A new bill introduced in Congress
authorizes the Department of Homeland Security to
set up a network of FEMA camp facilities to be
used to house U.S. citizens in the event of a
national emergency.
The National Emergency
Centers Act or HR 645 mandates the
establishment of “national emergency centers” to
be located on military installations for the
purpose of to providing “temporary housing,
medical, and humanitarian assistance to
individuals and families dislocated due to an
emergency or major disaster,” according to the
bill.
The legislation also states that
the camps will be used to “provide centralized
locations to improve the coordination of
preparedness, response, and recovery efforts of
government, private, and not-for-profit entities
and faith-based organizations”.
Ominously, the bill also states
that the camps can be used to “meet other
appropriate needs, as determined by the Secretary
of Homeland Security,” an open ended mandate which
many fear could mean the forced detention of
American citizens in the event of widespread
rioting after a national emergency or total
economic collapse.
Many credible forecasters have
predicted riots and rebellions in America that
will dwarf those already witnessed in countries
like Iceland and Greece.
With active duty military
personnel already being stationed inside the U.S.
under Northcom, partly for purposes of “crowd
control,” fears that Americans could be
incarcerated in detainment camps are all too
real.
The bill mandates that six
separate facilities be established in different
Federal Emergency Management Agency Regions (FEMA)
throughout the country.
The camps will double up as
“command and control” centers that will also house
a “24/7 operations watch center” as well as
training facilities for Federal, State, and local
first responders.
The bill also contains language
that will authorize camps to be established within
closed or already operating military bases around
the country.
As we have previously
highlighted, in early 2006 Halliburton subsidiary
Kellogg, Brown and Root was awarded a $385 million
dollar contract by Homeland Security to construct
detention and processing facilities in the event
of a national emergency.
The language of the preamble to
the agreement veils the program with talk of
temporary migrant holding centers, but it is made
clear that the camps would also be used “as the
development of a plan to react to a national
emergency.”
As far back as 2002, FEMA sought
bids from major real estate and engineering firms
to construct giant internment facilities in the
case of a chemical, biological or nuclear attack
or a natural disaster.
A much discussed and circulated
report, the Pentagon’s Civilian Inmate Labor
Program, was more recently updated and the
revision details a “template for developing
agreements” between the Army and corrections
facilities for the use of civilian inmate labor on
Army installations.”
Alex Jones has attended numerous
military urban warfare training drills across the
US where role players were used to simulate
arresting American citizens and taking them to
internment camps.
Read the new legislation in full
below.
National Emergency Centers
Establishment Act (Introduced in
House)
HR 645 IH
111th
CONGRESS
1st Session
H. R. 645 To direct the
Secretary of Homeland Security to establish
national emergency centers on military
installations.
IN THE HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES
January 22, 2009 Mr. HASTINGS of
Florida introduced the following bill; which was
referred to the Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure, and in addition to the Committee
on Armed Services, for a period to be subsequently
determined by the Speaker, in each case for
consideration of such provisions as fall within
the jurisdiction of the committee concerned
A BILL To direct the
Secretary of Homeland Security to establish
national emergency centers on military
installations.
Be it enacted by the Senate and
House of Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the
`National Emergency Centers Establishment
Act’.
SEC. 2. ESTABLISHMENT OF NATIONAL
EMERGENCY CENTERS.
(a) In General- In accordance
with the requirements of this Act, the Secretary
of Homeland Security shall establish not fewer
than 6 national emergency centers on military
installations.
(b) Purpose of National Emergency
Centers- The purpose of a national emergency
center shall be to use existing
infrastructure–
(1) to provide temporary housing,
medical, and humanitarian assistance to
individuals and families dislocated due to an
emergency or major disaster;
(2) to provide centralized
locations for the purposes of training and
ensuring the coordination of Federal, State, and
local first responders;
(3) to provide centralized
locations to improve the coordination of
preparedness, response, and recovery efforts of
government, private, and not-for-profit entities
and faith-based organizations; and
(4) to meet other appropriate
needs, as determined by the Secretary of Homeland
Security.
SEC. 3. DESIGNATION OF MILITARY
INSTALLATIONS AS NATIONAL EMERGENCY CENTERS.
(a) In General- Not later than 60
days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Secretary of Homeland Security, in
consultation with the Secretary of Defense, shall
designate not fewer than 6 military installations
as sites for the establishment of national
emergency centers.
(b) Minimum Requirements- A site
designated as a national emergency center shall
be–
(1) capable of meeting for an
extended period of time the housing, health,
transportation, education, public works,
humanitarian and other transition needs of a large
number of individuals affected by an emergency or
major disaster;
(2) environmentally safe and
shall not pose a health risk to individuals who
may use the center;
(3) capable of being scaled up or
down to accommodate major disaster preparedness
and response drills, operations, and
procedures;
(4) capable of housing existing
permanent structures necessary to meet training
and first responders coordination requirements
during nondisaster p eriods;
(5) capable of hosting the
infrastructure necessary to rapidly adjust to
temporary housing, medical, and humanitarian
assistance needs;
(6) required to consist of a
complete operations command center, including 2
state-of-the art command and control centers that
will comprise a 24/7 operations watch center as
follows:
(A) one of the command and
control centers shall be in full ready mode;
and
(B) the other shall be used daily
for training; and
(7) easily accessible at all
times and be able to facilitate handicapped and
medical facilities, including during an emergency
or major disaster.
(c) Location of National
Emergency Centers- There shall be established not
fewer than one national emergency center in each
of the following areas:
(1) The area consisting of
Federal Emergency Management Agency Regions I, II,
and III.
(2) The area consisting of
Federal Emergency Management Agency Region IV.
(3) The area consisting of
Federal Emergency Management Agency Regions V and
VII.
(4) The area consisting of
Federal Emergency Management Agency Region VI.
(5) The area consisting of
Federal Emergency Management Agency Regions VIII
and X.
(6) The area consisting of
Federal Emergency Management Agency Region IX.
(d) Preference for Designation of
Closed Military Installations- Wherever possible,
the Secretary of Homeland Security, in
consultation with the Secretary of Defense, shall
designate a closed military installation as a site
for a national emergency center. If the
Secretaries of Homeland Security and Defense
jointly determine that there is not a sufficient
number of closed military installations that meet
the requirements of subsections (b) and (c), the
Secretaries shall jointly designate portions of
existing military installations other than closed
military installations as national emergency
centers.
(e) Transfer of Control of Closed
Military Installations- If a closed military
installation is designated as a national emergency
center, not later than 180 days after the date of
designation, the Secretary of Defense shall
transfer to the Secretary of Homeland Security
administrative jurisdiction over such closed
military installation.
(f) Cooperative Agreement for
Joint Use of Existing Military Installations- If
an existing military installation other than a
closed military installation is designated as a
national emergency center, not later than 180 days
after the date of designation, the Secretary of
Homeland Security and the Secretary of Defense
shall enter into a cooperative agreement to
provide for the establishment of the national
emergency center.
(g) Reports-
(1) PRELIMINARY REPORT- Not later
than 90 days after the date of the enactment of
this Act, the Secretary of Homeland Security,
acting jointly with the Secretary of Defense,
shall submit to Congress a report that contains
for each designated site–
(A) an outline of the reasons why
the site was selected;
(B) an outline of the need to
construct, repair, or update any existing
infrastructure at the site;
(C) an outline of the need to
conduct any necessary environmental clean-up at
the site;
(D) an outline of preliminary
plans for the transfer of control of the site from
the Secretary of Def