Significantly increasing Security will cost significantly more $$$

Border protection gets largest chunk of $59B budget request

The largest chunk of the department’s proposed budget - 21 percent or nearly $12 billion - goes to U.S. Customs and Border Protection. The agency gets more money than it did this year with an increase of $240 million.

Border protection gets largest chunk of $59B budget request

The Washington Times

Monday, February 13, 2012

The seal of the Department of Homeland Securitymore >

The Department of Homeland Security’s total budget request for fiscal 2013 is just over $59 billion, a little less than the current year but almost $5 billion more than the 2011 level, according to government figures.

 

The largest chunk of the department’s proposed budget - 21 percent or nearly $12 billion - goes to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the agency that guards the nation’s entry ports and frontiers.

 

The agency is also one of the few that gets more money than it did this year with an increase of $240 million.

 

The Federal Emergency Management Agency and the U.S. Coast Guard get the next largest budgets at about $10 billion each. FEMA also will get the $2.9 billion in grants to distribute for state and local government disaster readiness programs, a $525 million increase over the current budget.

 

The department’s Science and Technology Division also gets a bump with an extra $163 million, bringing its funding to more than $830 million and restoring a big budget cut for this year.

 

The Transportation Security Administration, the fourth most-expensive agency at Homeland Security, gets 13 percent of the department’s planned spending, more than $7.5 billion.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which enforces immigration law inside the country, gets 10 percent of the budget, a little under $6 billion. It is a small reduction of about $200 million for each agency.

 

The budget also includes $769 million to improve the cybersecurity of the government’s nonmilitary computer networks and $117 million for scanners and other security technology at airports.

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Argumentation and Debate - 62242
Greg Vander Kooy
DEBATE 4
The US should NOT substantially increase security along the S. Border
Significantly increasing Security will cost significantly more $$$
In 20 years the Number of Border personnel have increased 700%
The budget continues to increase every year with no measurable effect
Substantially increasing security on the S Border will cause harms.
Tighter security at the borders does nothing to improve safety
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