SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 United in Remembrance, Divided over Policies Ten years after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the events of that day retain a powerful hold on the public's collective consciousness. Virtually every American remembers what they were doing at the moment the attacks occurred. Substantial majorities say that 9/11 had a profound personal impact and that the attacks changed the country in a major way.
9/11 Commission Alumni Blast Failure to Enact 'No-Brainers' Ten years after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the government still has not assured communications interoperability among first responders, or determined whether police or firefighters are the default authorities during a sudden disaster, according to reunited members of the 9/11 Commission who spoke on a panel Wednesday.
GOVERNMENT BAILOUT Billions Meant for Struggling Homeowners May Pay Down Deficit Instead With housing prices dropping sharply, and foreclosure filings against more than 1 million properties in the first half of this year, the Obama administration is scrambling for ways to help homeowners.
GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING War-Related Contracting Wasted up to $60 billion, Commission Reports A staggering $12 million squandered every day for the last 10 years–that was among the findings the Wartime Contracting Commission uncovered in more than two years of investigating war-related spending since 2001.
TECHNOLOGY Social Media Brings New Capacities and Liabilities to Crises Rapid-fire Tweets and smartphone photos can be a boon to emergency responders trying to see through the fog of an unfolding crisis, but they also can divert responders with misinformation and potentially create liability issues, experts said Tuesday.
Americans Using Web More for Federal Customer Service People increasingly are using online channels to access federal customer service and said that their most satisfying engagement with agencies in 2011 came when they used a website to do so, according to a survey.
‘Change by Us’ Connects Citizens to Government Seeking to reinvent the relationship between citizens and government, a national nonprofit and a New York-based media design firm have created Change by Us, a digital platform intended to foster better engagement.
Most Federal Websites Fail to Install Add-ons for Thwarting Site Redirects, Despite Mandate A year and a half after a White House-imposed deadline, only 23 percent of federal websites have employed mandatory security measures to prevent hackers from transferring visitors to bogus websites, a General Services Administration official told Nextgov.
The Smoking Gun on China's U.S. Cyberattacks A few weeks ago I wrote a column explaining, step by step, how hackers with a Chinese IP address attacked a honeypot network in the GCN Lab that had been set up for just that purpose.
Worried about Sophisticated Attacks, Agencies Ignore Low-tech Threats Sophisticated attacks using Advanced Persistent Threats are top of mind for nearly two-thirds of government IT officials in a recent security survey, but too little attention often is being paid to the low-hanging fruit being exploited by low-tech attacks.
Intell Agency's Software Would Predict World Events The Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity is seeking technology that can help intelligence analysts predict global events such as mass migrations, disease outbreaks, economic instability and natural disasters.
Using Open Data to Understand War and Peace A new project, funded by the U.S. Department of Defense, will make hard-to-find data on war and conflict available to academics–and help crowdsource military tactics.
HEALTH CARE HHS Awards $137M to States for Health IT, Prevention The Department of Health and Human Services on Thursday awarded $137 million to nearly every state to strengthen prevention efforts and to improve public health. Many of the awards include a health IT component, such as immunization information technologies and registries.
Facebook App to Help Track How Viruses Spread A new Facebook application, developed in a Tel Aviv University (TAU) lab, is poised to serve as a better indicator of how infections spread among populations.
Tying Health Problems to Rise in Home Foreclosures The threat of losing your home is stressful enough to make you ill, it stands to reason. Now two economists have measured just how unhealthy the foreclosure crisis has been in some of the hardest-hit areas of the U.S.
Colorado Scaling Back Medicaid after Drastically Underestimating Numbers, Cost Two years after lawmakers expanded Medicaid to cover poor adults without children, the state is vastly scaling back the program because the number of people eligible for coverage is nearly three times as high as first projected and the cost of insuring them is almost nine times original estimates.
SynCare Out as Assessor of Missouri Health Care Needs Barely three months after it began, SynCare LLC's brief but troubled relationship with the Missouri health department came to an abrupt end Thursday.
EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT When Disaster Strikes, It’s Up to Users to Preserve Bandwidth The East Coast is experiencing a rare and potentially catastrophic one-two punch: A 5.8 magnitude earthquake–the strongest most area residents have experienced in their lifetimes–shook the region on Aug. 23 and the area braced over the following weekend for Hurricane Irene.
FEMA Launches Mobile Apps for Disaster Preparedness Mobile application and text-message update service will help people become better prepared before emergencies happen.
Rebirth on the Bayou—Lessons from New Orleans and the Gulf Coast Hurricane
Katrina is the costliest disaster in U.S. history and among the three
costliest in the world ever. And as Hurricane Irene reminds us, the
potential for a recurrence is not hard to imagine. As such, New Orleans
and the Gulf Coast stand as a lesson about what it takes to rebuild
after a major catastrophe.
Fight Brewing Over Replenishing FEMA's Emergency Funds after Hurricane Irene FEMA stirred some controversy when it announced that to meet the current crisis it was temporarily suspending payments for rebuilding in areas hit by earlier disasters, such as this spring's tornadoes in Missouri and other states. Then on Monday, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor told a Fox News audience that any new federal disaster monies would require offsetting cuts in other spending, igniting a round of budgetary who-goes-first.
New Storm Brews in Congress Over Paying for Disaster Relief House Republicans want any new funds spent because of Hurricane Irene or other disasters to be offset by cuts elsewhere.
Costs of Irene Add Up as FEMA Runs Out of Cash So FEMA administrator Craig Fugate says his agency will postpone work on some of the repair and restoration projects resulting from the earlier storms to pay for the immediate needs resulting from Irene.
After Irene, FEMA Facing a Disaster of Its Own—Funding Now that the big hurricane is behind us–three days for Irene and six years for Katrina –the Federal Emergency Management Agency is running out of money and finds itself operating in a new political and fiscal climate that may be as treacherous as some of the disasters to which it must respond.
IMMIGRATION Judge Blocks Immigration Law Alabama's tough new immigration law is in limbo after a federal judge blocked it Monday, just days before it was to go into effect, so she can have more time to decide whether it is constitutional.
SCHOOLS A K-8 school by Day, Adult Club by Night? A Miami-Dade charter school is in trouble with the school district, accused of having bawdy, after-hours parties on its South Miami Heights campus.
Schools Fill Budget Holes with Fracking Revenues In late July, the Blackhawk School District, 40 miles northwest of Pittsburgh, joined a handful of other school districts in Pennsylvania looking to cash in on the state’s natural gas boom.
INTERNATIONAL What Will Make the Libyan Rebels' Government-building Attempts Successful? Guest blogger Laura Seay interviews the author of a book on governance by rebel groups about what Libya's National Transitional Council will need to do to build a stable government.
Libya in Conflict As anti-Qaddafi forces strengthen their hold on Tripoli and continue to fight the dictator's supporters, the challenges facing Libya in this transition are monumental. Brookings experts analyze the situation, examining next steps for the Libyan rebels and the implications for U.S. foreign policy in the region.
INTERESTING The Matternet: A Flying Autonomous Delivery System for the Developing World Nearly one billion people in rural areas live without access to all-season roads–meaning a large portion of the world's population can't get medication, food, and other supplies when they need them. The Matternet, a concept created by a group of students in this summer's class at Singularity University, aims to leapfrog road-based transportation altogether with a network of electric autonomous aerial vehicles (AAVs) in the developing world that transports supplies and people from place to place. Think of it as the Jetsons meets Mother Theresa.