Significant Memorandum of Agreements (MOAs).
NOTE: FOIA requests submitted to DHS\FEMATuesday, March 28, 2023
Significant Memorandum of Agreements (MOAs) with DHS\FEMA
Homeland Security Today: Hurricane Sandy. Unified Military Response.
EXCLUSIVE -- Dual-Status, Single Purpose: A Unified Military Response to Hurricane Sandy
March 11, 2013
By: Gen. Charles H. Jacoby, Jr., and Gen. Frank J. Grass
Satellite Communications: Disaster Preparedness from June 2012 Article MilSat Magazine.
By Tony Bardo, Assistant Vice President for Government Solutions, Hughes
Already, 2012 has distinguished itself as a year of severe storms, with record-breaking tornado outbreaks this past winter in the United States. With the hurricane season’s official start in June, first responders are preparing for the worst... last year’s biggest event, Hurricane Irene, caused more than $15 billion in damage and killed 49 people. Meteorologists predict fewer named storms, but those that do form will have a greater proximity to the U.S. coastline, making forecasting more difficult and reducing warning lead-times. This makes emergency alerts to the public all the more important.
Today, as satellite technology displaces the older analog method of relaying emergency information, states and localities are employing digital satellite services to help enable a far more sophisticated form for their Emergency Alert Systems (EAS). In the past, alerts were disseminated with fax machines and then dispatched at the radio or television station. Today, federal government mandates require a multi-media process that can enable the transmission of images, audio and video files.
Satellite serves as an ideal medium. In 2011, the state of Alabama rolled out a state-of-the-art digital emergency communications system called GSSNet/Alert Studio, powered by the Hughes nationwide satellite service and terrestrial technologies. Developed and operated by Global Security Systems (GSS), Alabama’s emergency communications can disseminate alerts through a host of multimedia applications—road signs, cell phones, smart phones, reverse 911, TV and radio. As the message is based on the government’s digital Common Alert Protocol (CAP), audio quality is vastly improved.
The greatest advance that the system provides is immediacy. In the past, emergency alerts weren’t pushed to the public at the same time. Back then, a dispatcher needed to read the message and then pass it along, resulting in a sometimes catastrophic delay. Eliminating that delay can mean the difference between life and death in an emergency. By using satellite technologies and the new digital messaging system, Alabama was able to completely remove the possibility of communication disruption.
With its proactive adoption of new satellite technology and coordinated information dissemination, Alabama is providing a model for other states of how to get the word out to the public as quickly and effectively as possible—helping citizens to reach safe haven as they ride out the storm. Alerting citizens, however, is only half of the story. In a hurricane, traditional communications technologies can fail. Such leaves first responders stranded without the connections they need to coordinate emergency operations. Satellites can provide
that critical link to them.
Hughes has been hard at work developing the Inter-Government Crisis Network (IGCN), which uses satellite technology to connect emergency response institutions and local governments in a crisis. A private network, it acts like the Internet, but without being vulnerable to network outages from the actual Internet—allowing agencies to collaborate in a crisis, sharing data, voice, and video-teleconferencing nationwide.
With this capability, any number of site-to-site connections can be readily configured to connect. IGCN also allows for predefined user-groups, so a state agency could set up a video-conference link-up with all fire departments, or all police departments, or all responders in a certain geographic area. Many U.S. state and local governments have emergency operational plans in place to facilitate rapid response, addressing such critical activities as evacuation, sheltering, and distribution of supplies. By leveraging the power of satellite, government leaders can ensure that these critical plans can be carried out without disruption no matter what storms turn their way.
A key to the effort was arraying EAS decoders across the system. This avoids the complication of the Internet, firewalls or configuration issue—and replaces the system’s old dependence on phone lines. Now, even if phones go down, or if the Internet becomes congested, warning alerts will make it out. With the use of satellite technology, messages can be generated from anywhere in the field and transmitted across the system, instead of first having to pass through the Emergency Operations Center.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Anthony “Tony” Bardo has 29 years of experience with strategic communication technologies that serve the complex needs of government. Since joining Hughes Network Systems in January 2006, Bardo has served as assistant vice president of Government Solutions, where he is focused on providing Hughes satellite broadband applications solutions to Federal, State, and Local governments. Bardo also recently served as Chair of the Networks and Telecommunications Shared Interest Group (SIG) for the Industry Advisory Council, an advisory body to the American Council for Technology (ACT). Prior to joining Hughes, Bardo was with Qwest Government Services for nearly five years where he served as senior director of civilian agencies sales and marketing, senior director of marketing, and senior director of business development. Prior to Qwest, Bardo spent 14 years with the government markets group at MCI where he held the position of executive director for civilian agencies. During his tenure, his teams managed programs with the Federal Aviation Administration’s national air traffic control network, the Social Security Administration’s toll-free network, the U.S. Postal Service Managed Service Network, and the U.S. General Services Administration’s FTS2001. Mr. Bardo is a 1974 graduate of Virginia Tech where he majored in economics with a minor in public communications.
http://www.hughes.com/HNS%20Library%20For%20Hughes%20Media/MSM_June2012_Bardo.pdf
Monday, March 27, 2023
Webinars FEMA, Cal OES and the National CERT Association Presents: Bringing CERT Into The 21st Century
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CNN. Opinion: As GOP governors obscure Black history, let’s finally tell the truth about Marcus Garvey
Opinion: As GOP governors obscure Black history, let’s finally tell the truth about Marcus Garvey
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Editor’s Note: Justin Hansford is a Howard University law professor, executive director of the Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center and elected member of the U.N. Permanent Forum on People of African Descent. His forthcoming book on the Marcus Garvey trial, “Jailing a Rainbow: The Marcus Garvey case,” will be released later this year under the imprint of Black Classic Press. Shaq Al-Hijaz is a second-year law student at Howard University and extern at the Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center. The views expressed in this commentary are their own. Read more opinion on CNN.
CNN — Earlier this month, President Joe Biden called out the
GOP for “trying to hide the truth” about Black history. While
politicians like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin have
described their efforts to reform education as bans on teaching critical race theory, in
reality, these bans have been invoked to prohibit teaching
elements of American history, especially Black history. The suppression of stories integral to the American narrative not only
robs us of important historical lessons, but also warps our vision of
ourselves and our future — and makes all of our lives less rich. With some of this country’s most powerful political figures trying to obscure the story of Black history, now is a good time to tell the true stories of Black leaders in America — particularly ones like Marcus Garvey, who was the subject of injustice and distortion. Known superficially as a “Back to Africa” advocate (as in, repatriating Black people to the African continent), Garvey actually founded what might well have been the largest human rights campaign in the history of the African Diaspora. At its zenith, Garvey’s organization boasted a membership of at least 6 million people with chapters registered in more than 40 nations. It provided inspiration for the life’s work of many important Black leaders, including Nelson Mandela, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. The Jamaican-born Garvey energized millions by calling for
an end to colonialism in Africa, for economic justice for the entire African
Diaspora and for cultural and political recognition and independence 100
years ago — a time when such declarations were just about unheard of. As part of his push to provide economic opportunity and autonomy for
Black people, Garvey started the Black-owned and -operated Black Star Line shipping company,
stylized after the White Star Line, which owned the Titanic. Garvey’s ships,
in theory, could have helped transport Black people back
to Africa, facilitated trade throughout the diaspora and instilled pride
while providing a vision of economic empowerment. Instead, Garvey’s movement splintered in the summer of 1923, when a federal judge in the southern district of New York convicted him of mail fraud for sending out advertisements for the purchase of stock in the Black Star Line, even though the shipping company was failing economically. The government not only accused Garvey of seeking to sell stock for too high of a price, but it insinuated that Garvey’s entire career was nothing more than a Ponzi scheme designed to make a quick buck. To the contrary, historians have for decades believed that Garvey
was framed for political reasons.
Indeed, as one of us has documented, the entire
legal process dripped with injustice and animosity toward Garvey. For
example, both the trial judge and an appellate judge were conspicuously
friendly with Garvey’s political opponents. In fact, even the initial charges can be traced directly to espionage
and efforts to infiltrate the Black Star Line by J. Edgar Hoover, who hired
some of the first-ever Black Bureau of
Investigation agents in order to stop any “Black Moses”
figures like Garvey from succeeding. Hoover wrote about his
search to find a charge that would allow the government to deport Garvey,
settling on mail fraud when other grounds for charges were unsuccessful. After thousands of Garvey’s followers (the
supposed victims of the fraud) petitioned for his release, his sentence was
commuted in 1927. Ultimately, after Garvey’s political vision had been
silenced, advocates for racial justice in the United States and abroad began
to focus less on economic justice and more on civil and political rights for
most of the 20th century. Today, the widening wealth gap and
other indicators of inequality suggest that this shift in focus was costly. Now Democratic Rep. Yvette D. Clarke of New York, first vice-chair of
the Congressional Black Caucus, and Democratic Rep. Hank Johnson of Georgia
are trying to set the historical record straight, recognizing the weight of
evidence supporting Garvey’s innocence and identifying him as a champion for
the liberation of people of African descent. “The world deserves to know the truth about Marcus Mosiah Garvey and
the truth about Black history,” Clarke declared in introducing the
resolution to exonerate the civil rights leader. Johnson added that “it’s
time to right this fundamental wrong” given the “utter lack of merit to the
charges on which he was originally convicted, combined with his profound
legacy and contributions to Black history in our country.” To be sure, Garvey’s record involves some controversial decisions. This includes meeting with the KKK, asserting correctly that, during the 1920s, they had a strong voice in the US government. But this cannot stand in the way of learning about Garvey’s true history and exonerating him. This is more than simply an exercise in historical truth telling and providing justice for his family, although both are immensely important. |
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Black
Emergency Managers Association International
Washington,
D.C.
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