On June 30, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) announced fiscal year 2020 final allocations of $385 million for seven competitive preparedness grant programs to support state, local, tribal and territorial partners.  Among the seven is the Port Security Grant Program (PSGP), which this year is providing $28,319,541 to 28 U.S. port authorities to help protect critical port infrastructure from terrorism, enhance maritime domain awareness, improve port-wide maritime security risk management, and maintain or reestablish maritime security mitigation protocols that support port recovery and resiliency capabilities.

According to FEMA, the agency gave priority consideration for projects that enhance protection of soft targets/crowded places; enhance weapons of mass destruction and improvised explosive device prevention, detection, response and recovery capabilities; enhance cybersecurity; and address emergent threats, such as unmanned aerial systems.
The following is a statement by American Association of Port Authorities (AAPA) Government Relations Director and General Counsel Cary Davis on the value and importance of these grants to ports:
“The Port Security Grant Program protects our country, our workers, and our supply chains.  Ports large and small use these grants to stay vigilant, to ‘harden’ their facilities and networks, and to prepare for attacks.  Even though it’s grotesque and difficult, critical infrastructure ports are targeted daily by terrorists around the world.
Our understanding about what threats look like are evolving, and the PSGP is evolving, too.  Whether it’s attempted supply chain disruption, sophisticated and coordinated cross-border attacks, or novel cyber threats that transcend national borders, ports have security challenges like never before.
AAPA is proud to fight tooth-and-nail for this program in light of proposed cuts.
We thank Congress, FEMA, and the entire Department of Homeland Security for their tireless work on behalf of America’s maritime gateways.