GUIDELINES/CRITERIA
FOR
EMERGENCY FUNDING REQUESTS RELATED TO
THE TERRORIST ATTACKS OF SEPTEMBER 11, 2001
Response
and Recovery
- The damage
to be repaired must have been directly caused by the
terrorist acts.
- The absence
of funding, and consequently a delay in damage repair, protection
or other activities, would result in significant economic
loss/hardship, attack risk or human endangerment/suffering,
including the cost of enhanced security and relocation of employees
to secure sites.
- Any action
ordered by the President to respond to the national security consequences
of the events of September 11, 2001.
- The requirement
is known, i.e., not a speculative need.
- The requirement
is urgent, i.e., could not reasonably be handled at a later time.
- The activity
to be performed is an appropriate Federal role and reflects
an appropriate sharing of responsibility among State, local, private,
and Federal entities.
- The level
of funding is limited to the amount necessary to restore
the entity/facility to current standards and requirements (e.g.,
damage to a 1950s building would be repaired using current building
codes and standards and guidelines for counter-terrorism defense).
- The requirement
is not competitive with or duplicative of activities
of other agencies with statutorily mandated disaster assistance
programs such as SBA and FEMA
- The requirement
cannot reasonably be met through the use of existing agency
funds, e.g., through reprogramming actions or the use of
other emergency funds.
Preparedness
and Mitigation
- Funds
should address specific deficiencies, encountered or
identified to prevent events such as those that occured on September
11, 2001, and may include expenditures for: law enforcement and
investigative activities; general preparation and response (planning,
training, equipment, and personnel); physical protection of government
facilities and employees; physical protection of the national
populace and infrastructure; and governmental awareness of potential
threats.
- Funds can
be used to enhance U.S. abilities to interdict terrorist threats.
- The activity
to be performed is an appropriate Federal role and reflects
an appropriate sharing of responsibility among State, local, private,
and Federal entities.
- The requirement
is urgent, i.e., could not reasonably be handled at a later time.
- Activities
are not competitive with or duplicative of activities of other
agencies with statutorily mandated preparation programs such as
DOD and FEMA.
- The requirement
cannot reasonably be met through the use of existing agency
funds, e.g., through reprogramming actions or the use of
other emergency funds.
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