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Boeing Co. Given $20 Million Contract to Beef up Surveillance on US/Canadian Border
Surveillance towers planned for Detroit, Buffalo
WASHINGTON - The U.S. Border Patrol is erecting 16 more video surveillance towers in Michigan and New York to help secure parts of the U.S.-Canadian border, awarding the contract to a company criticized for faulty technology with its so-called "virtual fence" along the U.S.-Mexico boundary.
The government awarded the $20 million project to Boeing Co., for the towers designed to assist agents stationed along the 4,000-mile northern stretch. Eleven of the towers are being installed in Detroit and five in Buffalo, N.Y., to help monitor water traffic between Canada and the United States along Lake St. Clair and the Niagara River.
The Boeing logo on a building in Huntington Beach, California.
(AFP/File/Robyn Beck) At present, Border Patrol agents are posted along the river to keep an eye on water traffic.
The cameras will be used to zoom in on a boat that left Canada, for instance, and watch where it goes and what it does, said Mark Borkowski, executive director of the Secure Border Initiative at Customs and Border Protection.
"So the idea is to have cameras watch, and then agents are freed up to respond," Borkowski said in an interview with The Associated Press. The cameras will cut down the agent's response time by minutes, he said.
Four similar video towers have already been erected in Buffalo. Security operations along the northern border include the use of unmanned aerial vehicles and coordination and intelligence sharing with local law enforcement.
Boeing is the firm responsible for a 28-mile stretch of technology erected along the U.S.-Mexico border near Tucson, Ariz., as part of the government's Secure Border Initiative. The company was widely criticized for delivering an inferior product.
Last year the government withheld some of the payment to Boeing because technology used in the test project near Tucson did not work properly. Boeing also was late in delivering the final product.
Borkowski said he is confident the Homeland Security Department, which oversees the Secure Border Initiative, will not run into the same problems it had with Boeing in the past.
Boeing spokeswoman Jenna K. McMullin said the company has "learned quite a bit from our previous SBInet experience and demonstrated how to implement lessons learned."
Deployment of the surveillance cameras will allow the Border Patrol to evaluate whether the technology can be effective in monitoring movement in often a cold-weather, river environment.
"We're committed to providing (Border Patrol) agents along the northern border with improved border security capabilities to enable them to do their jobs even better," said Steve Oswald, vice president of Boeing's Intelligence and Security Systems. "At the same time, the lessons learned from this deployment will contribute to even greater enhancements in the future."
Tim Sparapani, senior legislative counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union, said the Secure Border Initiative has been a disaster since its inception.
"The technologies don't work, they're not weather-resistant and they're certainly privacy invasive," Sparapani said. "Putting them in America's backyards only invades the privacy of Americans, it doesn't add to our security."
In a few cases, the Border Patrol will have to address land-use issues, such as determining whether the technology will hurt the environment, before installing the towers.
Borkowski acknowledged that as cameras pan an area it might point at a private residence. He said that is not the cameras' intended targets and the resolution of the video won't be clear enough for residents to be concerned about privacy issues. In addition, only law enforcement officials will be operating the cameras.
The Border Patrol says its 1,500 agents along the northern border were involved in the arrests of 7,925 individuals last year. During the same time, 705,005 people were arrested on the southwest border with Mexico, where 16,500 agents currently are assigned.
Generally, there is not as much traffic between northern border points of entry as there is along the southern border.
Borkowski said the additional technology on the northern border may not lead to more arrests. He said there are parts of the northern border that are vulnerable to terrorist and drug trafficking.
"What we don't know is how often that vulnerability is exploited," he said. "If, in fact, there's a lot more going on than we thought, then this technology will help us identify it and it will help us respond and apprehend those people in ways that we haven't before," he said.
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18 Comments so far
Show AllWant a good report on the virtual fence with Mexico? http://www.thedailyshow.com/video/index.jhtml?videoId=220620&title=Borderline-Cops
Jeez, why not cut out the middleman and just keep some predator drones in the air, armed with Hellfire missiles. Then we can blast a wedding party on a yacht and claim we foiled a terrorist plot, then later apologize and pay the families a thousand buck a head. It works in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Looks like just another welfare check to keep the stove lit down on the Lazy B Ranch. Move along, podner. Nuthin' to see here.
Pardon me, I may have missed my stop...where is Friendly Planet?
Surveillance towers? Stalags are always surrounded by guard towers.
Now, thanks to Boeing, we will have Stalag Detroit, Stalag Buffalo etc.
Predators and Hellfire!
Bombs bursting in air give proof through the nights
that now we have lost all of our rights!
Our taxes pay for the prisons we will soon occupy.
This is our burden for "safety."
Heckuva Job
Is this not getting a wee bit insane????........
It's more than un peu bit outrageous!
Oui See...(K)no(w)?
Is it true?
We were talking, here in Eugene at a "Sense of Place" seminar, more than a few years ago about the so-called plans to build a wall along the Mexican Border. I said, "Yeah, I heard that Halliburton has gotten the contract". Joanie replied, "yeah, and it's going to be built by Mexican labor"
American Friends Service Committee used to have a t-shirt for sale that said, "No one is illegal".
Should we survey the trafficking of alcohol, tobacco, and soda pop?
Hmmm...
Hugh michael misenti morin...
(aka as hue & hew)
Mike Morin
www.peoplesequityunion.blogspot.com
Another day, another worthless contract for somebody's connected friend.
Has anyone been along the northern Great lake borders? Has anyone been in the Canadian woods and along the prairies? Lake Superior alone is a wild inland sea, its margins frequently forested. And what about the border with Alaska? (You can see Russia from Alaska, so it is super dangerous). What are we expecting that could be detected by a few towers and cameras?
This is wrongheaded, unskilled and futile. China has a much better developed idea of modern warfare. Get everyone in debt to them, upset the balance of trade by selling toxic junk to the stupid enemy and undermine his consumer production, set up computer software that can invade anywhere, get information and bring any enterprise to a halt. It is a multi-faceted approach that weakens their rivals while enriching themselves. Brilliant (if you like war).
But whatever we say, most of our safety and security programs are about fear and contracts.
Joe
Tangentially related:
http://www.publicintegrity.org/articles/entry/1243
20 million dollars, what the hell do you think America is going to get for 20 million dollars from a defense contractor.
And why is it always the same company's winning contracts. When did Boeing become experts in video camera technology.
Are there no other company's in this country capable of government contracts except for the military industrial complex.
The good old boy network really pays in the USA. Land of opportunity, not it your the new kid on the block.Even if you have a better product.
BornFreeMen
Victim of good old fashioned human ground surveillance , 24/7 , since dec 2006. Hey , you cant get tortured or harassed by cameras like good old fashioned gang stalking.Tampa Florida, dont move to this stazi state if you value the constitution and your right to privacy, this state has sold its soul for being able to spy on its own residents.
Just another brick in the wall.
Beaver smuggling rings, women coming across the border to perform French translation, frostbacks sneaking into Detroit to take American jobs, it's a tough world out there.
These steps are great but let's do more in the west as well. Surely more cameras, more border agents and more electronic fences can be found to cover the western half of the northern border. We Canadians won't feel safe until all Americans are firmly ensconced in their country never to step one foot outside of it and that goes for all of their guns as well. Please keep them within your borders. We don't want or need them north of the 49th parallel. We actually don't need you either when you come right down to it, so build your fences fully realizing, of course, that while walls keep people out they are also used to imprison them.
Stop mining tar sands and you got a deal :-)
Borkowski sez: ""If, in fact, there's a lot more going on than we thought, then this technology will help us identify it ..."
***
Cool.
$20 million without any demonstrated need for it.
Imagine what kind of kickback these fine corporate citizens might have gotten if there was an actual use for their technology.
Who the hell wants to go to Detroit or Buffalo? They are turning into ghost towns anyway. All the action is in Vegas. It would be a lot more entertaining to string towers across Saskachewan and Alberta and then watch guards go snow blind and psychotic during the winter.
Ice fisherman beware! Uncle Sam will be watching you. This is beyond dumb. I hope the Canadians object. Folks in Windsor and Fort Erie will have to look at those towers. On a clear day, they'll be visible from the CN tower in Toronto. Will we build a thing of architectural beauty like the Eiffel Tower? No, just more ugliness to spoil the natural vistas of the waterways around Detroit, Niagars Falls, and Buffalo. And will the towers interfere with the traditional flyways of migrating birds?
Is this a make-work project? Who will benefit other than Boeing? Will they use Native American steelworkers to scale the high girders?
And I love Joe's comments about the forested, mountainous and grassland length of border--so unpopulated a rabbit has to carry his lunch.
Big Brother Obama