Committee on

TRANSPORTATION

AND

INFRASTRUCTURE

U.S. House of Representatives

 

 

Democratic  News

 

Room 2163 Rayburn House Office Building

Washington, DC  20515

Telephone 202-225-4472

 

Rep. James L. Oberstar,

Ranking Democratic Member


For Immediate Release                                                                                                      Contact:  Jim Berard

Thursday, May 6, 2004                                                                                                                 (202) 225-4472

 

 

House Strongly Supports Stricter

Security Rules for Incoming Ships

 

Instructs conferees on Coast Guard authorization

 

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WASHINGTON—The House of Representatives is standing by language in its version of the Coast Guard authorization bill to require ships coming into U.S. ports to meet U.S. security standards.

 

By a nearly unanimous vote of 395-19, the chamber voted to instruct conferees to hold to the provision in the House bill that requires foreign-flag vessels serving the United States to have a security plan specifically approved by the Coast Guard.  The Coast Guard has been allowing foreign vessels to have a security plan approved by their home country government.  The Senate version of the bill would affirm the Coast Guard’s policy.

 

Congress included the security requirement when it passed the Maritime Transportation Security Act of 2002.  Shortly afterward, however, the Coast Guard agreed to amendments to the international Safety of Life at Sea Convention that, in effect, precludes the Coast Guard from reviewing the security plan of a ship entering U.S. waters if the plan has already been approved by the government of the country in which the ship is registered.

 

During debate on the motion, Rep. James L. Oberstar (Minn.), Ranking Democratic Member of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee and Rep. Bob Filner, Ranking Democrat on the Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Subcommittee, stressed the importance of the provision.  They pointed out that, for economy and convenience, many of these vessels are registered in small countries noted for their lax enforcement of maritime safety regulations.

 

 

 

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“The Coast Guard negotiated away the power of the U.S. to inspect the security plans approved by other countries and to see whether a vessel operating under a foreign flag is in compliance with the security plan of the country of registry of that vessel,” Oberstar said. 

 

“Look at some of the largest registries in the world, like Panama, Malta and Cyprus, and you will find vessels that are often detained by the Coast Guard for violations of international safety laws.  Now we expect those countries to protect U.S. citizens by making sure that their vessels have adequately implemented security plans,” Filner said.  “I, for one, am not willing to delegate our security responsibilities to the government of Panama, Malta or Cyprus.”

 

The motion received strong bipartisan support despite opposition from the Bush Administration. 

 

“Didn’t the President of the United States say, and hasn’t he said repeatedly, ‘I will never ask permission of the United Nations to defend the United States.  I will never ask permission of a foreign government to protect the citizens of the United States.  We are not going to ask for a permission slip,’” Oberstar said.  “This treaty is a permission slip.”

 

Oberstar said the basic issue is whether the U.S. will have the ability to see that incoming foreign-flagged ships were loaded in accordance with a security plan that meets our standards and protects our security.

 

“We do this already with aviation,” Oberstar said.  “Why can’t we do it for maritime?”

 

 

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