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Homeland
security plans hurt rural areas: Karen Johnson-Webb
Homeland security policy in the wake of 9/11 has been
crafted not only without due consideration of rural
areas, but also sometimes to their detriment, according
to a University researcher.
Take, for example, the impact of immigration policy
changes on the supply of physicians in rural America,
argues Karen Johnson-Webb, author of “A ‘One
Size Fits All’ Policy? A Geographical Perspective
on Rural Homeland Security,” a study that examines
what she calls “vitally and strategically important”
areas that have been neglected in the homeland security
discussion.
Previously, foreign graduates of American medical schools
could start practicing while awaiting completion of
paperwork for a student visa waiver. The waiver allows
them to practice in a medically underserved rural area
rather than return to their home country for two years,
as required by their visas.
Now, foreign doctors need to have the waiver in hand
before they can practice, a change that has “further
crippled an already underserved rural health care system,”
says Johnson-Webb, of the geography department and the
Center for Policy Analysis and Public Service.
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Karen Johnson-Webb |
Some rural areas found it hard enough to attract doctors
before prospective candidates were given “more
hoops to jump through,” she says. Noting that
the effects ripple through quality of life in the affected
areas, she plans a survey of the 50 states to gauge
the change’s impact on the local level.
“This is critical to rural preparedness for terrorism,”
adds Johnson-Webb, who presented her preliminary findings
last year at a meeting of the Association of American
Geographers in New Orleans.
The concentration of agriculture and food producing
activities alone is enough to warrant consideration
of rural areas as strategically important, writes Johnson-Webb.
Crucial infrastructure also located in rural areas—including
dams, nuclear power plants, and portions of the nation’s
electrical grid and interstate highway systems—could
be prime terrorist targets as well, she says.
Yet, the federal government has reduced budgetary allocations
for agriculture and rural development to devote more
funds to homeland security, with most of that money
going to urban areas. In addition to leaving rural areas
with less for programs that help keep them viable, the
reductions demonstrate rural America’s disadvantage
in competitiveness for homeland security funding, Johnson-Webb
points out.
And President Bush didn’t offer any additional
funding in his recent State of the Union speech—an
omission that disappointed the BGSU researcher.
Another “serious and glaring issue,” she
says, is the unknown ownership of about 13,000 dams
among the roughly 77,000 listed in the 1999 National
Inventory of Dams. Also unknown, in the case of more
than 1,200 dams, was the hazard level to infrastructure
and population downstream should a breach occur. For
more than 550 dams, neither the owner nor the hazard
level was identified.
“These deficiencies must be corrected,”
according toJohnson-Webb. “A complete inventory
of dams is essential to the development of effective
national security planning.”
She began wondering how vulnerabilities differed in
urban and rural areas after attending Gov. Bob Taft’s
Ohio Homeland Security Summit in 2002.
“It’s a multifaceted issue, so it doesn’t
hurt to be looking at it from different angles,”
she maintains. “We need to be considering as many
scenarios as possible.”
She points out that if a catastrophic terrorist attack
occurs in an urban area, an exodus to rural areas is
possible, further straining emergency response and health
care capabilities in those areas. While applauding the
“tenacity and commitment” of both urban
and rural emergency responders, “a lot of them
would be in over their heads.”
“The first problem is funding, especially in rural
areas, and if that means we have to take the pinch somewhere
else, that’s what it means,” says Johnson-Webb,
who also advocates increased policy emphasis on Canadian
border security, including coordination with Indian
tribes to provide more patrols of tribal lands on the
border.
Homeland security is “not going to get done the
way it needs to get done without the funding,”
she continues. “The money is there for whatever
the president or powers that be want it to be there.”
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