WASHINGTON -- Defying President Bush's threatened veto, the House on
Thursday overwhelmingly approved a bill making the Coast Guard enforce
security zones around eight liquefied natural gas terminals and any
arriving tankers _all potential terrorism targets.
The White House has complained that the requirement would divert the
Coast Guard from other high-priority missions and provide an
''unwarranted subsidy'' for LNG owners.
The 395-7 vote margin on the $8.4 billion Coast Guard bill was well
beyond the two-thirds needed to override a presidential veto. Seven
Republicans voted against the measure.
After the vote, the White House praised the passage of a GOP-backed
amendment to the bill that permits the Coast Guard to take into account
agency, state and local government security resources when deciding on
security plans for LNG sites.
''The administration remains concerned about several key provisions in
the House bill,'' said White House spokesman Trey Bohn. ''However, the
veto threat prompted members to adopt a Republican amendment which made
significant changes to the bill. We will continue to work with members
of Congress as this legislation moves forward.''
The Senate is considering its own version of the bill.
Democrats scoffed at the White House's objections, saying Bush is
ignoring the huge security threat posed by LNG sites on the Atlantic
and Gulf coasts.
''I am simply appalled that this administration would refer to
protecting our families as an unwarranted and unnecessary subsidy,''
said Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., who chairs the House Transportation
subcommittee that oversees the Coast Guard.
A dozen more LNG terminals are being planned due to increased demand
for natural gas and limited domestic supplies.
Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., said the LNG security provision could hamper
the flow of much-needed natural gas as energy prices and demand rise.
''We're creating more red tape and more impediments,'' Mica said.
The Government Accountability Office says a terrorism attack on an LNG
tanker arriving at a terminal could ignite an explosion and fire so
fierce that people a mile away would be burned. But GAO auditors also
say the Coast Guard is already stretched too thin to meet its own
standards for protecting arriving LNG tankers from attack.
The bill also sets stricter crime reporting requirements for cruise
ships and requires double hulls around fuel tanks on large cargo ships
to prevent catastrophic oil spills like the one in San Francisco Bay in
November.
To address complaints that crimes aboard cruise ships are
underreported, the bill makes line operators report to the Homeland
Security Department all security incidents, including deaths, serious
bodily injuries and sexual assaults.
Cruise lines also are required to post crime statistics on an Internet
site maintained by the Coast Guard, with links from the cruise line
public Web sites.
''Sometimes, even cruise ships need sunshine,'' said Rep. Doris Matsui,
D-Calif.
Cruise lines last year announced a voluntary agreement with the FBI and
the Coast Guard to improve and standardize crime reporting.
''The bottom line is, the crime statistics provided by the cruise
industry are inaccurate and inadequate,'' said Rep. Chris Shays,
R-Conn. ''This has got to change.''
Cruise line industry officials say the reporting requirement is
redundant, since they are already doing so voluntarily.
The bill also addresses a problem that has plagued the Great Lakes
region: invasive species that sneak into U.S. waters aboard oceangoing
cargo ships and wreak havoc. Oceangoing ships would be required to
install ballast water treatment equipment to keep foreign species from
U.S. waters.
Ballast tanks help stabilize ships in rough ocean waters. But ballast
water is widely considered a leading source of aquatic invaders, which
compete with native species for food and habitat.
At least 185 invasive species have been identified in the Great Lakes,
including zebra and quagga mussels, which clog water pipes and do more
than $150 million worth of damage a year.
''This is a great day for the Great Lakes and the coastal areas,'' said
Rep. Vernon Ehlers, R-Mich. ''Let's get out there and fight those nasty
zebra mussels.''
The bill also would increase the Coast Guard by 1,500 members to
47,000. Another provision would tighten agency management controls over
Deepwater, the $24 billion program to modernize the agency's aging
fleet. It has been plagued by cost overruns, design flaws and lax
oversight.
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House Tells Coast Guard to Protect Terror Targets
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