- WASHINGTON (UPI) - Homeland
Security Director Tom Ridge said Thursday that the Bush administration
might propose a reorganization of the federal government -- requiring congressional
approval -- to better fight the war on terrorism.
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- President Bush's budget proposal unveiled this week does
little to combine government agencies, and a Ridge plan to combine border
control agencies was put on ice at the White House as department heads
scurried to maintain their turf.
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- But in a speech at the National Press Club on Thursday,
Ridge said the administration might do some reorganizing of the federal
government that would require new laws.
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- "We may make some recommendations about the integration
or consolidation of some of these departments that will certainly need
congressional approval," Ridge said.
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- The ex-Marine and former Pennsylvania governor predicted,
however, that he would not seek legal authority for his own office because
the president's personal support is enough for Ridge to do his job coordinating
homeland security operations.
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- "I've got all the authority I need," Ridge
said. "I've gotten $38 billion in (budget) authority in four months,"
Ridge said, referring to funds in Bush's budget proposal. "That is
not so bad."
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- Ridge said that instead, he would concentrate on coordinating
federal, state and local efforts to improve homeland security. Ridge said
his office would announce a new Homeland Security Advisory System in the
next few weeks that would help local and state governments make better
sense of sometimes-obtuse government warnings of possible attacks.
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- Ridge also predicted that Congress would approve of Bush's
proposed $38 billion to improve homeland security -- a doubling in spending
on such functions while most of the rest of government spending would be
stuck with just 2 percent growth.
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- Ridge predicted that Americans would reap the ancillary
benefits of enhanced police forces, fire departments, hospitals and research
institutions even if terrorists never strike again. "Homeland security
is not a zero-sum game," Ridge said. "It is a win-win."
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