DATE=9/17/03
TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT
TITLE=RAIL DANGER
NUMBER=5-54302
BYLINE=MIKE O'SULLIVAN
DATELINE=LOS ANGELES
INTERNET=YES
CONTENT=
VOICED AT:
INTRO: A California security study says a key U-S rail link is vulnerable to terrorist attack. Mike O'Sullivan reports, the study of a busy rail line near Los Angeles says a shutdown would harm the U-S economy.
TEXT: The rail network south and east of the city is called the Alameda Corridor East, and it links the joint ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach to rail lines leading to Chicago and other parts of the country.
More than 100 billion dollars in goods moves through the corridor each year. U-S officials have designated the link, and 60-thousand kilometers of other U-S rail lines, as strategically important national assets. The lines ensure that the military can quickly move heavy equipment, such as armored vehicles, in the event of an emergency.
Christopher Becker heads the Orange North American Trade Rail Access Corridor, the public agency that oversees this California rail link. He says a 10-day disruption would cost more than four billion dollars, and that other lines like this one are at risk throughout the country.
/// BECKER ACT ///
Right now, across America, railroad tracks really are vulnerable. It's almost impossible to protect them all. And what our study is saying is that these vital strategic rail corridors that provide a lot of America's economic well-being need to have extra protection and extra vigilance by everybody in watching and monitoring.
/// END ACT ///
A 10-day shutdown of West Coast U-S ports last year foreshadowed the problems that would be encountered in a shutdown of the rail lines. The port closure, caused by a labor dispute, left automakers unable to get car parts and restaurant owners unable to get imported food and produce.
Wally Baker is senior vice president of the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corporation.
/// BAKER ACT ///
The West Coast saw about a billion dollars a day in value, and we saw that last for 10 days. We also saw a 30-day, maybe longer, rewinding period.
/// END ACT ///
He says a terrorist attack on the rail lines could potentially have a greater impact because the railways carry U-S goods between Southern California, a 300-billion dollar market, and other parts of the country.
/// SECOND BAKER ACT ///
We're looking at a terrorist incident, so then you're dealing with something that's far worse, because not only do you have something like a 415 million dollar a day impact, you're not just impacting international trade now; you're impacting domestic and international trade.
/// END ACT ///
The report's authors say police and firefighters often lack the training to deal with a derailment or other problems on the rail lines. Security analyst Elsa Lee, who contributed to the report, wants federal officials to conduct a risk assessment of the Los Angeles rail corridor.
She says there is a clear threat to the rail system from international groups like al-Qaeda, which have threatened to strike key parts of the U-S infrastructure.
/// LEE ACT ///
We believe that the threat of terrorism is real and is not perceived. That's based on a number of factors. That's based on declared threats from terrorist groups. It's based on terrorist acts that have taken place against rail systems overseas, and we believe that when terrorists make threats against our rail system, they have to be taking very seriously.
/// END ACT ///
She says there is also a threat from domestic terrorists, such as the radical environmental group Earth Liberation Front.
The report notes there are 230-thousand kilometers of rail lines in the United States and says security needs to be improved along key transit points. The report's authors suggest that a portion of customs revenues collected at the ports be used to finance the improvements. (Signed)
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