
        
        
			- By Ralph C. Jensen
- Aug 01, 2012
After recommending strategies for on-the-border
  video cameras and other security technologies,
  Rep. Candice Miller (R-MI) and her
  colleagues in the U.S. House of Representatives have
  passed H.R. 1299, known as the Secure Border Act.
  The bill ensures that the use of electronic physical security
  equipment will be a priority for the Department of
  Homeland Security’s border security strategies.
  
H.R. 1299 promotes the use of a comprehensive
  technology plan for major surveillance and detection
  technology programs. The Security Industry Association
  (SIA) announced full support of the passage of
  this bill—partly because staffers helped draft and create
  this critical legislation.
  
According to SIA, the Secure Border Act will direct
  the DHS secretary to submit to Congress a detailed
  and comprehensive strategic plan for gaining
  operational control of the international borders between
  U.S. ports of entry. The legislation also calls for
  development of a five-year plan that will ensure complete
  operations control is being met in border areas.
  
Miller, who introduced the Secure Border Act, said
  that for too many years this nation has lacked a clear
  and comprehensive plan to gain and maintain operations
  control of the borders.
  
“My legislation directs the secretary of Department
  of Homeland Security to develop a strategy for
  securing our borders and ports of entry by taking into
  account personnel, technology and other resources to
  meet our nation’s security requirements,” Miller said.
  “Our common defense begins with effectively securing
  our borders, and the American people rightly expect
  and demand that the federal government take the
  responsibility to secure the borders.”
  
Not too many months ago, I created a little havoc
  by writing that the current administration isn’t doing
  enough to protect the borders. A couple of our readers
  took exception and felt I shouldn’t wander into the
  political arena. I’ve thought long and hard about this,
  but what is the border about if it isn’t about security?
  
Therefore, let me heap a little praise on the White
  House for signing a bill that raises the federal criminal
  penalties for building or financing the building of
  border tunnels from Mexico into the United States.
  
Authored by Silvestre Reyes (D-TX), the new law
  received broad bipartisan support in May and was
  signed by the president on June 5.
  
“This legislation will further deter tunnel activities
  by providing enhanced investigative tools to law enforcement
  and increasing options to prosecute people
  involved in these crimes,” Reyes said.
  
During the past three years, the current administration
  has boldly increased the number of border
  agents, and DHS for the first time ever has taken flight
  with unmanned aerial drones that cover the border
  from Texas to California.
  
Cross-border tunnels, however, have become more
  common along the southern border, especially in
  Arizona and California, as drug smugglers look for
  new ways to circumvent law enforcement in the many
  aboveground routes. The tunnels are often very sophisticated
  and have extensive ventilation and cooling
  systems, as well as cargo-moving facilities. The tunnel
  smugglers have to be stopped, and, hopefully, this
  will help thwart the drug industry, which is brazen in
  its every attempt to bring its illegal product into the
  United States.
  
“I’m proud to see the president sign this important
  legislation into law,” said Rep. Ben Quayle (RAZ).
  “For too long, criminal cartels have been able
  to construct and use illegal cross-border tunnels to
  smuggle weapons, drugs and people across our border
  without facing adequately harsh consequences.
  This bill is an important step in our efforts to secure
  our southern borders.”
  
It seems apprehensions along the border have risen
  because there have been far fewer attempts to cross illegally,
  in part due to the dramatic increase in seizures
  of illegal currency, drugs and guns. This doesn’t mean
  that all is well on the southern border.
  
The Government Accountability Office has indicated
  that only 44 percent of the Southwest border
  has been under operational control and that only
  32 of the nearly 4,000 northern border miles have
  reached an acceptable level of security. Investments in
  border security should not be ad hoc but rather part
  of a larger strategic plan.
  
“I am encouraged by the release of the first-ever
  DHS Northern Border Strategy,” Miller said. “As
  chairman of the subcommittee on border and maritime
  security, I have been calling on the department to
  focus on the unique challenges on the northern border
  by putting a stronger emphasis on sharing information
  to protect our citizens, facilitate trade across
  our borders, decrease wait times for cargo and people
  who cross the border and to make infrastructure investments
  needed to facilitate these goals.”
  
One of the most important responsibilities of
  our government and this Congress is the enumerated
  powers of the Constitution for providing for the
  common defense of the citizens. Proper security on
  the border is a common defense that must be funded
  to meet that mission.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        This article originally appeared in the August 2012 issue of Security Today.