Sifting through crisis info
Provision in bill would set up research center to investigate ways technology could help agencies respond to crises
A Utah congressman's amendment to a bill approved last week by the House
Science Committee includes a provision to set up a research center to investigate
ways technology could help government agencies respond to crises.
Rep. Jim Matheson's (D-Utah) amendment to the Networking and Information
Technology Research Advancement Act provides up to $10 million a year over
the next five years for a Crisis Management Enabling Technology Center.
The center will study technical solutions to help agencies manage the large
amounts of information they receive during a crisis.
Technology could help process the information needed to make good decisions,
Matheson said at the markup hearing for the bill.
The National Science Foundation would lead an interagency group to establish
the center in partnership with a nonprofit organization or group. The center's
research into how IT can enhance agencies' performance during crises will
focus on several areas, including:
* Human/computer interface technologies.
* Network-based collaboration tools, including virtual situation rooms.
* Rapidly deployable, self-configuring wireless networks.
* Software to assist crisis managers in making decisions in the absence
of complete information.The center also will test how the technologies perform
under realistic conditions.
The committee passed the amendment easily as part of the bill Dec. 6,
with committee chairman Sherwood Boehlert (R-N.Y.) citing bipartisan support
for a measure that could help agencies make decisions during emergencies
and disasters, such as the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
NEXT STORY: Calling on local cybersleuths