Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Why Homeland Security can’t secure the homeland

- Tom Ridge Tom Ridge, a Republican twice-elected governor of Pennsylvan­ia, served as the first Secretary of Homeland Security.

On Sept. 11, 2001, terrorists attacked our nation, a manifestat­ion of evil. I wanted to join the effort to fight back. President George W. Bush called me to leave my post as Pennsylvan­ia’s governor to serve in the White House Office of Homeland Security. I will never forget going to Capitol Hill in April 2002 with draft legislatio­n to create DHS. All four leaders of Congress, Republican and Democratic alike, greeted me and said they would get this done.

In less than a year, legislatio­n was enacted that constitute­d the largest reorganiza­tion of the federal government since the joint system of command was conceived by our former military leaders after World War II. Monumental change was called for, and the results have been a stronger and safer America.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security first opened its doors on March 1, 2003. In those early days, we referred to our colleagues as plank holders. Every detail of standing up the new department required tremendous attention to detail and effort. We had challenges with our facilities, our budget, and congressio­nal jurisdicti­onal issues. Even today, as I keep in touch with people in the department all these years later, they face many of the same challenges.

If I have one regret 20 years later, it is that America is still without a 21st-century immigratio­n policy. This is not the fault of the department but lies with Congress and the many administra­tions that have come and gone — Republican and Democratic alike.

DHS oversees America’s immigratio­n system, yet it does so with one hand tied behind its back. Our nation remains unable to establish a modern and sustainabl­e immigratio­n policy because we have yet to find a way to deal with illegal immigratio­n at the southern border.

Both parties hold strong views on key components of immigratio­n policy. Hidden behind pointed rhetoric and outsize political posturing is the critical need to fashion an immigratio­n policy that secures the southern border, shows compassion to “Dreamers,” builds a foreign worker entry and exit system, provides H-2B visa cap relief, and resolves the fate of those who, while entering illegally, have been lawful and contributi­ng residents.

I have been pleading for such changes for more than 20 years now. It is well past time to govern.

As I have stayed in close contact with my successors and many of the men and women I served with originally at DHS, what has never changed is the department’s total commitment to protecting our citizens. I can say confidentl­y that the dedication of the public servants at DHS, with all of the pressures of a still-young agency, is unmatched in our federal government.

DHS remains the epicenter of so many of our nation’s most difficult security and political challenges, and yet, the men and women of DHS continue to serve our country with integrity and without complaint.

I am blessed to have served with our nation’s best, and I know that today’s DHS workers continue the tradition of selfless service to our nation.

I reach this 20-year anniversar­y with optimism that our department will continue to protect us from terrorists, help us recover from the challenges of nature, and deal smartly and compassion­ately with immigratio­n, despite the lack of a cohesive road map.

 ?? ?? Former Pa. Gov. Tom Ridge
Former Pa. Gov. Tom Ridge

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