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US HR2188

US HR2188
Community Counterterrorism Preparedness Act


summary

Introduced
04/27/2017
In Committee
05/03/2017
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
12/31/2018

Introduced Session

115th Congress

Bill Summary

Community Counterterrorism Preparedness Act (Sec. 2) This bill amends the Homeland Security Act of 2002 to require the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to carry out a grant program for emergency response providers to prevent, prepare for, and respond to emerging terrorist attack scenarios in major metropolitan areas. DHS shall provide to eligible applicants: (1) unclassified information on such scenarios, and (2) information on training and exercises best practices. Jurisdictions that receive funding under the Urban Area Security Initiative may apply for such a grant. Eligible applicants receiving funding under the program may include in funded activities neighboring jurisdictions that would be likely to provide mutual aid in response in such scenarios. Recipients may use grants to: identify capability gaps related to preparing for, preventing, and responding to such scenarios; develop or update plans, annexes, and processes to address such gaps; conduct training and exercises to address such gaps; and conduct exercises, including at locations such as mass gathering venues, places of worship, or educational institutions, as appropriate, to validate capabilities. DHS shall aggregate, analyze, and share with relevant emergency response providers information on best practices and lessons learned from: (1) the planning, training, and exercises conducted using program grants; and (2) responses to actual terrorist attacks around the world.

AI Summary

This bill, the Community Counterterrorism Preparedness Act, amends the Homeland Security Act of 2002 to require the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to establish a grant program for emergency response providers in major metropolitan areas. The program aims to help these providers prevent, prepare for, and respond to emerging terrorist attack scenarios, such as complex, coordinated attacks and active shooters. DHS will provide unclassified information on these scenarios and best practices for training and exercises. Jurisdictions that receive Urban Area Security Initiative funding can apply for these grants, which can be used to identify capability gaps, update plans, conduct training, and validate capabilities through exercises. DHS will also share information on best practices and lessons learned from the program and actual terrorist attacks worldwide.

Committee Categories

Military Affairs and Security

Sponsors (21)

Last Action

Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 122. (on 06/15/2017)

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