Order Code RS21270
Updated September 26, 2003
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Homeland Security and Counterterrorism
Research and Development: Funding,
Organization, and Oversight
Genevieve J. Knezo
Specialist in Science and Technology Policy
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Summary
After the 2001 terrorist attacks, planning and coordination mechanisms for research
and development (R&D) to counter terrorism were developed in the White House’s
Office of Homeland Security, Office of Science and Technology Policy, and in
individual agencies.
Subsequently, P.L. 107-296, the Homeland Security Act
consolidated some R&D and coordination in the Department of Homeland Security
(DHS). FY2003 funding was appropriated in P.L. 107-8. A House/Senate conference
committee approved FY2004 R&D appropriations totaling $1.050 billion, 16% more
than the President requested. Policy issues include implementation; and coordination
of priority-setting among DHS, other agencies, and existing R&D coordination bodies.
This report will be updated.
Funding for Federal Counterterrorism R&D.
Federal funding for
counterterrorism R&D has increased substantially in the last three years. The President’s
Office of Science and Technology (OSTP) estimated the FY2004 budget request for all
federal R&D to combat terrorism at $3.2 billion,1 about 6 times the FY2000 amount The
new Department of Homeland Security will manage about one-third of this budget.
According to the Office of Management and Budget’s (OMB) Annual Report to Congress
on Combating Terrorism, FY2002
, 5.5% of the FY2003 budget request for combating
terrorism was for R&D. See Table 1.
1 See [http://www.ostp.gov/html/budget/2004/2004.html]. See also CRS Report RL31576,
Federal Research and Development Organization, Policy, and Funding for Counterterrorism;
and CRS Report RL31354, Possible Impacts of Major Counter Terrorism Security Actions on
Research, Development, and Higher Education.
For additional information about DHS, see CRS
Report RL31914, Research and Development in the Department of Homeland Security, and CRS
Report RS21542, Department of Homeland Security: Issues Concerning the Establishment of
Federally Funded Research and Development Centers (FFRDCs)
.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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Table 1. Research and Development (R&D) to Combat Terrorism, By
Agency, FY2000-FY2004 (Request), Dollars in Millions
FY2002
FY2003
FY2000 FY2001 FY2002
FY2004
Agency
Supple- FY2003 Enacted Supple--
Actual
Actual Enacted
Request
mental
mental
Agriculture
$37.3
$51.7
$28.0
$52.2
$30.4
---
$42.1
Commerce
9.6
0
11.7
7.0
16.4
---
19.4
Corps of Engineers - unknown unknown
---
3.0
---
---
---
Civil Works
Defense
unknown unknown
259.0
2.0
597.0
---
157.0
Energy
59.7
66.2
64.9
19.0
19.0
--- [43.7] (OMB
FY2003 rept.
p. 57)
EPA
unknown
0
2.8
1.5
49.7
---
29.0
DHHS
109.7
102.8
117.2
85.0
831.2
---
1648.2
[previous FY2003
data=1,770.9
(NIH,$1.75B;
CDC, $40M;
FDA, $50M)]
Homeland Security
---
---
110.0
93.4
658.2
---
844.0
Justice
45.2
11.4
13.1
76.1
173.5
4.9
174.7
NSF
unknown
7.0
7.0
0
27.0
Postal Service
unknown unknown
---
9.5
---
---
---
State
unknown unknown
1.8
---
1.8
---
1.8
Transportation
50.7
50.2
54.7
54.0
3.7
---
3.9
Treasury
2.1
1.2
1.1
0
1.1
unknown
Total
$511.3
$589.4
$827.0
$383.6
$2,649.4
$4.9
$3,205.7
Source: OMB, Annual Report to Congress on Combating Terrorism, FY2002, p. 27 for column FY2000;
OMB, Annual Report to Congress on Combating Terrorism, June 24, 2002, p. 26, for column FY2001,
DOE for FY2002, DHHS for FY2003, and Treasury. Remainder: OMB, 2003 Report to Congress on
Combating Terrorism,
Sept. 2003, p. 16, [http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/inforeg/2003_combat_terr.pdf].
The FY2004 request for R&D to combat terrorism was described in OMB’s FY2003
terrorism report and the largest programs are summarized here. The Department of Health
and Human Services (DHHS),
with about 53% of the total, manages most of the federal
civilian effort against bioterrorism. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) R&D,
at 27% of the total, is for the programs supported by the Science and Technology
Directorate. The third largest supporter of federal counterterrorism R&D is the National
Science Foundation,
followed by the Department of Justice and the Department of
Defense, (DOD)
, including the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
The Technical Support Working Group (TSWG), a State Department/DOD group,
coordinates interagency work on new technologies to combat terrorism (funding requested
at about $43 million, with an operating budget of about $141 million). The Department
of Agriculture’s
(USDA) R&D focuses on plant and animal diseases. The Environmental
Protection Agency
(EPA) focuses on toxic materials research. In the Commerce
Department
, R&D at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) deals
with protecting information systems.
In the past, the Department of Energy’s (DOE)
counterterrorism R&D included work on security, materials, detection of toxic agents,
genomic sequencing, DNA-based diagnostics, and microfabrication technologies.

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Creation of a Department of Homeland Security and Other Laws. The
Homeland Security Act of 2002, P.L. 107-296, November 25, 2002, created the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS), and, as one of its four directorates, a
Directorate on Science and Technology. Most of DHS’s research, development, test, and
evaluation (RDT&E) is under jurisdiction of the Under Secretary for Science and
Technology (S&T), created by Title III. Dr. Charles McQueary, an engineer, recently
retired as President of General Dynamics Advanced Technology Systems, was confirmed
to this position.
His responsibilities are to: coordinate DHS’s S&T missions; in
consultation with other agencies, develop a strategic plan for federal civilian
countermeasures to threats, including research; except for human health-related R&D,
conduct and coordinate DHS’s intramural and extramural R&D and coordinate with other
federal agencies to carry out DHS R&D; establish national R&D priorities to prevent
importation of chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear and related weapons and
terrorist attacks; collaborate with DOE regarding using national laboratories; collaborate
with the Secretaries of Agriculture and of Health and Human Services to identify “select
agents,”but not to assume their responsibilities to enforce “select agent” rules; develop
guidelines to disseminate DHS’s research and transfer technology; and support U.S. S&T
leadership. The law authorized a 20-member Homeland Security Science and Technology
Advisory Committee to advise and recommend research. Members are to include
representatives of emergency first-responders, citizen groups, economically disadvantaged
communities, and experts in emergency response, research, engineering, business, and
management. If possible, DHS’s research is to be unclassified.
Title III transferred to DHS DOE programs in chemical and biological security R&D;
nuclear smuggling and proliferation detection; nuclear assessment and materials
protection; biological and environmental research related to microbial pathogens; the
Environmental Measurements Laboratory; and the advanced scientific computing research
program from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
DHS was mandated to
incorporate a newly created National Bio-Weapons Defense Analysis Center and USDA’s
Plum Island Animal Disease Center, but USDA may continue to conduct R&D at the
facility. DHS is responsible for Coast Guard and Transportation Security Administration
(TSA) R&D. The DHS Secretary is to collaborate with the DHHS Secretary to set
priorities for DHHS’s human health-related R&D on “countermeasures for chemical,
biological, radiological, and nuclear and other emerging terrorist threats.”
Pursuant to Title III, the Under Secretary may establish or contract with one or more
Federally Funded R&D Centers (FFRDC) for independent analysis of homeland security
issues. A Homeland Security Advanced Research Projects Agency (HSARPA) will
administer an Acceleration Fund, to support innovative homeland security RDT&E in
businesses, FFRDCs, and universities.
Extramural funding is to be competitive and
merit-reviewed, but distributed to as many U.S. areas as practicable. One or more
university-based centers for homeland security is to be established and initial proposals
are being reviewed now. Regarding intramural R&D, the DHS may use any federal
laboratory and may establish a headquarters laboratory to “network” federal laboratories.
A Homeland Security Institute FFRDC was authorized to conduct risk analysis and policy
research to determine vulnerabilities of, and alternative security approaches for, critical
infrastructures; improve interoperability of tools for field operators and first responders;
and test prototype technologies.
The Institute may use the National Infrastructure
Simulation and Analysis Center (NISAC), which was transferred from DOE.
A
Technology Clearinghouse was authorized to transfer information about innovative
solutions for homeland security and will coordinate with TSWG, which is now reviewing
initial proposals received.

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Among the functions of the Special Assistant to the Secretary, created by Sec. 102
of P.L. 107-296 is working with the private sector to develop innovative technologies for
homeland security. The DHS Secretary, with the National Security Council and OSTP,
is to establish uniform procedures to handle critical infrastructure information that is
voluntarily submitted to the Government in good faith that will not be subject to
disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. DHS issued a proposed rule on this
(see Federal Register, Apr. 15, 2003, pp. 18524 -18529). P.L. 107-296 codified an
existing Office of Science and Technology in the National Institute of Justice and
authorized local technology centers to support training and RDT&E for equipment (Sec.
232 and 235). The DHS Secretary was given special acquisitions authority for basic,
applied, and advanced R&D (Sec. 833). Sec. 1003 authorized NIST to conduct R&D on
improving information security. The DHS Under Secretary for Information Analysis and
Infrastructure Protection was authorized to establish a “NET Guard,’‘ comprised of S&T
volunteers, to assist in recovery from attacks on information systems (Sec. 224). OSTP’s
Director was mandated to report to Congress on effects of changes in visa procedures on
the issuance of student visas (Sec. 428). According to Sec. 1712, OSTP’s Director is to
advise the President on homeland security, and to consult and cooperate with the Office
of Homeland Security (OHS). (See below for information about OHS.)
P.L. 107-305, “The Cyber Security Research and Development Act,” (H.R. 3394),
authorized $903 million over five years for R&D and training programs by the National
Science Foundation and NIST to prevent and combat terrorist attacks on private and
government computers. Several committees have held hearings on cybersecurity R&D.
DHS estimated its FY2003 R&D funding at $761 million. FY2004 requested
funding totaled $907 million, with $803 million for the S&T directorate. According to
the budget request, 5% of DHS R&D funding would be for basic research, 13% for
applied research, 66% for development, and $16% for facilities and equipment. R&D
funding for programs transferred from other agencies was estimated at about $200
million. The conference report on FY2004 Homeland Security appropriations (H.Rept.
108-280) would allow $874 million in appropriations for R&D in the Directorate of
Science and Technology, and additional R&D in DHS to bring the total R&D
appropriation to $1.050 billion, which is 16 % more than the President requested. See
Table 2
. Additional federal homeland security-related R&D is funded by other agencies,
including the National Institutes of Health, totaling about $1.6 billion, requested for
FY2004 for bioterrorism R&D.
Coordination Mechanisms Created Before Authorization of DHS. The
Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) is a statutory office in the Executive
Office of the President (EOP); its Director advises the President and recommends federal
R&D budgets. OSTP’s Director has chaired the National Security Council’s Preparedness
Against Weapons of Mass Destruction R&D Subgroup (comprised of 16 agencies), which
helps plan R&D relating to chemical, biological, nuclear, and radiological threats. OSTP
provides technical support to the DHS and manages the interagency National Science and
Technology Council (NSTC), which created a new Committee on Homeland and National
Security to set help set R&D priorities in eight functional areas. OSTP’s interagency
work has focused on such topics as anthrax, regulations to restrict access to research using
biological “select agents,” access to “sensitive but unclassified” scientific information,
policy for foreign student visas, access to “sensitive” courses, and advanced technology
for border control. Pursuant to Executive Order 13231, OSTP was to work with the
interagency President’s Critical Infrastructure Board to recommend priorities and budgets
for information security R&D. The OHS had been created in the EOP on October 8, 2001

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by Executive Order 13228. It was replaced by the new Homeland Security Council
(HSC), created by P.L. 107-296, to provide policy and interagency guidance. It is unclear
if the HSC Policy Coordination Committee on R&D, created pursuant to Executive Order
13228, still functions.
Table 2. Department of Homeland Security: R&D in the Budget
(budget authority in millions of dollars)
FY 2003
FY 2004
FY2004 Conf. Report, H.Rept.
Estimate
Request*
108-280
DHS R&D:
Border & Transportation Security (TSA)
$110
$75
$155
Emergency Preparedness
0
0
0
Information Analysis and Infra.
15
5
5
Science and Technology
521
803
874
Biological countermeasures

365
199
Nuclear & Radiological countermeasures

137
127
Chemical countermeasures

55
52
High Explosives countermeasures

10
10
Threat & vulnerability assessments

90
94
Conventional missions

55
34
Rapid Prototyping / TSWG

30
75
Standards / state and local

25
39
Emerging threats

22
21
Critical infrastructure protection

5
67
University programs / HS fellowships

10
70
Salaries & expenses 1/ ( Mgt/Adm. in H.Rept

0 44 (in S&T directorate, but not
108-280)
counted as R&D)
Nat’l Biodef. Anly&Countermeasures Cntr2/
---
0
88
Coast Guard
23
23
15
Total DHS R&D
669
907
Excluding Mgt/Adm., 1050
Selected non-R&D items:
0
890
890
Biodefense countermeasures (BioShield)
Total DHS Discretionary Budget
28875
28372
29411
Source, except for last column, based on largely on: AAAS R&D Funding Update, DHS in FY2004 House Appropriations, June 25, 2003.
AAAS estimates based on FY 2004 appropriations bills. Includes conduct of R&D and R&D facilities. FY 2003 and FY 2004 request
figures based on OMB R&D data and supplemental agency budget data. Figures are rounded to the nearest million.
* FY 2004 request figures have been revised since the February 2003 release of the President’s budget.
1/ The House Homeland Security appropriations bill moved salaries and expenses for federal employees in the S&T Directorate from
program line items to a consolidated Salaries & Expenses account. 2/Funded in Biological Counter-measures in FY2003 and FY2004
request.
The working group on bioterrorism prevention, preparedness, and response,
established by Section 108 of P.L. 107-188, the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism
Preparedness and Response Act of 2002, consists of the DHHS and DOD Secretaries and
other agency heads. One of its functions is to recommend “research on pathogens likely
to be used in a biological threat or attack on the civilian population ....”
Critiques Before Creation of the Department of Homeland Security.
Before passage of P.L. 107-296, some critics said that effective counterterrorism R&D
required better coordination than OHS, OSTP, NSTC and other groups could provide, and
that R&D priorities should reflect intelligence and threat estimates, and balance between
long-range and short-term R&D to hasten deployment of technological responses. The

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Administration called for consolidating core R&D in a homeland security agency in
National Strategy for Homeland Security, July 2002). The National Academies advocated
creating a Secretary for Technology and a homeland security “think tank” (in Making the
Nation Safer: The Role of Science and Technology in Countering Terrorism
, June 2002).
The Brookings Institution in Assessing the Department of Homeland Security, July 15,
2002, urged caution because homeland security R&D priorities were unclear.
Oversight Issues. Under Secretary McQueary noted, in a speech before the
AAAS on April 11, 2003 and in congressional testimony, that DHS S&T priorities
include intramural work in the National Laboratory for Homeland Security; soliciting
innovative ideas from academia and industry via work in HSARPA; promoting standards
for design and manufacture of homeland security technologies; participating with TSWG
to support prototyping of new technologies; and strategic R&D partnerships with the
academic community, including academic fellowships. Key DHS S&T initiatives focus
on: border protection and monitoring (including prevention of illegal entry of nuclear
devices), biological protection (including working with the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention to develop surveillance systems and to deploy sensors to monitor the
release of pathogens and agents), and information analysis (including tools and
cybersecurity research). It is unclear how DHS sets priorities for programs, including for,
HSARPA, the university center(s), the Homeland Security Institute, and laboratories. The
20-member Homeland Security Science and Technology Advisory Committee, authorized
by P.L. 108-280 to advise and recommend research, has not been established yet. An
article in the Chronicle of Higher Education, September 16, 2003, estimates that FY2003
congressional “earmarks” for homeland security-related academic R&D total $223
million, a 68% increase over 2002, and questions the impacts of earmarking on DHS’s
priority-setting processes.
Coordination of federal homeland security R&D may be an issue.
DHS has
responsibility for about one-third of the budget request for R&D to combat terrorism.
DHS has some authority to coordinate and help set priorities for other federal homeland
security R&D, including in human health. The extent of that responsibility remains to be
demonstrated. The heads of other agencies that handle R&D have no formal role in
DHS’s R&D priority-setting and coordination, and the role of the DHS Secretary in
setting priorities for those agencies is undetermined. DHS’s effectiveness in planning and
coordinating R&D may depend upon the Secretary’s ability to influence other agencies
and his interactions with existing counterterrorism coordination mechanisms in OSTP,
NSTC, and interagency committees. Additional questions could be raised about what
kinds of coordination occur between DHS and the other federal agencies which support
homeland security R&D, especially extramural R&D. (See CRS Report RS21617,
Homeland Security: Extramural R&D Funding Opportunities in Federal Agencies.)
There are issues of how Congress will organize its oversight activities for DHS’s
multifaceted R&D and for homeland security-related activities in other agencies.
In
response to criticism of P.L. 107-296, legislation was enacted (P.L. 108-7), to revise
eligibility criteria so that more institutions can compete for funding for DHS’s academic-
based homeland security center(s). The Subcommittee on Cybersecurity, Science, and
Research & Development of the House Select Committee on Homeland Security held an
oversight hearing on May 21, 2003. Additional hearings have been held and others are
scheduled by this subcommittee and others in the House and Senate.