Showing posts with label prepardedness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prepardedness. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
Michelle Malkin: Hey, How's America's Rail Security Doing?
Michelle Malkin at Human Events offers a piece on rail security.
With vengeance-seeking global jihadists on the loose here and around the world, now is a good time to ask (again):
Are we ready for a nefarious terrorist attack on our train and transit lines?
Smoke and fire plagued two of the nation’s major metro rail stations this week, raising justified questions about safety and preparedness. On Monday, one person died and 84 fell ill after heavy smoke filled the L’Enfant Plaza Metro in Washington, D.C. Officials believe an “electrical arcing event” caused the lethal Beltway incident. A probe into the cause of the arcing — as well as an investigation into evacuation delays that trapped hundreds of passengers — is underway.
On Tuesday, an estimated 150 New York Fire Department personnel responded to a three-alarm fire at Penn Station that started before2:30 a.m. Two firefighters suffered injuries battling the Big Apple blaze, which was initially deemed “suspicious” and then “accidental.” Worth noting: A militant ISIS sympathizer published multiple threats on Twitter a few hours before the fire, warning that “tomorrow New York will burn” and predicting a “3:00 a.m. bomb.”
Whatever the causes of these two incidents, Americans need to know whether homeland security bureaucrats are doing their jobs — or hitting their over-worn government snooze buttons.
You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
http://humanevents.com/2015/01/14/hey-hows-americas-rail-security-doing/?utm_source=hedaily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Are We Prepared For Another Terrorist Attack?: My Q & A With Professor Michael Greenberger
The current issue of Counterterrorism magazine offers my Q&A with Professor Michael Greenberger, the director of the Center of Health and Homeland Security (CHHS) at the University of Maryland.Professor Greenberger explains how CHHS works with federal, state and local governments, hospitals and private industry in developing preparedness plans so that we may be better able to respond to catastrophic natural disasters and horrific terrorist attacks.
You can read my Q&A with Professor Greenberger below:
Below are two photos of CHHS personnel training and conducting drills:
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