| S 430 IS
108th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. 430
To amend the Homeland
Security Act of 2002 to enhance agricultural biosecurity in the United
States through increased prevention, preparation, and response planning.
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED
STATES
February 24, 2003
Mr. AKAKA introduced the following
bill; which was read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture,
Nutrition, and Forestry
A BILL
To amend the Homeland
Security Act of 2002 to enhance agricultural biosecurity in the United
States through increased prevention, preparation, and response planning.
Be it enacted by the
Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in
Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE; TABLE
OF CONTENTS.
(a) SHORT TITLE- This Act
may be cited as the `Agriculture Security Preparedness Act'.
(b) TABLE OF CONTENTS- The
table of contents of this Act is as follows:
Sec. 1. Short title; table
of contents.
Sec. 3. Agricultural biosecurity.
`Subtitle J--Agricultural Biosecurity
`Sec. 899A. Definitions.
`Chapter 1--Interagency Coordination
`Sec. 899D. Agricultural
disease liaisons.
`Sec. 899E. Transportation.
`Sec. 899F. Regional,
State, and local preparation.
`Sec. 899G. Study on feasibility
of establishing a national plant disease laboratory.
`Chapter 2--International Activities
`Sec. 899J. International
agricultural disease surveillance.
`Sec. 899K. Inspections
of imported agricultural products.
`Sec. 899L. Bilateral
mutual assistance agreements.
`Chapter 3--Response Activities
`Sec. 899O. Study
on feasibility of establishing a national agroterrorism and ecoterrorism
incident clearinghouse.
`Sec. 899P. Review of
legal authority.
`Sec. 899Q. Information
sharing.
Sec. 4. Inclusion of agroterrorism
in terrorist acts involving weapons of mass destruction.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
(1) the intentional use
of agricultural disease agents to attack United States agriculture threatens
an industry that accounts for approximately 13 percent of the gross domestic
product of the United States;
(2) the economic impact
of a worst-case agricultural disease affecting multiple farms in multiple
States could be measured in billions of dollars, including the costs of
eradication, production losses, and other market repercussions;
(3) agricultural diseases
can be naturally occurring (such as the outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease
in Great Britain during 2001) or intentionally created by malicious actors;
(4) risk factors affecting
the spread of a plant or animal disease include--
(B) animal and plant concentration
points (such as auction markets, sale barns, and grain lots);
(C) plant and animal movement;
(D) individuals moving on
and off farms;
(5) the rapid and widespread
movement of animals and crops is an integral part of United States agriculture
and the principle means by which an agricultural disease will spread if
an agricultural disease occurs;
(6) response planning and
mitigation requires the coordination between the animal health and agricultural
community, transportation officials, and representatives of the shipping
and trucking industry;
(7) the United States Department
of Agriculture and State departments of agriculture have responsibility
for the protection of the agricultural resources of the United States;
(8) in the event of an agricultural
disease, the Department of Agriculture and State departments of agriculture
will need the support and resources of other Federal, State, and local
agencies that carry out traditional emergency management and response functions;
(9) while the introduction
of an infectious foreign animal disease (such as foot-and-mouth disease)
will be the primary threat addressed by an agricultural security plan,
the principles used to prevent, detect, control, or eradicate such a disease
will apply to large-scale outbreaks of other diseases and other agricultural
diseases that affect agriculture;
(10) numerous Federal agencies
have authorities and responsibilities relating to public, animal, and wildlife
health, safety, and management;
(11) the highest priority
of the United States, in connection with agricultural diseases, is to prevent
the introduction of, detect, control, and eradicate an agricultural disease
as quickly as practicable and return the United States to a disease-free
status;
(12)(A) the Incident Command
System was adopted by the National Fire Academy as the model system of
the Academy in 1987 and was later endorsed by the International Association
of Chiefs of Police and the American Public Works Association;
(B) the Incident Command
System is used by many Federal agencies, such as the Environmental Protection
Agency and the United States Fire Administration, while responding to emergencies;
and
(C) the Secretary of Agriculture,
acting through the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, should incorporate
the Incident Command System in all agricultural disaster emergency response
plans; and
(13) since agricultural
diseases will continue to be rare occurrences in the United States, the
Department of Agriculture and Federal, State, and local partners will need
to reinforce preparedness, training, and response mechanisms--
(A) through an all-hazard
approach to all agricultural disaster emergencies; and
(B) by gaining field experience
in foreign countries where high-risk agricultural diseases are endemic.
SEC. 3. AGRICULTURAL BIOSECURITY.
(a) IN GENERAL- Title VIII
of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (Public Law 107-296; 116 Stat. 2220)
is amended by adding at the end the following:
`Subtitle J--Agricultural Biosecurity
`SEC. 899A. DEFINITIONS.
`(1) AGRICULTURAL DISEASE-
The term `agricultural disease' means an outbreak of a plant or animal
disease, or a pest infestation, that requires prompt action in order to
prevent injury or damage to people, plants, livestock, property, the economy,
or the environment.
`(2) AGRICULTURE- The term
`agriculture' includes--
`(A) the science and practice
of activities relating to food, feed, and fiber production, processing,
marketing, distribution, use, and trade;
`(B) family and consumer
science, nutrition, food science and engineering, agricultural economics,
and other social sciences; and
`(C) forestry, wildlife
science, fishery science, aquaculture, floraculture, veterinary medicine,
and other environmental and natural resource sciences.
`(3) AGROTERRORISM- The
term `agroterrorism' means the commission of an agroterrorist act.
`(4) AGROTERRORIST ACT-
The term `agroterrorist act' means a criminal act consisting of causing
or attempting to cause damage or harm to, or destruction or contamination
of, a crop, livestock, farm or ranch equipment, a material, any other property
associated with agriculture, or a person engaged in agricultural activity,
that is committed with the intent--
`(A) to intimidate or coerce
a civilian population; or
`(B) to influence the policy
of a government by intimidation or coercion.
`(A) IN GENERAL- The term
`biosecurity' means protection from the risks posed by biological, chemical,
or radiological agents to--
`(i) plant or animal health;
`(ii) the agricultural economy;
`(iii) the environment;
and
`(B) INCLUSIONS- The term
`biosecurity' includes the exclusion, eradication, and control of biological
agents that cause plant or animal diseases.
`(6) ECOTERRORISM- The term
`ecoterrorism' means the use of force or violence against a person or property
to intimidate or coerce all or part of a government or the civilian population,
in furtherance of a social goal in the name of an environmental cause.
`CHAPTER 1--INTERAGENCY COORDINATION
`SEC. 899D. AGRICULTURAL DISEASE
LIAISONS.
`(a) AGRICULTURAL DISEASE
MANAGEMENT LIAISON- The Secretary shall establish a senior level position
within the Federal Emergency Management Agency to serve, as a primary responsibility,
as a liaison for agricultural disease management between--
`(2)(A) the Federal Emergency
Management Agency;
`(B) the Department of Agriculture;
`(C) other Federal agencies
responsible for agriculture disease emergency response;
`(D) the emergency management
community;
`(E) State emergency officials
and agricultural officials; and
`(F) affected industries.
`(b) ANIMAL HEALTH CARE
LIAISON- The Secretary of Health and Human Services shall establish within
the Department of Health and Human Services a senior level position to
serve, as a primary responsibility, as a liaison between--
`(1) the Department of Health
and Human Services; and
`(2)(A) the Department of
Agriculture;
`(B) the animal health community;
`(C) the emergency management
community; and
`(D) affected industries.
`SEC. 899E. TRANSPORTATION.
`The Secretary of Transportation,
in consultation with the Secretary of Agriculture and the Secretary, shall--
`(1) publish in the Federal
Register proposed guidelines for restrictions on interstate transportation
of an agricultural commodity or product in response to an agricultural
disease;
`(2) provide for a comment
period for the proposed guidelines of not less than 90 days;
`(3) establish the final
guidelines, taking into consideration any comments received under paragraph
(2); and
`(4) provide the guidelines
to officers and employees of --
`(A) the Department of Agriculture;
`(B) the Department of Transportation;
and
`SEC. 899F. REGIONAL, STATE,
AND LOCAL PREPARATION.
`(a) ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY- The Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, in consultation
with the Secretary of Agriculture, shall cooperate with regional, State,
and local disaster preparedness officials to include consideration of potential
environmental impacts of response activities in planning responses to agricultural
diseases.
`(b) DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE-
The Secretary of Agriculture, in consultation with the Secretary, shall--
`(1) develop and implement
information-sharing procedures to provide information to and share information
among Federal, regional, State, and local officials regarding agricultural
threats, risks, and vulnerabilities; and
`(2) cooperate with State
agricultural officials, State and local emergency managers, representatives
from State land grant colleges and research universities, agricultural
producers, and agricultural trade associations to establish local response
plans for agricultural diseases.
`(c) FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
AGENCY- The Director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, in consultation
with the Secretary of Agriculture, shall--
`(1) establish a task force,
consisting of agricultural producers and State and local emergency response
officials, to identify best practices for regional and State agricultural
disease programs;
`(2) distribute to States
and localities a report that describes the best practices; and
`(3) design and distribute
packages containing exercises for training, based on the identified best
practices, in the form of printed materials and electronic media, for distribution
to State and local emergency managers and State agricultural officials.
`SEC. 899G. STUDY ON FEASIBILITY
OF ESTABLISHING A NATIONAL PLANT DISEASE LABORATORY.
`Not later than 270 days
after the date of enactment of this subtitle, the Secretary of Agriculture
shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report on the
feasibility of establishing a national plant disease laboratory, based
on the model of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with the
primary task of--
`(1) integrating and coordinating
a nationwide system of independent plant disease diagnostic laboratories,
including plant clinics maintained by land grant colleges and universities;
and
`(2) increasing the capacity,
technical infrastructure, and information-sharing capabilities of laboratories
described in paragraph (1).
`CHAPTER 2--INTERNATIONAL
ACTIVITIES
`SEC. 899J. INTERNATIONAL AGRICULTURAL
DISEASE SURVEILLANCE.
`Not later than 1 year after
the date of enactment of this subtitle, the Secretary of Agriculture, in
consultation with the Secretary of State and the Administrator of the United
States Agency for International Development, shall submit to the appropriate
committees of Congress a report on measures taken by the Secretary of Agriculture--
`(1) to streamline the process
of notification by the Secretary of Agriculture to Federal agencies in
the event of agricultural diseases in foreign countries; and
`(2) to cooperate with representatives
of foreign countries, international organizations, and industry to devise
and implement methods of sharing information on international agricultural
diseases and unusual agricultural activities.
`SEC. 899K. INSPECTIONS OF IMPORTED
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS.
`(1) cooperate with the
Secretary of Agriculture and appropriate Federal intelligence officials
to improve the ability of the Department of Agriculture to identify agricultural
commodities and products, livestock, and other goods imported from suspect
locations recognized by the intelligence community as having--
`(A) experienced agricultural
terrorist activities or unusual agricultural diseases; or
`(B) harbored agroterrorists;
and
`(2) use the information
collected under paragraph (1) to establish inspection priorities.
`SEC. 899L. BILATERAL MUTUAL
ASSISTANCE AGREEMENTS.
`The Secretary of State,
in coordination with the Secretary of Agriculture and the Secretary, shall--
`(1) enter into mutual assistance
agreements with other countries for assistance in the event of an agricultural
disease--
`(A) to provide training
to veterinarians and agriculture specialists of the United States in the
identification, diagnosis, and control of foreign agricultural diseases;
`(B) to provide resources
and personnel to foreign governments with limited resources to respond
to agricultural diseases; and
`(C) to participate in bilateral
training programs and exercises; and
`(2) provide funding for
personnel to participate in related exchange and training programs.
`CHAPTER 3--RESPONSE ACTIVITIES
`SEC. 899O. STUDY ON FEASIBILITY
OF ESTABLISHING A NATIONAL AGROTERRORISM AND ECOTERRORISM INCIDENT CLEARINGHOUSE.
`Not later than 240 days
after the date of enactment of this subtitle, the Attorney General, in
conjunction with the Secretary of Agriculture, shall submit to the appropriate
committees of Congress a report on the feasibility and estimated cost of
establishing and maintaining a national agroterrorism incident clearinghouse
to gather information for use in coordinating and assisting investigations
on incidents of--
`(1) agroterrorism committed
against or directed at--
`(A) any plant or animal
enterprise; or
`(B) any person, because
of any actual or perceived connection of the person with, or support by
the person of, agriculture; and
`SEC. 899P. REVIEW OF LEGAL
AUTHORITY.
`(a) IN GENERAL- The Attorney
General, in consultation with the Secretary of Agriculture, shall conduct
a review of State and local laws relating to agroterrorism and biosecurity
to determine--
`(1) the extent to which
those laws facilitate or impede the implementation of current or proposed
response plans with respect to agricultural diseases;
`(2) whether an injunction
issued by a State court could--
`(A) delay the implementation
of a Federal response plan; or
`(B) affect the extent to
which an agricultural disease spreads; and
`(3) the types and extent
of legal evidence that may be required by State courts before a response
plan may be implemented.
`(b) REPORT- Not later than
1 year after the date of enactment of this subtitle, the Attorney General
shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report that describes
the results of the review conducted under subsection (a) (including any
recommendations of the Attorney General).
`SEC. 899Q. INFORMATION SHARING.
`The Secretary of Agriculture,
in cooperation with the Attorney General, shall develop and implement a
system to share information during all stages of an agroterrorist act.'.
(b) CONFORMING AMENDMENT-
The table of contents in section 1(b) of the Homeland Security Act of 2002
(Public Law 107-296; 116 Stat. 2135) is amended by adding at the end of
the items relating to title VIII the following:
`Subtitle J--Agricultural Biosecurity
`Sec. 899A. Definitions.
`Chapter 1--Interagency Coordination
`Sec. 899D. Agricultural
disease liaisons.
`Sec. 899E. Transportation.
`Sec. 899F. Regional,
State, and local preparation.
`Sec. 899G. Study on feasibility
of establishing a national plant disease laboratory.
`Chapter 2--International Activities
`Sec. 899J. International
agricultural disease surveillance.
`Sec. 899K. Inspections
of imported agricultural products.
`Sec. 899L. Bilateral
mutual assistance agreements
`Chapter 3--Legal Definitions
and Response Activities
`Sec. 899O. Study
on feasibility of establishing a national agroterrorism and ecoterrorism
incident clearinghouse.
`Sec. 899P. Review of
legal authority.
`Sec. 899Q. Information
sharing.'.
SEC. 4. INCLUSION OF AGROTERRORISM
IN TERRORIST ACTS INVOLVING WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION.
Section 2332a(a) of title
18, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (2), by
striking `or' at the end;
(2) in paragraph (3), by
striking the comma at the end and inserting `; or'; and
(3) by inserting after paragraph
(3) the following:
`(4) against private property,
including property used for agricultural or livestock operations;'.
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