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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Report to the Chairman, Subcommittee on Oversight of Government 
Management, the Federal Workforce, and the District of Columbia, 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate: 

August 2011: 

Homeland Security: 

Actions Needed to Improve Response to Potential Terrorist Attacks and 
Natural Disasters Affecting Food and Agriculture: 

GAO-11-652: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-652, a report to the Chairman, Subcommittee on 
Oversight of Government Management, the Federal Workforce, and the 
District of Columbia, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental 
Affairs, U.S. Senate. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The President issued Homeland Security Presidential Directive 
(HSPD)-9 in 2004 to establish a national policy to defend the food and 
agriculture systems against terrorist attacks, major disasters, and 
other emergencies. HSPD-9 assigns various emergency response and 
recovery responsibilities to the Departments of Agriculture (USDA), 
Health and Human Services (HHS), Homeland Security (DHS), and others. 
In addition, Emergency Support Function (ESF)-11 addresses the federal 
food and agriculture response during emergencies and is coordinated by 
USDA. GAO was asked to evaluate (1) the extent to which there is 
oversight of federal agencies’ overall progress in implementing HSPD-9; 
(2) the steps USDA has taken to implement its HSPD-9 responsibilities 
for response and recovery and challenges, if any; and (3) the 
circumstances under which USDA has coordinated an ESF-11 response and 
challenges it faces, if any. GAO reviewed key documents; surveyed 
states; and interviewed agency, state, and industry officials. 

What GAO Found: 

There is no centralized coordination to oversee the federal government’
s overall progress implementing the nation’s food and agriculture 
defense policy—HSPD-9. At one time, the White House Homeland Security 
Council and DHS took steps to gather and coordinate information about 
agencies’ efforts to implement HSPD-9, but no agency currently does 
so. Officials from the National Security Staff—-which now supports the 
Homeland Security Council—-told GAO that they will be looking for an 
opportunity to conduct an interagency review of HSPD-9, and DHS 
officials stated that Homeland Security Council leadership is 
important to ensure the success of their coordination efforts. Federal 
standards for internal control call for agencies to employ such 
activities as top-level review to help ensure that management’s 
directives are carried out and to determine if agencies are 
effectively and efficiently using resources. Because there is no 
centralized coordination to oversee agencies’ overall HSPD-9 efforts, 
the nation may not be assured that these crosscutting agency efforts 
are effective at reducing the vulnerability to, and impact of, major 
emergencies. 

USDA agencies have taken steps to implement the department’s HSPD-9 
response and recovery responsibilities. However, various challenges 
remain, such as critical research gaps, which could impede recovery 
from high-consequence plant diseases that could devastate the nation’s 
production of economically important crops. Also, USDA does not have a 
department-wide strategy for setting its priorities and allocating 
resources for implementing its numerous HSPD-9 responsibilities. 
Without such a strategy, USDA cannot be assured that its agencies are 
making progress to align with departmental priorities and that its 
HSPD-9 responsibilities are met. 

Since 2007, USDA has coordinated the federal ESF-11 response for about 
28 natural disasters, including hurricanes and floods. Although USDA 
and state officials GAO met with identified factors that contributed 
to the success of USDA’s response—such as having a single USDA 
coordinator to facilitate communication during ESF-11 emergencies—they 
also identified some challenges. For example, federal agencies’ 
responsibilities for disposing of animal carcasses following an 
emergency are unclear, which delayed previous disposal efforts and 
could pose a public health risk. Also, USDA has not consistently 
prepared after-action reports that summarize what went well and what 
needed improvement during an emergency response. Without preparing 
such reports for all ESF-11 responses, USDA managers may not have the 
necessary information to help ensure that past mistakes are not 
repeated. 

Figure: Livestock Stranded, Killed, and Buried as a Result of Natural 
Disasters: 

[Refer to PDF for image: 3 photographs] 

Sources: Clean Harbors (photo on left); USDA (photos in middle and on 
right). 

[End of figure] 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO’s nine recommendations include that (1) DHS resume efforts to 
coordinate agencies’ HSPD-9 implementation efforts, (2) USDA develop a 
department-wide strategy for implementing its HSPD-9 responsibilities, 
and (3) USDA ensure that after-action reports are completed. USDA, 
HHS, and DHS generally agreed with GAO’s recommendations. The National 
Security Staff stated they agree that a review of HSPD-9 is 
appropriate and will look for an opportunity to do so. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-652] or key 
components. For more information, contact Lisa Shames at (202) 512-
3841or shamesl@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

No Centralized Coordination Exists to Oversee Federal Agencies' 
Overall Progress in Implementing the Nation's Food And Agriculture 
Defense Policy: 

USDA Agencies Have Taken Steps to Implement the Department's Response 
and Recovery Responsibilities, but Challenges Remain: 

USDA Has Coordinated the Federal Food and Agriculture Response for 
Various Natural Disasters, but USDA, FEMA, and State Officials 
Identified Several Challenges: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Federal Agencies Roles and Responsibilities for Food and 
Agriculture Defense as Defined by HSPD-9: 

Appendix II: The 15 Emergency Support Functions (ESF), ESF 
Coordinators, and ESF Responsibilities: 

Appendix III: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Appendix IV: Seventeen Most Damaging Animal Diseases Identified for 
USDA's National Veterinary Stockpile: 

Appendix V: Survey of State and U.S. Territory Animal Health Officials: 

Appendix VI: Thirteen High-Consequence Plant Diseases with Completed 
Recovery Plans for USDA's NPDRS: 

Appendix VII: USDA List of 28 ESF-11 Activations between 2007 and 2011: 

Appendix VIII: Comments from the U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

Appendix IX: Comments from the Department of Health and Human Services: 

Appendix X: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

Appendix XI: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Departments, Agencies, and Offices Interviewed: 

Table 2: Organizations Interviewed: 

Table 3: State Agencies Interviewed: 

Abbreviations: 

APHIS: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service: 

ARS: Agricultural Research Service: 

CDC: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: 

DHS: Department of Homeland Security: 

EPA: Environmental Protection Agency: 

ESF: Emergency Support Function: 

FDA: Food and Drug Administration: 

FEMA: Federal Emergency Management Agency: 

FSIS: Food Safety and Inspection Service: 

HHS: Department of Health and Human Services: 

HSPD: Homeland Security Presidential Directive: 

NPDRS: National Plant Disease Recovery System: 

NVS: National Veterinary Stockpile: 

OHSEC: Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Coordination: 

USDA: U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

August 19, 2011: 

The Honorable Daniel K. Akaka: 
Chairman: 
Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management, the Federal 
Workforce, and the District of Columbia: 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

Dear Mr. Chairman: 

Agriculture is critical to public health and the nation's economy. It 
annually produces $300 billion worth of food and other farm products, 
provides a major foundation for prosperity in rural areas, and is 
estimated to be responsible for 1 out of every 12 U.S. jobs. As a 
result, any natural or deliberate disruption of the agriculture or 
food production systems--including natural disasters, disease 
outbreaks, and food contamination--can present a serious threat to the 
national economy and human health and can halt or slow trade. For 
example, initial estimates found that Hurricane Katrina caused $882 
million in total crop, livestock, and aquaculture losses in the 
Southeast and interrupted the flow of poultry, milk, and other 
agricultural products to markets. The food and agriculture systems are 
also vulnerable to terrorist attacks, such as the intentional 
introduction of a foreign animal or plant disease or the intentional 
contamination of food products. While the U.S. food and agriculture 
systems have yet to experience such an attack, the congressionally 
established bipartisan Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass 
Destruction Proliferation and Terrorism reported in 2010 that the 
nation is seriously lacking in its capability to rapidly respond to a 
natural or intentional biological threat and gave the nation a failing 
grade in this area.[Footnote 1] 

Recognizing the vulnerability of the U.S. food and agriculture 
systems, the President issued Homeland Security Presidential Directive 
(HSPD)-9 in January 2004 to establish a national policy to defend the 
food and agriculture systems against terrorist attacks, major 
disasters, and other emergencies. HSPD-9 assigns federal agencies 
responsibilities to enhance the nation's preparedness for food and 
agriculture emergencies. For example, HSPD-9 assigns the U.S. 
Department of Agriculture (USDA) responsibility for four efforts 
related to emergency response and recovery, including as co-lead with 
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) on enhancing 
recovery efforts. See appendix I for detailed information on agencies' 
roles and responsibilities under HSPD-9. 

Separately, in 2004, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) created 
the National Response Plan--which in 2008 was replaced by the National 
Response Framework. The framework outlines how the nation will 
collectively respond to any emergency, natural or man-made, regardless 
of its cause or size. Specifically, according to this document, during 
an emergency, state and local governments typically take the lead in 
response efforts, and the federal government can provide assistance if 
states become overwhelmed or require additional capabilities. The 
framework includes 15 emergency support functions (ESF) for a federal 
response to an emergency, as well as federal support to states during 
an emergency (see appendix II for a list of all 15 ESFs). DHS 
activates individual ESFs when a threat or emergency necessitates a 
specific type of coordinated federal response. For example, during 
Tropical Storm Fay in 2008, DHS activated multiple ESFs, including ESF-
5 to support evacuations, ESF-8 to assess the health care 
infrastructure, and ESF-12 to monitor fuel and traffic. ESF-11 
specifically addresses the federal food and agriculture response 
during emergencies, and USDA is designated as the coordinator. 

In 2005, we reported that the United States faces several complex 
challenges--including the inability to deploy vaccines within 24 hours 
of a disease outbreak--that limit its ability to quickly and 
effectively respond to a widespread attack on agriculture.[Footnote 2] 
In addition, for more than a decade, we have reported on the 
fragmented nature of federal food safety oversight and have found that 
it results in inconsistent oversight, ineffective coordination, and 
inefficient use of resources. In 2007, we added food safety to our 
list of high-risk areas that warrant attention by Congress and the 
executive branch. Our biennial reviews of high-risk issues in 2009 and 
2011 concluded that fragmentation of federal food safety oversight 
continues to be a problem.[Footnote 3] We have made several 
recommendations on this issue, including recommending that agencies 
develop a government-wide performance plan for food safety that 
includes results-oriented goals and performance measures, as well as 
information about strategies and resources.[Footnote 4] 

This report responds to your request for a review of the nation's food 
and agriculture defense policy and ESF-11. Our objectives were to (1) 
evaluate the extent to which there is oversight of federal agencies' 
overall progress in implementing the nation's food and agriculture 
defense policy; (2) evaluate the steps USDA has taken to implement its 
response and recovery responsibilities outlined in this policy, and 
identify challenges, if any, that the department faces in implementing 
these responsibilities; and (3) identify the circumstances under which 
USDA has coordinated the federal food and agriculture response for an 
emergency for which ESF-11 was activated and challenges, if any, that 
the parties involved experienced. 

To evaluate the extent to which there is oversight of federal 
agencies' overall progress in implementing HSPD-9, we reviewed 
presidential directives and compared federal efforts with those 
outlined in the Standards for Internal Control in the Federal 
Government.[Footnote 5] We also interviewed officials from USDA, DHS, 
HHS, and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)--because these 
agencies have the most responsibilities under HSPD-9--and analyzed 
progress reports these agencies provided to the Homeland Security 
Council. 

To evaluate the steps USDA has taken to implement its response and 
recovery responsibilities outlined in HSPD-9 and identify whether it 
encountered any implementation challenges, we reviewed relevant laws, 
regulations, and presidential directives, as well as federal guidance, 
planning, and implementation documents. We interviewed officials from 
various USDA agencies responsible for implementing the department's 
response and recovery responsibilities, and we interviewed relevant 
officials from DHS, HHS, and EPA regarding USDA's interagency 
coordination efforts. Moreover, we conducted a survey of animal health 
officials from all 50 states and 5 U.S. territories. The survey 
gathered information about states' and U.S. territories' experiences 
working with USDA regarding the National Veterinary Stockpile (NVS), 
the nation's repository of resources for responding to outbreaks of 
the most damaging animal diseases. We received responses from 52 of 55 
animal health officials surveyed, for an overall response rate of 95 
percent. We also conducted interviews in person or via telephone with 
agriculture officials from a nonprobability sample of three states 
about their experiences working with USDA--Iowa, Mississippi, and 
Texas--selected, in part, because USDA officials told us that these 
states used resources from the NVS for animal-related emergencies. In 
addition, we conducted interviews with representatives of industry 
associations for the top five U.S. agricultural commodities--cattle 
and calves, corn, soybeans, dairy products, and broiler chickens--
about the impact of USDA's food and agriculture emergency response and 
recovery efforts on industry. 

To identify the circumstances under which USDA has coordinated the 
federal food and agriculture response during an emergency for which 
ESF-11 was activated, and if the parties involved experienced any 
challenges, we reviewed relevant agency documents, including ESF-11 
and key documents from ESF-11 activations. We also interviewed 
relevant officials from USDA and DHS. Moreover, we conducted 
interviews in person or via telephone with agriculture officials from 
Iowa, Massachusetts, Mississippi, and Texas--selected largely because 
(1) these states have experienced at least one emergency for which ESF-
11 was activated, (2) USDA conducted on-the-ground activities in these 
states in response to these emergencies, and (3) of their geographic 
locations--about their experience working with USDA and DHS during 
previous ESF-11 emergencies. We also requested and reviewed 
information from USDA and DHS related to the number of times ESF-11 
has been activated and found that the data are not sufficiently 
reliable for reporting purposes. We are making a recommendation 
regarding this finding. Additional details about the objectives, 
scope, and methodology of our review are presented in appendix III. 

We conducted this performance audit from June 2010 to August 2011, in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Background: 

Four federal agencies have most of the responsibility under the 
response and recovery category of HSPD-9USDA, DHS, HHS, and EPA. Each 
of these four agencies also conducts additional activities to support 
and protect the food and agriculture systems as follows: 

* USDA's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Coordination 
(OHSEC) coordinates USDA's disaster management and emergency planning 
response activities and has responsibility for coordinating the 
department's HSPD-9 responsibilities. In addition, USDA's Animal and 
Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) is responsible for issuing 
orders and regulations to prevent the introduction or dissemination of 
animal and plant pests and diseases. USDA's Food Safety and Inspection 
Service (FSIS) is responsible for the safety of meat, poultry, and 
processed egg products. Moreover, USDA's Agricultural Research Service 
(ARS) is the department's chief research agency, conducting research 
on agricultural problems of high national priority. Additionally, 
USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service administers a number of 
programs that encourage conservation, development, and productive use 
of the nation's land. 

* DHS is responsible for coordinating the overall national effort to 
protect the nation's critical infrastructure--including agriculture-- 
from terrorist attacks, major disasters, and other large-scale 
emergencies. DHS's Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA) 
mission is to provide response to emergencies and major disasters, 
such as those arising from terrorist attacks and natural disasters, 
including managing the response, coordinating federal response 
resources, and aiding recovery. FEMA coordinates response support 
across the federal government by activating one or more ESFs. In 
addition, DHS's Office of Health Affairs provides medical, public 
health, and scientific expertise to prepare for, respond to, and 
recover from all hazards impacting the nation's health security. The 
Office of Health Affairs has been delegated responsibility for 
coordinating the department's HSPD-9 responsibilities. 

* In the event of an outbreak of a zoonotic disease--a disease that 
can be transmitted between humans and animals and could possibly kill 
both, such as highly pathogenic avian influenza--HHS's Centers for 
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) would become involved to help 
control the spread of the disease and minimize the impact of the 
outbreak. CDC also manages the Strategic National Stockpile, which 
contains such medical supplies as antibiotics and life-support 
medications to address public health emergencies affecting humans. 
Another HHS agency, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), is 
responsible for ensuring the safety of most other food that does not 
fall under USDA's jurisdiction, such as whole shell eggs, seafood, 
milk, grain products, and fruits and vegetables. FDA also approves 
human drugs, biologics (which include vaccines, blood and blood 
components, and tissues), and medical devices used in the Strategic 
National Stockpile and new animal drugs for treating disease in 
animals, including food-producing animals. 

* EPA's mission is to protect human health and the environment. 
Specifically for protecting the food and agriculture sector under HSPD-
9, EPA provides technical assistance and guidance on decontamination 
and disposal to the public and private sectors and authorizes the use 
of pesticides to prevent or mitigate crop and livestock pathogens and 
other pests and bio-agents that can be a threat to crop and food 
production. In addition, EPA is responsible for working with DHS, HHS, 
and USDA for developing and disseminating decontamination and disposal 
standards and model plans to be used during food and agriculture 
emergencies. 

In addition, the White House Homeland Security Council was established 
by executive order in 2001 to ensure coordination of the homeland 
security-related activities of executive departments and agencies, as 
well as effective development and implementation of homeland security 
policies, such as HSPD-9. The Homeland Security Council advises the 
President and includes the Vice President and heads of some executive 
branch agencies.[Footnote 6] In May 2009, the President merged the 
Homeland Security Council with the National Security Council, a 
council that advises the President on national security and foreign 
policy matters. The White House National Security Staff now supports 
both councils. The Homeland Security Council was maintained as the 
principal venue for interagency deliberations on issues that affect 
homeland security. 

USDA coordinates a federal food and agriculture response, among other 
things, when ESF-11 is activated. ESF-11 defines specific areas of 
federal response, including: 

* providing nutrition assistance, 

* responding to animal and plant diseases and pests, 

* ensuring the safety and security of the commercial food supply, 

* providing for the safety and well-being of household pets during an 
emergency response or evacuation, and: 

* protecting natural and cultural resources and historical properties. 
[Footnote 7] 

During an emergency, USDA may assist with response efforts through its 
normal day-to-day or statutory responsibilities. FEMA also has the 
authority to ask USDA, through a mission assignment, to conduct work 
outside of its general statutory authorities. A mission assignment is 
a reimbursable work order to other federal agencies to complete a 
specific task. 

No Centralized Coordination Exists to Oversee Federal Agencies' 
Overall Progress in Implementing the Nation's Food And Agriculture 
Defense Policy: 

There is no centralized coordination to oversee the federal 
government's overall progress in implementing responsibilities 
outlined in the nation's food and agriculture defense policy--HSPD-9. 
Because the responsibilities outlined in HSPD-9 cut across several 
different agencies, centralized oversight is important to ensure that 
agencies' efforts are coordinated to avoid fragmentation, efficiently 
use scarce funds, and promote the overall effectiveness of the federal 
government. Moreover, in our past work, we have offered approaches for 
better overseeing crosscutting programs, including improved 
coordination to ensure that program efforts are mutually reinforcing. 
Previously, the Homeland Security Council conducted some coordinated 
activities to oversee federal agencies' HSPD-9 implementation by 
gathering information from agencies about their progress, and DHS's 
Office of Health Affairs supported these activities by coordinating 
agencies' reporting of HSPD-9 implementation progress. However, the 
Homeland Security Council and DHS's efforts are no longer ongoing. 
Officials from EPA noted that although the Homeland Security Council's 
and DHS's oversight roles have not been consistent for the past few 
years, EPA and other agencies have used multi-agency working groups to 
coordinate food and agriculture emergency activities.[Footnote 8] It 
is unclear why the Homeland Security Council no longer gathers such 
information, but DHS noted that interest from agencies and the 
Homeland Security Council has decreased, and they no longer coordinate 
agencies' reporting of their HSPD-9 implementation progress. 

From 2007 to early 2009, the Homeland Security Council gathered status 
updates from agencies, which were a list of efforts agencies had 
undertaken to fulfill their HSPD-9 responsibilities. USDA, DHS, EPA, 
and HHS officials told us that the Homeland Security Council's efforts 
were valuable. For example, EPA officials told us it was valuable to 
interact with other agencies regarding HSPD-9 efforts, and HHS 
officials found the Homeland Security Council's consolidation of 
information across multiple agencies to be useful. However, USDA and 
DHS officials told us that the Homeland Security Council stopped 
requesting this information some time in late 2008 or early 2009. An 
official from the National Security Staff--which now supports the 
Homeland Security Council--confirmed that the National Security Staff 
is not currently conducting an interagency review of HSPD-9 but will 
be looking for an opportunity to do so. 

In addition, in 2008 the Homeland Security Council tasked DHS with 
creating an online forum intended to enable agencies to share 
information that coordinated their HSPD-9 efforts.[Footnote 9] 
According to DHS officials, the forum was intended to replace the 
status updates that agencies were providing to the Homeland Security 
Council and would allow Homeland Security Council and department 
officials to efficiently view agencies' implementation progress in a 
consistent manner. DHS officials told us that agencies' initial 
participation in the development of the online forum was strong, but 
participation declined after the Homeland Security Council's 
leadership on HSPD-9 implementation diminished in 2009. These DHS 
officials also noted that the Homeland Security Council's support of 
the online forum was beneficial and encouraged other agencies to 
participate. USDA officials told us that the online forum would be 
useful if agencies were given resources to contribute and maintain 
information included in the forum. EPA and HHS officials, however, 
told us that they did not find the forum to be useful and were 
concerned about how DHS would use the information shared through the 
forum. According to DHS officials, DHS has the authority to coordinate 
HSPD-9 implementation, as HSPD-9 states that the Secretary of Homeland 
Security will "lead, integrate, and coordinate implementation efforts 
among Federal departments and agencies." DHS officials told us that in 
2009 during the change of presidential administrations, the department 
"paused" the interagency working group involved with developing the 
forum. According to these DHS officials, although the department 
continues to use the forum internally to monitor DHS's HSPD-9 
progress, agencies have not contributed information to the forum since 
that time. 

Under the federal standards for internal control, federal agencies are 
to employ internal control activities, such as top-level review, to 
help ensure that management's directives are carried out and to 
determine if agencies are effectively and efficiently using resources. 
[Footnote 10] Because there is currently no centralized coordination 
to oversee agencies' HSPD-9 implementation progress, it is unclear how 
effectively or efficiently agencies are using resources in 
implementing the nation's food and agriculture defense policy. As a 
result, the nation may not be assured that crosscutting agency efforts 
to protect agriculture and the food supply are well-designed and 
effectively implemented in order to reduce vulnerability to, and the 
impact of, terrorist attacks, major disasters, and other emergencies. 

USDA Agencies Have Taken Steps to Implement the Department's Response 
and Recovery Responsibilities, but Challenges Remain: 

USDA agencies have taken steps to implement the four HSPD-9 response 
and recovery efforts for which USDA has the lead responsibility, but 
various challenges remain. First, APHIS has developed the NVS but 
experiences complex implementation challenges. Second, ARS has taken 
steps to develop the National Plant Disease Recovery System (NPDRS), 
but implementation challenges remain. Third, various USDA agencies 
have taken steps to enhance food and agriculture recovery efforts, but 
critical challenges may affect recovery from animal disease outbreaks 
or food contaminations. Fourth, USDA submitted a required report on 
tools to help agriculture producers in the event of a terrorist attack 
to the Homeland Security Council but has not taken steps to address 
the report's recommendations. We also found that a common challenge 
affecting all four of these efforts is that USDA does not have a 
department-wide strategy for implementing HSPD-9. 

APHIS Developed the NVS to Respond to Outbreaks of Certain Animal 
Diseases but Experiences Complex Implementation Challenges: 

In 2006, APHIS began operating its NVS to respond to the 17 most 
damaging animal diseases, such as highly pathogenic avian influenza 
(see appendix IV for a list of the 17 diseases). Under HSPD-9, the 
Secretary of Agriculture is responsible for developing a stockpile 
containing sufficient resources to respond to the most damaging animal 
diseases affecting human health and the economy and deploying them 
within 24 hours of an outbreak. This responsibility grew out of a 
national concern that terrorists could simultaneously release animal 
diseases of catastrophic proportions that would quickly deplete state 
[Footnote 11] and industry resources and overwhelm the private sector. 
USDA assigned this responsibility to APHIS because of its mission to 
safeguard the health of the nation's animals against the introduction, 
reemergence, or spread of animal diseases. From 2006 through 2010, 
APHIS allocated approximately $33 million to develop the NVS and 
acquire critical resources to combat animal disease threats, including 
vaccines, diagnostic test kits, personal protective equipment, animal 
handling equipment, antiviral medication, and contracts for commercial 
support services--which are response companies that can quickly 
provide trained personnel with equipment to support states. According 
to the NVS business plan, deploying these resources within 24 hours 
after an outbreak would benefit states only if they knew how to 
request, manage, and use them. In light of this, APHIS has taken 
several steps to help prepare states to request and use NVS resources. 
For example, APHIS developed guidance and hired a full-time liaison 
to, among other things, help states develop a plan to manage these 
resources. 

[Side bar: 
Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza: 

[Photograph] 

Source: USDA. 

Highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses are associated with high 
morbidity and mortality in poultry and are considered foreign animal 
diseases because they rarely occur in the United States. Clinical 
signs in chickens include sudden death, lack of energy and appetite, 
decreased egg production, swelling of the head and eyelids (as 
depicted in photo above), nasal discharge, among others. Although 
primarily an avian disease, the H5N1 strain of the virus can infect 
humans and have severe economic consequences. For example, since 2003 
highly pathogenic avian influenza killed millions of wild and domestic 
birds worldwide and infected over 550 people, more than half of whom 
died. Spread of this virus has taken a major economic toll, costing 
East Asian economies an estimated $10 billion. According to the World 
Health Organization, controlling the virus in animals is the principal 
way to reduce opportunities for human infection and, therefore, reduce 
opportunities for a pandemic to emerge. End of side bar] 

Although APHIS has taken important steps to develop the NVS, complex 
implementation challenges remain. For example, according to USDA 
management officials, although the NVS has acquired various resources 
to respond to each of the 17 most damaging animal disease threats, 
resource gaps exist for some of the diseases for a variety of reasons. 
Some vaccines and diagnostic test kits, for example, have not yet been 
developed for certain diseases or may be too costly for the NVS to 
purchase. In addition, APHIS officials told us that although they have 
the capability to deploy certain resources within 24 hours--as 
required by HSPD-9--it will take longer to deliver certain vaccines to 
states. We previously reported that because vaccines are not stored in 
a ready-to-use state, their delivery will take additional time. 
[Footnote 12] Our analysis of NVS documents indicates that 
manufacturers must first prepare such vaccines for use--a process that 
could take an additional 7 to 14 days, depending upon the vaccine. 
According to the NVS business plan, purchasing and maintaining 
vaccines with methods that minimize the costs of storage, maintenance, 
and expiration--such as by not storing them in a ready-to-use state--
is imperative to using existing funds wisely. In addition, more than 
half of state and U.S. territory animal health officials responding to 
our survey reported that they are concerned the NVS may not be able to 
deploy its vaccines within 24 hours of an outbreak (see app. V for the 
complete survey). In fact, state and U.S. territory animal health 
officials reported more concerns about NVS vaccines than any other 
resource available from the NVS. 

Another challenge is that the states may not be adequately prepared to 
receive and use NVS resources. Specifically, about three-quarters of 
state and territory animal health officials who responded to our 
survey reported that they have taken steps to create an NVS plan. 
About one-third of all the states and territories responding to our 
survey reported completing such a plan. According to NVS guidance, 
states need a plan to manage the distribution of NVS resources to 
ensure responders get what they need. Moreover, some of the states 
that lack such a plan have major cattle, hog, or poultry production. 
State and territory animal health officials who responded to our 
survey generally reported they have not completed a NVS plan because 
they lack sufficient personnel or financial resources. In addition, 
only 38 percent of state and territory animal health officials who 
responded to our survey reported that their state or U.S. territory 
has identified a physical location to manage the NVS resources APHIS 
would deploy in response to a disease outbreak. According to NVS 
guidance, it is "absolutely critical" that states identify locations 
from which they will manage NVS resources in advance of an outbreak; 
otherwise, states will not be able to adequately support responders. 
NVS officials are aware of states' progress in creating NVS plans and 
are developing a 5-year training and exercise strategy to help 
overcome this problem. According to APHIS officials, this strategy is 
designed to enhance the preparedness of federal, state, tribe, 
territory, and local governments to logistically respond to damaging 
animal disease outbreaks, which will improve the NVS program's ability 
to accomplish its mission and meet its goals. 

Further, more than half of state and territory animal health officials 
reported concerns that APHIS has not shared sufficient information 
regarding the type or amount of NVS resources available. Without such 
information, states may be less able to adequately plan for using NVS 
resources or determine whether the resources would be sufficient or 
appropriate to meet their needs during an emergency. For example, one 
official reported that planning efforts are "futile" unless states 
know what is available from the NVS. APHIS officials told us they did 
not share this information in the past for security reasons but that 
they are now developing a mechanism to securely share information 
about the type, but not the amount, of resources available in the NVS 
with states and territories. APHIS officials told us they will 
continue to not share information regarding the quantity of resources 
available for security reasons. 

Moreover, APHIS and CDC have taken some steps to help the NVS leverage 
the mechanisms and infrastructure of CDC's Strategic National 
Stockpile. HSPD-9 states that the "NVS shall leverage where 
appropriate the mechanisms and infrastructure that have been developed 
for the management, storage, and distribution of the Strategic 
National Stockpile." According to APHIS and CDC officials, the two 
agencies have collaborated since the inception of the NVS. For 
example, CDC officials told us that they provided the NVS technical 
assistance and shared lessons learned, operational plans, and guidance 
documents. In addition, in February 2011, APHIS and CDC officials met 
to discuss collaboration between the two stockpiles, including the 
possibility of sharing resources, such as transportation, warehousing, 
and state and local resources used for the receipt and distribution of 
Strategic National Stockpile assets. However, according to CDC 
officials, no additional opportunities for resource sharing have been 
identified to date. Furthermore, CDC officials told us that it is 
inappropriate, and may be too costly, for the NVS to further leverage 
the Strategic National Stockpile because of differences in their 
missions. Specifically, they told us that the mission of the Strategic 
National Stockpile is to save human life and requires a 12-hour 
response time or quicker, whereas the mission of the NVS is to 
minimize the economic impact of an animal disease outbreak and allows 
a longer 24-hour response time. 

Despite these steps to collaborate, there appears to be some confusion 
about the details of each stockpile's mission and infrastructure that 
may be impeding the agencies' efforts to further leverage the 
stockpiles. For example, according to APHIS officials, opportunities 
exist for the NVS to use the same state inventory management system 
developed by the Strategic National Stockpile so that states do not 
have to understand and maintain multiple systems to manage resources 
they would receive from either stockpile during an emergency. 
According to an APHIS official responsible for state coordination, 
managing separate systems is neither cost effective nor efficient. 
Having two separate systems requires additional costs for maintenance, 
training, and technical support. However, according to CDC officials, 
the Strategic National Stockpile does not currently provide an 
inventory management system for state use. Instead, states use their 
own systems to meet their particular needs for managing Strategic 
National Stockpile provided inventory. Moreover, CDC officials told us 
there is no need to share inventory management systems, because as 
they understood it, the NVS does not send any resources to states; 
instead, CDC officials said the NVS sends commercial support services 
directly to farms to respond to disease outbreaks. This is counter to 
NVS planning guidance, which asserts that states must have an 
inventory management system in place to manage the "massive resources" 
they will receive from the NVS and that their system should be 
operational before the first shipment of resources arrives. When 
commenting on a draft of this report, however, HHS officials stated 
that the agency is in the process of developing an inventory 
management system for state and federal use during an emergency. HHS 
officials also told us that this system could potentially prove useful 
to state officials who might receive or manage resources from the NVS 
and that CDC has offered to provide NVS access to the system after it 
is developed. 

In addition, APHIS and CDC officials disagree about whether additional 
resources from the Strategic National Stockpile can be leveraged. 
Specifically, APHIS officials told us that opportunities exist to 
leverage antiviral medication contained in the Strategic National 
Stockpile. For example, a senior NVS official told us that both 
stockpiles would use the same antiviral medication to protect humans 
during an emergency and should explore opportunities to leverage 
similar resources. In fact, this official told us that if the NVS's 
existing inventory of antiviral medication expires or is depleted, 
additional supplies are available from the Strategic National 
Stockpile. CDC officials told us, however, that the vast majority of 
the antiviral medications contained in the Strategic National 
Stockpile are pre-allocated for states and that it is inappropriate 
for the NVS to leverage antiviral medications from the Strategic 
National Stockpile. CDC officials also told us that the NVS could 
easily purchase the antiviral medication on the commercial market at a 
lower cost than the comprehensive cost of developing an interagency 
agreement. However, according to HHS's pandemic influenza plan, demand 
for antivirals during an influenza pandemic is likely to "far 
outstrip" supplies available in stockpiles or through usual channels 
of distribution. This was observed during the 2009 H1N1 influenza 
pandemic when the Strategic National Stockpile had to release 
antiviral medications for young children in response to state and 
local shortages. Supply and demand imbalances are not limited to 
influenzas. For example, this imbalance was recently observed 
following the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Japan that resulted 
in the release of radiation from damaged nuclear reactors. 
Specifically, FDA reported increased demand for potassium iodide--the 
only FDA-approved medication available to treat contamination with 
radioactive iodine--and media reported that manufacturers struggled to 
keep up with the sudden increase in demand, and, in some cases, supply 
of the product ran out. We have previously reported on challenges 
associated with leveraging CDC's Strategic National Stockpile 
capabilities and infrastructure for the NVS. Specifically, in 2007 we 
reported that NVS officials told us that in order to prevent 
duplication of efforts and limit costs, the best strategy for the NVS 
to acquire antiviral medication to protect responders from highly 
pathogenic avian influenza would be to gain access to antiviral 
medication in the Strategic National Stockpile.[Footnote 13] Four 
years later, APHIS and CDC officials continue to disagree on this 
issue. 

APHIS and CDC officials have collaborated since the inception of the 
NVS, but as we discussed, confusion and disagreement may be impeding 
efforts to further identify leveraging opportunities. With no formal 
agreement regarding if and when it is appropriate for the NVS to 
leverage the mechanisms and infrastructure developed for the Strategic 
National Stockpile, USDA and HHS may miss opportunities to more 
effectively utilize federal and state resources. 

ARS Has Taken Steps to Develop a NPDRS, but Implementation Challenges 
Remain: 

USDA's ARS has taken steps to develop the NPDRS, which is a system 
intended to help the nation recover from high-consequence plant 
disease outbreaks--outbreaks that could devastate the nation's 
production of economically important crops. Under HSPD-9, the 
Secretary of Agriculture is responsible for developing a NPDRS capable 
of, among other things, responding to high-consequence plant diseases 
within a single growing season by using resistant seed varieties and 
disease control measures, such as pesticides. From 2005 through 2010, 
ARS allocated approximately $10.6 million to the development of the 
NPDRS. According to the 2010 NPDRS draft strategic plan, which 
officials expect to finalize in summer 2011, ARS's principal method 
for fulfilling this responsibility is to develop an estimated 30 to 50 
recovery plans for select high-consequence plant diseases that may 
enter the United States. Thus, from 2005 through 2010, ARS allocated 
about $1.1 million (10.8 percent) of NPDRS funds to develop recovery 
plans and assigned responsibility for developing the plans to its 
Office of Pest Management Policy--which integrates USDA's activities 
related to pest management, among other things. As of May 2011, ARS's 
Office of Pest Management Policy has completed 13 plans (see appendix 
VI for a description of the plant diseases with completed recovery 
plans), all of which address the use of disease control measures and 
resistant seed varieties. According to NPDRS documents, each recovery 
plan is intended to provide a brief primer on the plant disease and 
identify research gaps and priorities, among other things. For 
example, the NPDRS recovery plan for stem rust of wheat--one of the 
most devastating plant diseases worldwide, which threatens wheat and 
barley production--states that current understanding of the disease is 
based largely on 50-year-old data that must be reexamined and 
identifies 13 specific areas that require updated research. According 
to ARS officials, updated research is needed to improve understanding 
of stem rust in the context of contemporary cropping practices, wheat 
varieties, and diseases. 

[Side bar: 
Stem Rust of Wheat: 

[Photograph] 

Source: Agricultural Research Service, USDA. 

According to the NPDRS recovery plan for stem rust of wheat, the 
disease occurs wherever wheat is grown and has been one of the most 
devastating plant diseases worldwide. In 1999, a new strain of the 
disease was reported in Uganda. The new strain is able to cause 
disease on previously resistant wheat cultivars, and USDA is concerned 
that it will be introduced into the United States—thereby threatening 
wheat and barley production. Although stem rust has been effectively 
controlled in the United States for the past 50 years, previous 
outbreaks have been costly to producers. For example, according to the 
NPDRS recovery plan, total production losses due to stem rust in 
Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota in 1935, 1953, and 1954 were 
estimated at over 250 million bushels, which represents nearly $3.7 
billion (adjusted to 2009 dollars). End of side bar] 

In addition to developing recovery plans, ARS uses NPDRS funds for 
research purposes. ARS officials told us that the NPDRS program 
provides a flexible source of funding to help ARS initiate research on 
new, emerging plant disease problems as they arise. Thus, from 2005 
through 2010, ARS allocated over $7 million of NPDRS funds to conduct 
research on the two plant diseases that, according to ARS officials, 
currently pose the greatest threat to the U.S. food and agriculture 
systems soybean rust[Footnote 14] and stem rust of wheat. According to 
a senior ARS official, these research funds were used to implement 
national USDA action plans and conduct research that addressed the 
highest priority needs included in the NPDRS recovery plans for these 
two high-consequence plant disease threats. 

Despite these efforts, important challenges related to the NPDRS 
remain. For example, although the Office of Pest Management Policy 
spent resources developing recovery plans that identified critical 
research gaps, ARS officials told us the agency lacks resources and a 
process to fill these gaps. According to ARS officials, they rely on a 
variety of entities--including ARS, other federal agencies, state 
governments, land grant universities, and the private sector--to 
conduct research on high-consequence plant diseases that may fill 
research gaps identified in the recovery plans. However, ARS does not 
have a systematic process for tracking research conducted or under way 
that may fill the gaps identified in the NPDRS recovery plans. Without 
a documented, systematic process to monitor the extent to which 
research gaps are filled, USDA may not have critical information 
needed to help the nation recover from high-consequence plant disease 
outbreaks. Moreover, NPDRS guidance states that recovery plans provide 
an opportunity to indicate where research dollars need to be 
concentrated in the future. 

ARS also has not effectively communicated the NPDRS to key 
stakeholders that need to know about these plant disease recovery 
plans. The NPDRS draft strategic plan states that recovery from high-
consequence plant diseases will require coordination between USDA and 
states. Moreover, according to USDA officials, several key officials 
should be aware of NPDRS recovery plans, including state plant 
regulatory officials and APHIS state plant health directors. However, 
of the five state plant regulatory officials, the five APHIS state 
plant health directors, and the two APHIS senior regional plant health 
officials we met with to discuss the NPDRS, all had limited or no 
knowledge about NPDRS recovery plans. ARS officials told us that they 
share information about the recovery plans with federal and state 
plant health officials through a variety of venues, including their 
public Web site. An ARS official responsible for developing NPDRS 
recovery plans acknowledged, however, that ARS needs to conduct 
additional outreach to and collaborate with states, including state 
department of agriculture officials. In addition, HHS officials told 
us that recovery from high-consequence plant diseases should also 
involve FDA because plants are a source of food and animal feed. 
Because recovery from high-consequence plant diseases will require 
effective coordination with state and federal plant health officials, 
without such efforts, USDA may miss opportunities to enhance the 
effectiveness of NPDRS recovery plans and ensure states have the 
information they need to facilitate recovery from high-consequence 
plant diseases. 

USDA Agencies Have Taken Steps to Enhance Recovery, but Challenges 
Could Affect Recovery from Animal Disease Outbreaks or Food 
Contaminations: 

Various agencies within USDA have taken steps in response to HSPD-9 to 
enhance recovery from food and agriculture emergencies. According to 
HSPD-9, the Secretary of Agriculture--along with the Secretary of HHS--
is responsible for enhancing recovery efforts that "rapidly remove and 
effectively dispose of contaminated food and agriculture products or 
infected plants and animals, and decontaminate premises." The 
following includes steps USDA agencies have taken, in coordination 
with other agencies, to fulfill this responsibility: 

* Several USDA agencies--including APHIS, FSIS, and ARS--and FDA 
participated in a 2005 EPA-led effort that produced guidance on 
federal roles and responsibilities for disposing of contaminated 
animals, crops, and food products and decontaminating affected areas 
in order to prevent the spread of disease. 

* FSIS, in conjunction with FDA and EPA, prepared guidelines for the 
disposal and decontamination of intentionally adulterated food 
products. 

* APHIS is co-leading an interagency working group for the White House 
National Science and Technology Council[Footnote 15] Committee on 
Homeland and National Security that, among other things, identifies 
research gaps for depopulating--or slaughtering--and disposing and 
decontaminating of diseased animals. In the event of a foreign animal 
disease outbreak, depopulation, disposal, and decontamination services 
are an essential part of the response and recovery effort because 
USDA's traditional strategy to eradicate a foreign animal disease is 
to depopulate all susceptible animals. 

* USDA's Rural Development--an agency whose mission is to improve the 
economy and quality of life in rural America--is participating in a 
federal multiagency effort to draft a recovery framework that will 
outline federal activities to support community recovery by, for 
example, identifying resources, capabilities, and best practices for 
recovering from a disaster. 

* APHIS is partnering with universities, states, and industry to 
develop continuity of business plans for some animal disease 
emergencies. The purpose of these plans is to (1) help ensure that 
certain live animals and food products can be safely moved through an 
affected area to market, (2) maintain industry viability, and (3) 
ensure a steady supply and source of food to consumers. 

Although HHS has co-lead on this HSPD-9 responsibility to enhance 
recovery, and FDA has responsibility for ensuring the safety of 
roughly 80 percent of the food supply, HHS officials informed us that 
FDA has a "small role in recovery efforts" in agriculture or food 
emergencies. According to FDA officials, in addition to the two 
efforts noted above, FDA took other steps to enhance recovery efforts; 
however, they noted that these efforts were not taken in direct 
response to HSPD-9. For example, in response to the draft of the 
National Disaster Recovery Framework, HHS set up a HHS Recovery 
Working Group, of which FDA is a member, to discuss specific actions 
that would take place in a recovery effort. 

However, federal, state, and industry officials we spoke with also 
identified challenges related to these efforts that could affect the 
nation's ability to recover from a catastrophic animal disease 
outbreak, including the following challenges with depopulation of 
livestock, carcass disposal, and decontamination: 

Depopulation of livestock. According to APHIS and industry officials, 
there may not be sufficient workforce capacity to depopulate animals 
quickly in the event of a catastrophic disease outbreak. For example, 
APHIS officials told us that it could take as long as 80 days to 
depopulate a single feedlot--a concentrated feeding area for cattle 
that typically contains about 100,000 animals. Agencies' concerns 
regarding the enormity of the workforce response and the coordination 
required to manage a large-scale outbreak has surfaced in our prior 
work.[Footnote 16] 

Carcass disposal. Carcass disposal can present multiple challenges 
during a catastrophic disease outbreak, according to federal, state, 
and industry officials. Specifically, a highly contagious animal 
disease such as foot-and-mouth disease can result in the depopulation 
of millions of animals in order to control the spread of the disease. 
According to USDA guidance, effective disposal of animal carcasses and 
materials is a key component of a successful foot-and-mouth disease 
response. In the event of an outbreak, foot-and-mouth disease- 
susceptible animals should be disposed of within 24 hours. In 
addition, it must be done in a manner that does not allow the virus to 
spread and minimizes negative environmental effects, among other 
things. Although burial has traditionally been the preferred method 
for disposal, USDA officials told us that this may not be feasible on 
a large scale because, among other things, the operation is labor 
intensive. A joint federal, state, and industry exercise testing 
capabilities to control a widespread foot-and-mouth disease outbreak 
supports this concern. During the exercise, it was determined that 
burying 70,000 cattle carcasses within 4 days was not possible. In 
addition, carcass burial may be limited by topography, soil type, soil 
depth to bedrock, and environmental regulations at all levels of 
government. Multiple methods of disposal will likely be needed to 
handle the large quantity of materials in need of disposal. 
Incineration, composting, and rendering may be viable alternatives. 
Rendering is a process by which carcasses are converted into products 
that are safe to use in animal feeds, and it is regulated by the 
states and FDA. According to USDA officials, the public health 
consequences of carcass burial on a large scale are unacceptable, as 
recent foot-and-mouth disease outbreaks in Japan, Korea, and the 
United Kingdom have shown. For example, the media reported groundwater 
contaminations in Korea near some burial sites of animal carcasses--
including near several schools--making the water unfit for human use. 
News reports stated that, under the pressure to respond to the 
outbreak, authorities may have failed to take the necessary 
precautions for safe burial, such as lining the pits with two layers 
of plastic sheeting, and other reports noted that some animals were 
buried alive as the supply of euthanasia drugs ran low. 

[Side bar: 
Foot-and-Mouth Disease: 

[2 photographs] 

Source: USDA. 

Foot-and-mouth disease is a highly contagious viral disease of cloven-
hoofed animals such as cattle, swine, and sheep. Infected animals 
develop a fever and blisters on their tongue, lips, and between their 
hooves. Many animals recover from a foot-and-mouth disease infection, 
but the disease leaves them debilitated and causes losses in meat and 
milk production. Foot-and-mouth disease does not have human health 
implications. It can be spread by animals, people, or materials that 
bring the virus into physical contact with susceptible animals. The 
disease is also considered a potential agent for agroterrorism. There 
has not been a foot-and-mouth disease outbreak in the United States 
since 1929; however, the disease is considered widespread in parts of 
Africa, Asia, Europe, and South America. According to USDA, a 2001 
outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in the United Kingdom resulted in 
the slaughter and disposal (pictured above) of millions of animals and 
economic losses conservatively estimated at $14.7 billion. Moreover, 
South Korea has recently been battling a major outbreak of foot-and-
mouth disease, which from November 2010 through January 2011 has 
resulted in the culling of 2.2 million livestock and the vaccinating 
of 12 million more, an effort which has cost around $1.6 billion. End 
of side bar] 

According to APHIS officials, one way to mitigate the depopulation and 
disposal resource concerns is to move away from the traditional 
strategy of eradicating certain diseases through depopulation and 
disposal. Officials said that this may be possible by increasing the 
use of vaccines for at-risk animals, which could minimize the number 
of animals that need to be depopulated. This would also reduce the 
need for disposal. USDA and DHS are conducting research to develop 
more effective vaccines that could be used against foot-and-mouth 
disease. In addition, USDA's November 2010 draft foot-and-mouth 
disease response plan includes options that take this vaccine policy 
approach into consideration. 

A potential new challenge with carcass disposal is that disposal roles 
and responsibilities may be unclear if the carcasses are contaminated 
with a foreign animal disease. USDA officials told us that although 
APHIS traditionally has authority under the Animal Heath Protection 
Act for carcass disposal when the carcasses are contaminated with a 
foreign animal disease,[Footnote 17] the recently enacted FDA Food 
Safety Modernization Act designates EPA as the lead agency, in 
coordination with USDA, HHS, and DHS, for developing and exercising 
decontamination and disposal standards and model plans to be used 
during food and agriculture emergencies, including a foreign animal 
disease outbreak.[Footnote 18] According to USDA officials, this issue 
could lead to confusion in the event of an outbreak. EPA officials 
told us that they are working with other agencies to discuss if and 
how the FDA Food Safety Modernization Act changes their understanding 
of the roles and responsibilities for carcass disposal. 

Decontamination. According to APHIS officials and subject matter 
experts, research gaps remain in the ability to decontaminate areas 
infected with disease, such as feedlots and poultry houses. For 
example, testing of disinfectants is generally done at room 
temperature and on hard, nonporous surfaces such as stainless steel, 
and not on porous surfaces commonly found on farms. APHIS officials 
said, however, that it is also necessary to test on more porous 
surfaces that may be found on farms--such as wood and soil--and at 
different temperatures. APHIS is working with Canadian officials to 
test at temperatures below freezing, and a White House interagency 
working group, which the agency leads, has drafted a research plan to 
address this and other gaps in decontamination and disposal. However, 
USDA officials told us that funding to support research is lacking. 
According to EPA officials, EPA has also done some limited testing on 
decontamination measures for foreign animal diseases. For example, EPA 
confirmed that a number of disinfectants assumed to be effective for 
highly pathogenic avian influenza were, in fact, ineffective. 

Recovery challenges are not limited to controlling animal diseases. 
There is also the difficulty in tracing recalled food products through 
the distribution chain during a food recall. As we have previously 
reported, the food distribution chain can be complex, involving 
multiple levels of processors, distributors, and retailers before the 
food reaches consumers.[Footnote 19] In the event of an emergency, it 
can be difficult to trace both the source of contamination and the 
ultimate destination of the contaminated product. 

[Side bar: 
Food Recalls: 

[Photograph] 

Source: USDA. 

This nation enjoys a plentiful and varied food supply that is 
generally considered to be safe. However, the Centers for Disease 
Control and Prevention estimates that each year roughly 1 in 6 
Americans gets sick, 128,000 are hospitalized, and 3,000 die of 
foodborne diseases. To protect consumers from unsafe food, the U.S. 
Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) 
and the Department of Health and Human Service’s Food and Drug 
Administration have recall programs. For example, in 2010, FSIS 
initiated recalls of over 34.5 million pounds of food, including over 
6 million pounds of Salmonella-contaminated frozen chicken meals and 
over 7 million pounds of E.coli-contaminated beef products. The total 
figure does not include currently open recall cases. In some 
instances, companies were alerted to the contaminated food when 
officials found patterns of illnesses linked to the products. In other 
instances, consumers called the company to complain about foreign 
material—such as pieces of plastic—in the food products. FSIS also 
identifies problems with products in other ways, such as through 
regulatory testing, plant or third-party testing, and routine 
inspection verification activities (see photo above). End of side bar] 

This point was well-illustrated in a 2007 outbreak of botulism--a 
serious illness caused by botulinum toxin that can lead to paralysis 
and potentially death in humans. Botulinum toxin found in canned hot 
dog chili sauce resulted in at least eight severe illnesses and 
spurred a massive recall of tens of millions of cans of food across 49 
states, causing retailers and officials to scramble to locate and 
remove potentially contaminated items. Because there was potentially 
dual jurisdiction over the food products, FSIS and FDA were both 
involved in the recall. According to a report from the DHS National 
Center for Food Protection and Defense, information on the recall 
changed, and the number of recalled items expanded, creating confusion 
for affected organizations and consumers and delaying recovery 
efforts. Moreover, a former state-level food and drug director who 
headed recall efforts in one state that conducted almost 16,000 site 
visits to remove contaminated products from shelves told us that 
states received very little information from FSIS and FDA about the 
distribution chain during the recall, and the lists of recalled 
products that the two agencies issued were inconsistent. According to 
this former state official, this inconsistency delayed state efforts 
and caused some retailers to continue selling contaminated products as 
many as four days after the recall was announced, potentially 
endangering human lives. 

FSIS officials also told us that some parties affected by the recall-- 
including schools and senior centers--were confused by the large 
number of telephone calls they received from different agencies 
alerting them about the recall, as it was unclear who was in charge. 
FSIS officials told us that the agencies involved have since resolved 
these coordination problems. A former state-level food and drug 
director involved in the recall told us, however, that a lack of 
coordination may affect future recalls unless resolved. According to 
HHS officials, FDA has since updated its recall procedures and 
directives to improve communications between states and FDA officials. 
The former state official believes that the passage of the FDA Food 
Safety Modernization Act will provide the framework and process for 
sharing information with states to ensure that this will not happen in 
the future and, according to this official, it is critical for federal 
and state agencies to work together on these types of recalls. 
However, the act gives mandatory recall authority to FDA but not USDA, 
which could add to fragmentation in future recalls. As we previously 
mentioned, food safety has been on our list of high-risk areas since 
2007 because the fragmented federal oversight of food safety has 
caused inconsistent oversight, ineffective coordination, and 
inefficient use of resources.[Footnote 20] 

USDA Submitted a Required Report to the Homeland Security Council but 
Has Not Taken Steps to Implement Its Recommendations: 

USDA submitted a July 2004 report to the Homeland Security Council 
that recommended steps the department could take to help the food and 
agriculture sector protect itself from financial risks resulting from 
terrorism, but the department has not taken steps to address any of 
the report's recommendations. Under HSPD-9, the Secretary of 
Agriculture was responsible for studying and making recommendations to 
the Homeland Security Council for the use of existing, and the 
creation of new, financial risk management tools encouraging self-
protection for food and agriculture enterprises vulnerable to losses 
due to terrorism. To fulfill this responsibility, USDA's Risk 
Management Agency--whose goal is to help agriculture producers manage 
their business risks--hired a contractor to investigate and develop 
solutions for the financial risks associated with potential acts of 
terrorism affecting agriculture. The resulting report made 19 
recommendations to USDA--such as appointing an individual to 
coordinate risk management policy development and implementation for 
nonfarm agricultural businesses--and found "serious gaps" in the tools 
and strategies that some agriculture businesses have in place to 
financially protect themselves against losses resulting from a 
terrorist attack. According to USDA's OHSEC officials, the department 
has not taken steps to address the report's recommendations because 
the Homeland Security Council provided no further direction to USDA as 
to how to proceed with implementation. 

Officials from USDA's Office of the General Counsel told us that 
numerous USDA disaster and financial assistance programs may be 
available to help producers recover from a terrorist attack. Before 
providing such assistance, however, USDA must first determine which 
specific programs the department is permitted to use given the 
particular circumstances of the emergency. To make this determination, 
USDA would review its statutory authorities for each disaster or 
assistance program and assess whether the circumstances meet each 
program's eligibility criteria. Officials from USDA's Office of the 
General Counsel noted that the department would follow this same 
process regardless of the underlying cause of the emergency--whether a 
natural event or terrorist attack. 

USDA Does Not Have a Department-Wide Strategy for Implementing Its 
HSPD-9 Responsibilities: 

Despite agencies' efforts to implement USDA's HSPD-9 response and 
recovery responsibilities, USDA does not have a department-wide 
strategy for implementing these responsibilities. We previously 
reported that developing a strategy to accomplish national security 
goals and desired outcomes helps agencies manage their programs more 
effectively and is an essential mechanism to guide progress in 
achieving desired results.[Footnote 21] Moreover, we have reported 
that effective strategies help set priorities and allocate resources, 
including staffing, to inform decision making and help ensure 
accountability.[Footnote 22] Such priority setting and resource 
allocation is especially important in a fiscally constrained 
environment. However, USDA officials told us that the department did 
not develop a department-wide strategy for implementing its HSPD-9 
responsibilities. Instead, according to a senior official from OHSEC-- 
the USDA office responsible for coordinating HSPD-9 implementation-- 
USDA assigned HSPD-9 implementation responsibilities to its agencies 
based on their statutory authority and expertise and allowed 
individual agencies to determine their implementation and budget 
priorities. In addition, senior OHSEC officials told us that although 
OHSEC does not specifically oversee agencies' HSPD-9 efforts, it holds 
monthly meetings where agencies have the opportunity to share 
information about homeland-security activities generally. OHSEC 
officials also noted that because food and agriculture defense has not 
been a primary focus for the National Security Staff over the past few 
years, OHSEC has been less focused on HSPD-9 oversight and has 
prioritized other, more recently directed activities, such as a 2007 
executive order that promotes education, training, and experience of 
current and future professionals in national security positions. 
According to OHSEC officials, USDA would benefit from strategic 
direction from the National Security Staff with respect to HSPD-9 to 
help prioritize specific activities and funding decisions, given this 
time of limited resources. OHSEC officials and senior APHIS officials 
responsible for emergency planning and coordination told us that USDA 
would also benefit from strategic planning, but they noted that the 
department lacks dedicated resources for conducting such planning and 
has not determined the resources that would be needed to carry out 
such an effort. Because USDA has not developed a department-wide 
strategy, it may lack assurance that its agencies' efforts align with 
departmental priorities and have effectively allocated resources, and 
the department cannot be assured that it is fulfilling its HSPD-9 
responsibilities. 

USDA Has Coordinated the Federal Food and Agriculture Response for 
Various Natural Disasters, but USDA, FEMA, and State Officials 
Identified Several Challenges: 

USDA has coordinated the federal food and agriculture capabilities 
that were needed during numerous recent natural disasters. USDA, FEMA, 
and state officials involved in these emergencies identified some 
factors that contributed to the success of these efforts, as well as 
challenges they experienced. We also found additional management 
issues related to these ESF-11 coordination efforts. 

[Side bar: 
ESF-11 Activation in Iowa for Flooding: 

[2 photographs] 

Source: Clean Harbors. 

In June 2008, tens of thousands of acres of crop land and swine 
facilities in Iowa were flooded by heavy rains. Although more than 
17,000 swine in the affected area were relocated prior to the 
flooding, about 4,000 were left behind and became stranded or drowned 
when levees failed. Under ESF-11, FEMA asked APHIS personnel to assist 
with trapping, euthanizing, and disposing of the swine and other 
livestock carcasses, many of which were found beached on the levee or 
floating in flood waters (as depicted in photos above). USDA’s 
contractor used flat-bottomed airboats to corral carcasses and 
transport them to dry land, where they could then be moved to an 
approved landfill. Despite the hot, humid weather, workers wore full 
personal protective equipment because many of the carcasses were badly 
decomposed, and the water was assumed to be contaminated with 
chemicals and sewage. More than 3,000 swine carcasses were removed in 
the cleanup efforts. End of side bar] 

According to information provided by USDA's ESF-11 national 
coordinator, from 2007 through May 2011, USDA coordinated the ESF-11 
response for about 28 natural disasters, including hurricanes, floods, 
winter storms, and other weather-related emergencies (see app. VII for 
a list of the 28 emergencies for which ESF-11 was activated). In the 
event of an emergency, FEMA may activate ESF-11 to coordinate the 
federal response to address issues that affect agriculture and the 
food supply, among other things. More specifically, FEMA may issue 
mission assignments to USDA to undertake three types of activities 
that are otherwise outside USDA's statutory authority(1) federal 
operations support, such as providing personnel to help coordinate 
state and federal response efforts at regional and national 
coordinating centers; (2) technical assistance to states by sharing 
subject matter expertise, for example, on the cleanup of tree debris 
contaminated with an invasive beetle; and (3) direct federal 
assistance to help states, such as disposing of animal carcasses that 
may pose a threat to public health. 

USDA, FEMA, and state officials involved in ESF-11 activations 
identified factors that have contributed to the success of these 
efforts. For example, USDA, FEMA, and state agriculture officials we 
interviewed told us that having a single USDA point of contact at the 
regional level to coordinate with FEMA staff on a state's behalf 
helped ensure more effective and streamlined communication during 
emergencies. In addition, USDA officials involved in previous 
emergencies noted that effective working relationships, both between 
USDA and FEMA and among federal and state officials, contributed to 
the success of several ESF-11 activations. Following an ice storm in 
New England, for example, effective working relationships between USDA 
and FEMA staff helped facilitate the disposal of tree debris 
contaminated with Asian long-horned beetles. Iowa officials involved 
with an ESF-11 response to flooding that affected swine farms told us 
that having the ESF structure in place was beneficial because it 
provided a logical and consistent framework for emergency response 
across states. 

Side bar: 
ESF-11 Activation in Massachusetts for Ice Storms: 

[2 photographs] 

Source: Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation. 
Source: Agricultural Research Service, USDA. 

In summer 2008, USDA began an eradication program in Massachusetts to 
quarantine and remove trees infested with the Asian long-horned beetle 
(pictured above)-—an invasive pest that grows and reproduces within 
trees (such as maple, birch, willow, elm, and ash) and eventually 
kills the trees. According to USDA, the beetle has the potential to 
damage such industries as lumber, maple syrup, nursery, and tourism, 
accumulating over $41 billion in losses. However, in December 2008, 
New England—-including part of the quarantine zone established in 
Massachusetts for the Asian long-horned beetle—-was impacted by a 
severe winter ice storm, resulting in a significant amount of tree 
debris (as depicted in photo below). FEMA activated ESF-11 to provide 
updates on the removal of tree debris, some of which was contaminated 
with the Asian long-horned beetle. FEMA also gave an ESF-11 mission 
assignment to USDA to provide technical assistance by helping to 
produce outreach and awareness materials for distribution to the 
public to ensure that the beetle outbreak would not spread. End of 
side bar] 

However, USDA, FEMA, and state officials involved in ESF-11 
activations also identified challenges they experienced, including the 
following: 

Lack of clarity on the type of support provided under ESF-11. USDA, 
FEMA, and state officials told us that lack of clarity over the type 
of support that ESF-11 provides has compromised response efforts in 
Massachusetts, Texas, and Mississippi. For example, FEMA and USDA 
negotiated for several weeks in the aftermath of a major ice storm 
affecting New England about what types of activities FEMA could fund 
through a mission assignment that were not under USDA's statutory 
authority. Specifically, USDA--through APHIS's mission to control 
plant pests--had been working in Massachusetts to quarantine an Asian 
long-horned beetle infestation prior to the storm. However, according 
to USDA officials involved with the response efforts, the ice storm 
significantly increased the quantity of tree debris that was part of 
the quarantine. Quarantined wood could not be sold as firewood, a 
measure meant to avoid spreading the beetle to other parts of the 
country. USDA was overwhelmed, and in need of assistance to maintain 
the quarantine, but USDA officials told us that FEMA could not provide 
reimbursement to USDA for program activities that were already 
receiving resources through USDA's nondisaster emergency response 
funds. FEMA ultimately issued an ESF-11 mission assignment for 
technical assistance to USDA almost 4 weeks after the ice storm. This 
provided USDA with additional funds to produce outreach and awareness 
materials for distribution to the public and to mobilize emergency 
response personnel to oversee debris removal activities associated 
with the ice storm. We have previously reported that, in preparing for 
a disaster, legal authorities and roles and responsibilities must be 
clearly defined, effectively communicated, and well understood in 
order to facilitate rapid and effective decision making.[Footnote 23] 

In another example, Texas state officials told us that, after 
Hurricane Ike in 2008, FEMA did not issue a mission assignment to USDA 
to provide assistance to round up and relocate roaming cattle because 
it disagreed with Texas state public safety officials' contention that 
these cattle were a public safety hazard. Thousands of cattle were 
stranded on roadways and needed to be moved, identified, and returned 
to their owners. Officials said that one car accident occurred when a 
vehicle struck a cow wandering on the road. Moreover, according to 
Texas state officials, many cattle later died from saline toxicity 
because of the lack of fresh drinking water, thereby adding to the 
number of carcasses that needed to be disposed of. Ultimately, an 
association of cattle ranchers helped to corral some of the roaming 
cattle, and FEMA asked USDA to provide feed to cattle that were 
stranded on the roads. According to Texas officials, the ESF-11 
request process was "overly exhaustive" and potentially cost more time 
and effort than the benefits of receiving the animal feed. A USDA 
official expressed regret that USDA was unable to do more to assist 
the live cattle because providing such assistance was not expensive. 
According to this official, USDA was not able to provide more 
assistance because FEMA declared the live cattle to be private 
property and thus they could not receive assistance under ESF-11. 
Texas state officials told us that this experience raises questions 
about the extent to which FEMA will provide assistance for other 
agriculture-related issues that may arise during emergencies. For 
example, they questioned whether FEMA would provide generators or fuel 
to poultry farmers if they were to lose power from strong storms. A 
power loss could cause poultry houses to overheat, killing thousands 
of birds. Texas state officials said that they recognize that FEMA 
does not generally provide assistance to industry, but they also 
pointed out that agriculture is recognized as critical infrastructure 
by DHS and affects public safety, animal welfare, and the nation's 
food supply. According to Texas state officials, this lack of clarity 
on what type of support ESF-11 provides prevents states from being 
able to plan accordingly. 

A senior official from Mississippi expressed similar concerns related 
to federal assistance for dairy farms that lose power following a 
natural disaster. Following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, dairy farmers 
were unable to milk their cows because they did not have generators or 
sufficient fuel to power their generators, which were needed to 
operate milking equipment. USDA officials told us that if dairy cows 
are not milked within a certain time frame, the cows will become 
diseased and will need to be slaughtered after several days. According 
to the Mississippi state official, the state requested generators from 
FEMA; however, FEMA denied their request because Stafford Act funds-- 
assistance available when the President declares a major disaster-- 
could not be used to purchase equipment for private businesses. State 
and federal officials told us that, consequently, many farmers sold 
their cows below market value, causing approximately 50 percent of 
dairy farms to go out of business. The Mississippi state official 
added that the dairy industry supplies important food for human 
nutrition and health and should be considered "public infrastructure" 
and thus eligible for Stafford Act funding during emergencies. 

Lack of clarity on carcass disposal responsibilities when ESFs are 
activated. As we previously mentioned, disposal of livestock carcasses 
infected with animal diseases can impede recovery efforts, but clarity 
regarding agencies' roles and responsibilities for animal carcass 
disposal presents additional challenges when ESFs are activated and 
multiple agencies are involved. Specifically, federal agencies' 
responsibilities for disposing of animal carcasses following an 
emergency are not always clear, which has at times impeded an 
effective ESF-11 response. When ESFs are activated for an emergency, 
FEMA is responsible for determining which federal agency should 
conduct carcass disposal as part of response efforts. According to 
FEMA officials, the disposal of animal carcasses is generally the 
responsibility of ESF-3, which addresses public works and engineering 
and is coordinated by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. ESF-3 defines 
livestock or poultry carcasses and plant materials as debris. FEMA 
officials also told us that, through ESF-11, USDA would coordinate the 
disposal of diseased animal carcasses or carcasses with chemical, 
biological, radiological, and nuclear contamination. For the ESF-11 
emergencies that we reviewed that involved animal carcasses, FEMA 
assigned two different USDA agencies--the Natural Resources 
Conservation Service and APHIS's NVS--with this responsibility. APHIS 
traditionally disposes of livestock infected with a foreign animal 
disease through its authority under the Animal Health Protection Act, 
but none of the animals in the emergencies we reviewed were infected 
with a foreign animal disease; they had died from drowning or were 
otherwise impacted by natural disasters. Federal and state officials 
told us that disposal responsibilities are further complicated by a 
lack of agreement as to whether carcasses resulting from a natural 
disaster are considered to be a public health threat. The USDA ESF-11 
national coordinator told us that USDA could be asked to conduct 
carcass disposal when HHS or a state declares the carcasses to be a 
public health concern; otherwise, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is 
generally responsible. A CDC Web page currently states that animals 
killed in a natural disaster pose a low risk to human health if proper 
precautions are taken. Such precautions include practicing proper hand 
washing and removing animal carcasses to avoid attracting rats. 
However, according to USDA officials, other federal officials believe 
that decaying animal carcasses do pose a public health threat, 
attracting vectors such as rodents and insects, which can carry 
disease to humans. 

[Side bar: 
ESF-11 Activation in Texas for Hurricane Ike: 

[2 photographs] 

Source: Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Photographer Earl 
Nottingham. 
Source: USDA. 

Hurricane Ike hit the Gulf Coast of Texas in September 2008, with a 
storm surge several miles inland that displaced thousands of 
livestock, including cattle and horses. Under ESF-11, USDA provided 
feed for living cattle that were stranded on roads—which was some of 
the only dry land available for the cattle to roam. In addition, 
USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service removed and disposed of 
livestock carcasses, some of which ended up in residential and public 
areas, including the grounds of a hospital. USDA officials estimated 
they retrieved more than 1,300 cattle, horse, and goat carcasses. 
According to Texas state officials, carcass disposal was complicated 
because of the difficulty identifying cattle so their owners could be 
indemnified by the federal government for their losses. Cattle are 
normally identified by an ear tag or branding. This was difficult, 
however, because, in some cases, the ear tags were missing or brands 
could not be read because the cattle carcasses were piled up, missing 
limbs, and were decaying from sitting in extreme heat (see photo 
below). End of side bar] 

The resulting lack of clarity has delayed response efforts during 
previous emergencies for which ESF-11 was activated. For example, 
Texas agriculture officials involved with response to Hurricane Ike in 
2008 told us that valuable time was lost as federal officials debated 
whether the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers or USDA should assist with 
disposal. Ultimately, FEMA asked USDA's Natural Resources Conservation 
Service to conduct the carcass disposal; however, according to 
officials from the Natural Resources Conservation Service, they did 
not receive this mission assignment until several days after the 
hurricane struck Texas--after the carcasses had already begun to 
decompose. Officials from the Natural Resources Conservation Service 
told us that they were frustrated with the time it took FEMA to 
determine who would conduct carcass disposal efforts, as this delayed 
their ability to seek and obtain a contractor to conduct the disposal. 
The cumulative delay impeded recovery. According to Texas state 
officials, the surge of water from the hurricane washed cattle, 
horses, and poultry 15 to 20 miles inland, leaving dead livestock in 
backyards, in front of hospitals, and on roads and highways. Texas 
state officials told us that because the temperatures were over 100 
degrees, the carcasses quickly filled with gas and exploded, becoming 
"soupy" after a few days, further complicating disposal efforts. It 
also created a negative public perception of the federal government's 
disposal efforts. In light of this, Texas state officials told us 
that, although they would like to continue partnering with the federal 
government during major emergencies, they have concerns about how 
disposal would be handled in a future emergency. Moreover, Texas 
officials stated that they will maintain some level of involvement and 
responsibility to respond to small, yet high-profile, disposal issues 
that affect public perception and attract the attention of media and 
local officials. 

Side bar: 
ESF-11 Activation in Mississippi for Hurricane Gustav: 

[2 photographs] 

Source: Mississippi Department of Agriculture and Commerce (both 
photos). 

On September 1, 2008, Hurricane Gustav made landfall in the United 
States, and federal emergency declarations were made for multiple 
states, including Mississippi, where the storm washed approximately 
2,000 animal carcasses on the beachfront and along the Jordan River. 
The carcasses were primarily nutria-—an invasive semiaquatic rodent 
(pictured above)-—but also included birds, hogs, and a canine. Within 
several days, residents began complaining of foul odor resulting from 
the decomposing carcasses, and Mississippi requested federal 
assistance to help remove them. According to an APHIS after-action 
report, since biological, physical, and chemical hazards were involved 
in the carcass removal operations, personnel wore personal protective 
equipment (pictured below) and worked in inhospitable conditions 
including 90-degree heat among hundreds of venomous and nonvenomous 
snakes. Personnel used pitchforks and shovels to place the carcasses 
in polyethylene barrel liners, sealed the liner openings with duct 
tape, and then carried them to a polyethylene-lined dumpster for 
transport to landfills. End of side bar] 

Similarly, following Hurricane Gustav in 2008, hundreds of nutria--a 
large type of rodent--were washed onto Mississippi beaches. According 
to USDA officials involved with coordinating the emergency, 
negotiations among federal representatives about who was responsible 
for disposal delayed and complicated the response. A Mississippi state 
official told us that the impact of the carcasses was limited, 
however, because another hurricane hit the area several days later, 
and the related storm surge carried the remaining carcasses out to 
sea. We have previously reported that a lack of clarity in leadership 
roles and responsibilities can result in disjointed federal emergency 
response efforts among collaborating agencies and confusion about what 
resources would be provided within specific time frames[Footnote 24]. 
To address such a lack of clarity in leadership roles among 
collaborating agencies, we have reported that a practice to enhance 
and sustain collaboration is for agencies to work together to define 
and agree on their respective roles and responsibilities, including 
how the collaborative effort will be led.[Footnote 25] 

Pet sheltering reimbursement challenges. One of USDA's 
responsibilities under ESF-11 is to provide for the safety and well-
being of household pets during an emergency. However, coordinating 
this activity can be problematic for USDA because, according to a USDA 
official, activities to shelter animals that do not meet FEMA's 
definition of a household pet are not eligible for FEMA or Stafford 
Act funding. Pet sheltering is an important part of emergency response 
because some people refuse to evacuate their homes in an emergency if 
they cannot take their pets with them. In its disaster assistance 
policy, FEMA defines a household pet as a domesticated animal, such as 
a dog, cat, bird, rabbit, rodent, or turtle kept in the home, and not 
intended for commercial purposes. FEMA also reimburses costs for 
evacuations and sheltering of service animals, such as guide dogs for 
individuals with impaired vision or hearing. However, according to 
Mississippi and Texas state officials, evacuees often bring to the 
shelters numerous animals that are not listed in FEMA's definition, 
including horses, goats, and potbellied pigs. State officials told us 
that states and volunteer organizations often still accept all animals 
brought to shelters, but because FEMA does not provide reimbursement 
for the care of animals not included in their definition of household 
pets, states and volunteer organizations have to absorb the costs for 
these animals. A Mississippi state official told us that they are not 
able to estimate the additional costs associated with animals outside 
of FEMA's definition, largely because they do not track costs by 
animal. 

We also identified additional challenges related to USDA's management 
of ESF-11, including the following: 

Unreliable tracking of emergencies for which ESF-11 was activated. 
USDA and FEMA data are not sufficiently reliable for reporting the 
number of times ESF-11 has been activated. Under government auditing 
standards, management information is to be complete, accurate, and 
consistent to support performance and decision making.[Footnote 26] 
However, USDA and FEMA data on emergencies for which ESF-11 was 
activated were incomplete, inaccurate, and inconsistent, changing 
throughout the course of our review. Specifically, USDA officials 
provided us with three different sets of documents that could be used 
to track such emergencies (1) by mission assignments issued by FEMA, 
(2) by funding received from FEMA per mission assignment, and (3) by 
USDA after-action reports--documents that summarize information on 
what went well and what needed improvement during an emergency 
response to improve future responses. Our review of these documents 
found that the information on the number of emergencies varied, 
raising questions about the accuracy of the information they provided 
us. When we asked USDA about these differences, a senior official 
stated that the inconsistencies are, in part, a result of changes in 
management. USDA ultimately provided us with a list of about 28 ESF-11 
activations, which is the number we are reporting to provide some 
context on the number of times these activations have occurred. In 
addition, FEMA separately provided us with a list of ESF-11 
activations that included some emergencies that did not appear in any 
of the USDA lists we received. According to DHS officials, managing a 
list of ESF-11 activations is USDA's responsibility as the coordinator 
of ESF-11. FEMA officials also told us that the system they used to 
generate the list they provided to us is not intended to track ESF-11 
emergencies and that ESF information is not a standard field on FEMA 
system's search page. Without an accurate count of ESF-11 activations 
over time, USDA managers may not have the information necessary to 
request and allocate resources, including staff, for ESF-11 activities. 

Lack of efforts to comprehensively identify and address lessons 
learned. USDA's after-action reporting process is inconsistent and 
does not include key parties involved in ESF-11 emergency response. 
USDA policy is to prepare after-action reports following the response 
to an ESF-11 activation. However, USDA does not always complete these 
reports after every emergency. USDA completed 14 after-action reports--
including one that covered the 2008 hurricane season--for various 
emergencies even though USDA officials reported to us that ESF-11 has 
been activated for about 28 emergencies.[Footnote 27] In addition, the 
after-action reports that USDA did complete have not always contained 
the perspectives of key parties involved in the response, such as FEMA 
officials, relevant USDA officials involved in the emergency at the 
state level, and state officials. For example, an after-action report 
prepared for the 2008 hurricane season did not include the 
perspectives of state officials and, therefore, did not capture the 
carcass disposal problems that Texas and Mississippi experienced after 
Hurricanes Ike and Gustav, respectively. Several state and USDA 
officials that were involved with past emergencies for which ESF-11 
was activated told us that they had not been formally asked to provide 
input on lessons learned, and several state officials also stated that 
they had not received a copy of a completed after-action report from 
USDA. 

Moreover, our analysis of USDA's after-action reports from 2007 
through 2011 found common challenges, including challenges involving 
communication, technology, and the need for additional training. USDA 
officials responsible for ESF-11 coordination told us that they 
address critical issues identified in the after-action reports 
immediately and that other issues are addressed informally at national 
conferences. However, these officials also told us that it could be 
beneficial to have a more structured and consistent way of addressing 
challenges that arose in past emergencies. 

Without a more consistent and comprehensive after-action reporting 
process, USDA managers may not have the necessary information to 
identify gaps or challenges and address them through corrective 
actions to help ensure that past mistakes are not repeated. In 
addition, by not sharing after-action reports with key parties, those 
parties also may not have information needed to improve coordination 
and performance in future emergencies for which ESF-11 is activated. 
In February 2006, a White House report on Hurricane Katrina stated 
that "too often, after-action reports for exercises and real-world 
incidents highlight the same problems that do not get fixed."[Footnote 
28] According to the report, all departments and agencies should 
translate findings of homeland security gaps and vulnerabilities into 
concrete programs for corrective action that are fully implemented in 
a timely fashion. 

Conclusions: 

The nation is vulnerable to both intentional and natural threats that 
could imperil its food and agriculture systems. Since the terrorist 
attacks of September 11, 2001, the federal government has taken many 
steps to address this vulnerability, including developing a national 
policy to defend the food and agriculture systems against terrorist 
attacks, major disasters, and other emergencies (HSPD-9), as well as 
strategically organizing resources and capabilities to ensure a more 
efficient response to such emergencies (ESF-11). However, the 
Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction 
Proliferation and Terrorism gave the nation a failing grade for its 
capabilities to rapidly respond to and recover from a biological 
attack. Moreover, natural disasters and diseases also can pose a 
significant threat to the food and agriculture systems, as 
demonstrated by Hurricane Katrina, highly pathogenic avian influenza, 
and food recalls, such as botulinum toxin found in canned hot dog 
chili sauce in 2007. 

Despite these threats, there is currently no centralized coordination 
to oversee the federal government's overall progress in defending the 
food and agriculture systems. DHS is responsible for coordinating 
agencies' overall HSPD-9 implementation efforts but has not done so 
since 2009. Similarly, the Homeland Security Council has in the past 
gathered status updates on agency efforts to fulfill its HSPD-9 
responsibilities, but the National Security Staff--which now supports 
the Homeland Security Council--is no longer doing so, and it is not 
conducting any other interagency process to coordinate HSPD-9 
implementation efforts. Without coordinated activities to oversee 
agencies' HSPD-9 implementation efforts, federal decision makers may 
lack critical information they need to assess how well the nation is 
prepared for major emergencies and how efficiently agencies are using 
federal resources to prepare. Moreover, without encouragement from the 
National Security Staff that agencies should contribute to DHS's 
coordination efforts, successful coordination efforts to oversee 
agencies' progress may be limited. 

As a leader of our nation's food and agriculture system, USDA has 
invested considerable time and resources to protect animals, plants, 
and food. Specifically, APHIS and CDC have taken some steps to 
leverage the mechanisms and infrastructure of HHS's Strategic National 
Stockpile, as directed by HSPD-9, but confusion and disagreement may 
be impeding efforts to further identify leveraging opportunities. 
Unless the departments formally determine whether such opportunities 
exist, they cannot be assured that they are taking advantage of all 
opportunities to make efficient use of federal resources. 

In addition, USDA faces two important implementation challenges that 
could impact its ability to recover from a high-consequence plant 
disease outbreak. First, ARS has no documented, systematic process for 
tracking research gaps identified in the NPDRS recovery plans and for 
monitoring whether these gaps have been filled. Without such a 
process, USDA may lack critical information needed to help the nation 
recover from a high-consequence plant disease. Second, key state and 
federal plant health officials lack awareness of NPDRS recovery plans, 
potentially leaving them without the necessary information to 
facilitate recovery from high-consequence plant diseases. 

More broadly, USDA does not have a department-wide strategy for 
setting priorities and allocating resources, including staffing, for 
implementing its numerous HSPD-9 responsibilities. Instead, USDA 
assigned HSPD-9 implementation responsibilities to its agencies and 
allowed them to determine their implementation and budget priorities. 
Without such a strategy, USDA lacks assurance that its agencies are 
making progress to align with departmental priorities, that its 
efforts are adequately staffed, and that it is fulfilling its HSPD-9 
responsibilities. Setting priorities is especially critical in a 
fiscally constrained environment. 

USDA has also faced challenges to effective coordination of ESF-11 
responses to various natural disasters affecting food and agriculture, 
as it did after two hurricanes in 2008 when the federal government 
lost valuable time as FEMA decided which agency should take the lead 
in disposing of animal carcasses. Although FEMA would be responsible 
for determining which agency is responsible for carcass disposal if 
ESF-11 were activated, it has not clarified the roles and 
responsibilities that key agencies will have for the disposal of 
animal carcasses during emergencies for which ESF-11 is activated. 
Absent such clarification, agencies may not be adequately prepared to 
quickly respond, and decomposing animal carcasses may threaten public 
safety and health. 

In addition, USDA has not consistently prepared after-action reports 
for all emergencies involving ESF-11 activations and has not always 
incorporated the perspectives of key parties involved in each 
activation or shared the completed reports with them. These reports 
are important for addressing identified gaps or challenges through 
corrective actions to help ensure that past mistakes are not repeated. 
For example, consistently completed after-action reports that include 
the perspectives of key parties involved in each activation may help 
to bring issues, such as challenges with pet sheltering, to the 
attention of USDA managers. Without a more consistent and 
comprehensive after-action reporting process that includes completing 
a report for all ESF-11 activations, incorporating the perspectives of 
key parties, and providing completed reports to key parties, USDA 
managers may not have the necessary information to identify gaps or 
challenges and address them through corrective actions to help ensure 
that past mistakes are not repeated. Key parties may also not have all 
of the information they need to improve coordination and performance 
in future emergencies for which ESF-11 is activated. Moreover, USDA 
did not provide a complete and accurate count of ESF-11 activations 
over time. Government auditing standards call for management 
information to be complete, accurate, and consistent to support 
performance and decision making. However, without an accurate count of 
ESF-11 activations over time, USDA managers may not have the 
information and sufficiently reliable data necessary to request and 
allocate resources, such as staff, for ESF-11 activities. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

We are making the following nine recommendations: 

To help ensure that the federal government is effectively implementing 
the nation's food and agriculture defense policy, we recommend that: 

* the Secretary of Homeland Security resume DHS's efforts to 
coordinate agencies' overall HSPD-9 implementation efforts. 

* the Homeland Security Council direct the National Security Staff to 
establish an interagency process that would provide oversight of 
agencies' implementation of HSPD-9. 

* the Homeland Security Council direct the National Security Staff to 
encourage agencies to participate in and contribute information to 
DHS's efforts to coordinate agencies' implementation of HSPD-9. 

To ensure the most effective use of resources and to resolve any 
confusion, we recommend that: 

* the Secretaries of Agriculture and Health and Human Services jointly 
determine on a periodic basis if there are appropriate opportunities 
for the NVS to leverage Strategic National Stockpile mechanisms or 
infrastructure as directed by HSPD-9. If such opportunities exist, the 
two agencies should formally agree upon a process for the NVS to use 
the identified mechanisms and infrastructure. 

To help ensure that the nation is adequately prepared to recover from 
high-consequence plant diseases, we recommend that: 

* the Secretary of Agriculture direct the Administrator of ARS, in 
coordination with relevant USDA agencies, to develop and implement a 
documented, systematic process to track research gaps identified in 
the NPDRS recovery plans and monitor progress in filling these gaps. 

* the Secretary of Agriculture direct the Administrator of ARS, in 
coordination with relevant USDA agencies, to develop and implement a 
mechanism to ensure NPDRS recovery plans are shared with key state and 
federal plant health officials. 

To ensure that USDA is fulfilling its responsibilities to protect the 
nation's food and agriculture systems, we recommend that: 

* the Secretary of Agriculture develop a department-wide strategy for 
implementing its HSPD-9 responsibilities. Such a strategy would 
include an overarching framework for setting priorities, as well as 
allocating resources. 

To expedite response and recovery from major emergencies, we recommend 
that: 

* the Secretary of Homeland Security direct the Administrator of FEMA, 
in coordination with key agencies to provide guidance that clarifies 
the roles and responsibilities agencies will have regarding the 
disposal of animal carcasses in emergencies for which ESF-11 is 
activated. 

To improve USDA's performance as ESF-11 coordinator and to address 
issues experienced by key parties, such as challenges with pet 
sheltering, we recommend that: 

* the Secretary of Agriculture develop a process for ensuring that (1) 
following all ESF-11 activations, after-action reports are 
consistently completed and shared with key parties involved in each 
activation; (2) the perspectives of key parties are incorporated in 
these reports; (3) any identified gaps or challenges are addressed 
through corrective actions; and (4) the completed after-action reports 
are used to provide a complete, accurate, and consistent count of ESF-
11 activations over time, in turn producing sufficiently reliable data 
on ESF-11 activations. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided the Departments of Agriculture, Health and Human Services, 
and Homeland Security; the Environmental Protection Agency; and the 
National Security Staff a draft of this report for their review and 
comment. USDA, HHS, and DHS generally concurred with the 
recommendations and provided written comments on the draft, which are 
summarized below and presented in their entirety in appendixes VIII, 
IX, and X, respectively, of this report. In addition, in an e-mail 
received July 22, 2011, the National Security Staff's Deputy Legal 
Advisor stated that the National Security Staff agrees that a review 
of HSPD-9 is appropriate and that they will look for an opportunity to 
do so. USDA, HHS, DHS, EPA, and the National Security Staff provided 
technical comments, which we incorporated as appropriate. 

USDA agreed with the report's five recommendations to the department. 
In commenting on our recommendation that USDA and HHS jointly 
determine if there are opportunities for the NVS to leverage Strategic 
National Stockpile mechanisms or infrastructure, USDA officials 
confirmed that they have collaborated with CDC officials since the 
inception of the NVS in 2006 and noted that they met with CDC 
officials in February 2011 to discuss the possibility of resource 
sharing. We modified our report to include information about this 
February 2011 meeting. USDA also stated in its written comments that 
the agency will continue to work with CDC to explore leveraging 
opportunities between the two agencies and will document the process 
for using CDC's resources or the findings if there are no such 
opportunities, as appropriate. In response to our recommendation that 
USDA develop and implement a mechanism to ensure NPDRS recovery plans 
are shared with key state and federal plant health officials, USDA 
commented that it will expand the department's efforts to share NPDRS 
recovery plans more broadly. As our report states, USDA and state 
plant health officials we met with all had limited or no knowledge 
about NPDRS recovery plans, even though ARS officials were sharing 
plans through a variety of venues. In commenting on our recommendation 
that USDA take steps to enhance its after-action reporting process, 
USDA officials stated that they have been meeting regularly to discuss 
any identified gaps or challenges and plans for executing appropriate 
corrective actions; however, they also stated that they will seek even 
broader input to the after-action reports and that they will e-mail 
the after-action reports directly to ESF-11 stakeholders. Moreover, 
officials commented that the after-action reporting processes allow 
for the compilation of complete, accurate, consistent, and reliable 
data on ESF-11 activations. We agree that this could be a sufficiently 
reliable source of data; however, as our report states, USDA provided 
us with three different sets of documents that could be used to track 
ESF-11 emergencies, which showed inconsistent information on the 
number of such emergencies and raised questions about the accuracy of 
the information USDA officials provided to us. We continue to believe 
that if USDA consistently completes after-action reports, the agency 
can provide a complete, accurate, and consistent count of ESF-11 
activations over time. 

HHS agreed with the report's recommendation that USDA and HHS jointly 
determine if there are opportunities for the NVS to leverage Strategic 
National Stockpile mechanisms or infrastructure. In commenting on our 
report, HHS stated that, to date, it has not identified opportunities 
for resource sharing but that if an opportunity arises in the future, 
as determined by HHS and USDA, HHS will work to ensure that the 
appropriate interagency agreements are in place. We view this as a 
positive step, but we continue to believe that the departments have 
not yet arrived at a joint determination about what resources are 
appropriate for the NVS to leverage. Also in its comments, HHS stated 
that the specific areas cited in the report where leveraging can occur 
are incorrect. As stated in our report, the two examples we provide 
are from the perspective of APHIS officials, further demonstrating 
that there is not yet a joint determination about what resources are 
appropriate to leverage. As a result, we modified our report to 
clarify that, at this time, there appears to be some confusion about 
the details of the NVS's and Strategic National Stockpile's mission 
and infrastructure that may be impeding the agencies' efforts to 
further leverage the stockpiles. In addition, we modified the 
recommendation to clarify that it is intended to resolve any confusion 
between USDA and HHS and that they should jointly determine on a 
periodic basis whether there are opportunities for the NVS to leverage 
Strategic National Stockpile resources. 

DHS agreed with the report's recommendations that DHS resume the 
department's efforts to coordinate agencies' overall HSPD-9 
implementation efforts and that DHS provide guidance that clarifies 
the roles and responsibilities agencies will have regarding the 
disposal of animal carcasses in emergencies for which ESF-11 is 
activated. In commenting on our recommendations, DHS stated that it 
was pleased with GAO's characterization of DHS's role in protecting 
the nation's food and agriculture systems and responding to terrorist 
attacks and major disasters. DHS also commented that it will continue 
to support the coordination of overall HSPD-9 implementation efforts. 
Moreover, DHS stated that FEMA will work with and provide guidance to 
federal partners clarifying roles and responsibilities for animal 
carcass disposal and noted that, to fulfill this recommendation, its 
federal partners will need to review their authorities and determine 
their agencies' specific responsibilities during ESF-11 activations. 

As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days 
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies to the 
appropriate congressional committees; the Secretaries of Agriculture, 
Health and Human Services, and Homeland Security; the Administrator of 
the Environmental Protection Agency; the Executive Secretary for the 
National Security Staff; and other interested parties. In addition, 
this report will be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff members have any questions about this report, 
please contact me at (202) 512-3841 or shamesl@gao.gov. Contact points 
for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be 
found on the last page of this report. GAO staff who made major 
contributions to this report are listed in appendix XI. 

Sincerely yours, 

Signed by: 

Lisa Shames: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Federal Agencies Roles and Responsibilities for Food and 
Agriculture Defense as Defined by HSPD-9: 

Agency responsibilities: 

Awareness and Warning: Develop surveillance and monitoring systems for 
animal, plant, and wildlife disease, as well as food, public health, 
and water quality for early detection and awareness of disease, pest, 
or poisonous agents; 
Department of Homeland Security: [Empty]; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Primary Responsibility for 
Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of the Interior: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution. 

Awareness and Warning: Develop systems to track specific animals and 
plants,as well as specific commodities and food; 
Department of Homeland Security: [Empty]; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Primary Responsibility for 
Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of the Interior: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution. 

Awareness and Warning: Develop nationwide laboratory networks for 
food,veterinary, plant health, and water quality that are 
interconnected and standardized; 
Department of Homeland Security: [Empty]; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Primary Responsibility for 
Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of the Interior: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution. 

Awareness and Warning: Develop and enhance intelligence operations and 
analysis capabilities for agriculture, food, and water sectors; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Support Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: Support Task Execution; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Awareness and Warning: Develop new biological threat awareness 
capacity to enhance detection and characterization of an attack; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Support Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: Support Task Execution; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: Support Task Execution. 

Vulnerability Assessments: Expand and continue vulnerability 
assessments of the agriculture and food sectors; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Primary Responsibility for 
Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: [Empty]; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Mitigation Strategies: Prioritize, develop, and implement mitigation 
strategies to protect vulnerable critical production nodes from the 
introduction of diseases, pests, or poisonous agents; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Support Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: Support Task Execution; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: Support Task Execution; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: Support Task Execution. 

Mitigation Strategies: Expand development of common screening 
procedures for agriculture and food items entering the United States 
and maximize effective domestic inspection activities for food items 
within the United States; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Primary Responsibility for 
Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: [Empty]; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Response and Recovery: Develop a National Veterinary Stockpile 
containing sufficient amounts of animal vaccine, antiviral, or 
therapeutic products to respond to the most damaging animal diseases 
affecting human health and the economy; 
Department of Homeland Security: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Support Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: Support Task Execution; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Response and Recovery: Develop a National Plant Disease Recovery 
System capable of responding to a high-consequence plant disease with 
pest control measures and the use of resistant seed varieties; 
Department of Homeland Security: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Support Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: Support Task Execution; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Response and Recovery: Enhance recovery systems to stabilize 
agriculture production, the food supply, and the economy, including 
disposal and decontamination procedures; 
Department of Homeland Security: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Primary Responsibility for 
Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: Support Task Execution; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Response and Recovery: Study and make recommendations to the Homeland 
Security Council for the use of financial risk management tools for 
self-protection of food and agriculture enterprises vulnerable to 
losses due to terrorism; 
Department of Homeland Security: [Empty]; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: [Empty]; 
Environmental Protection Agency: [Empty]; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Response and Recovery: Ensure adequate federal, state, and local 
response capabilities to respond quickly and effectively to a 
terrorist attack, major disease outbreak, or other disaster affecting 
the national agriculture or food infrastructure; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Support Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: Support Task Execution; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Response and Recovery: Develop a coordinated agriculture and food-
specific standardized response plan to be integrated into the National 
Response Plan[A]; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Support Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: Support Task Execution; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Outreach and Professional Development: Establish an effective 
information sharing and analysis mechanism for agriculture and food in 
cooperation with appropriate private sector entities; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Support Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: [Empty]; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: Support Task Execution. 

Outreach and Professional Development: Develop and promote higher 
education programs for the protection of animal, plant, and public 
health; 
Department of Homeland Security: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Primary Responsibility for 
Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: [Empty]; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: Support Task Execution; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Outreach and Professional Development: Develop and promote higher 
education programs to address protection of the food supply; 
Department of Homeland Security: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Primary Responsibility for 
Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: [Empty]; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: Support Task Execution; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Outreach and Professional Development: Establish opportunities for 
professional development and specialized training in agriculture and 
food protection; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Primary Responsibility for 
Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: [Empty]; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Research and Development: Accelerate and expand development of 
countermeasures against the intentional introduction or natural 
occurrence of catastrophic animal, plant,and zoonotic diseases; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Primary Responsibility for 
Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: Support Task 
Execution; 
Other: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution. 

Research and Development: Develop a plan to provide safe, secure, and 
state-of-the-art agriculture biocontainment laboratories to research 
and develop diagnostic capabilities for foreign animal and zoonotic 
diseases; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: [Empty]; 
Environmental Protection Agency: [Empty]; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Research and Development: Establish university-based centers of 
excellence in agriculture and food security; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Support Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Support Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: [Empty]; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Budget: Submit an integrated budget plan for defense of the U.S. food 
system; 
Department of Homeland Security: Primary Responsibility for Task 
Execution; 
Department of Agriculture: Primary Responsibility for Task Execution; 
Department of Health and Human Services: Primary Responsibility for 
Task Execution; 
Environmental Protection Agency: [Empty]; 
Department of the Interior: [Empty]; 
Department of Justice: [Empty]; 
Department of Education: [Empty]; 
Central Intelligence Agency: [Empty]; 
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: [Empty]; 
Other: [Empty]. 

[A] The National Response Plan was replaced by the National Response 
Framework in 2008. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: The 15 Emergency Support Functions (ESF), ESF 
Coordinators, and ESF Responsibilities: 

ESF-1: Transportation; 
Coordinator: Department of Transportation; 
* Aviation/airspace management and control; 
* Transportation safety; 
* Restoration and recovery of transportation infrastructure; 
* Movement restrictions; 
* Damage and impact assessment. 

ESF-2: Communications; 
Coordinator: Department of Homeland Security; 
* Coordination with telecommunications and information technology 
industries; 
* Restoration and repair of telecommunications infrastructure; 
* Protection, restoration, and sustainment of national cyber and 
information technology resources; 
* Oversight of communications within the federal incident management 
and response structures. 

ESF-3: Public Works and Engineering; 
Coordinator: Department of Defense (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers); 
* Infrastructure protection and emergency repair; 
* Infrastructure restoration; 
* Engineering services and construction management; 
* Emergency contracting support for lifesaving and life-sustaining 
services. 

ESF-4: Firefighting; 
Coordinator: Department of Agriculture (U.S. Forest Service); 
* Coordination of federal firefighting activities; 
* Support to wildland, rural, and urban firefighting operations. 

ESF-5: Emergency Management; 
Coordinator: Department of Homeland Security (Federal Emergency 
Management Agency); 
* Coordination of incident management and response efforts; 
* Issuance of mission assignments; 
* Resource and human capital; 
* Incident action planning; 
* Financial management. 

ESF-6: Mass Care, Emergency Assistance, Housing, and Human Services; 
Coordinator: Department of Homeland Security (Federal Emergency 
Management Agency); 
* Mass care; 
* Emergency assistance; 
* Disaster housing; 
* Human services. 

ESF-7: Logistics Management and Resource Support; 
Coordinator: General Services Administration and Department of 
Homeland Security (Federal Emergency Management Agency); 
* Comprehensive, national incident logistics planning, management, and 
sustainment capability; 
* Resource support (facility space, office equipment and supplies, 
contracting services, etc.). 

ESF-8: Public Health and Medical Services; 
Coordinator: Department of Health and Human Services; 
* Public health; 
* Medical; 
* Mental health services; 
* Mass fatality management. 

ESF-9: Search and Rescue; 
Coordinator: Department of Homeland Security (Federal Emergency 
Management Agency); 
* Lifesaving assistance; 
* Search and rescue operations. 

ESF-10: Oil and Hazardous Materials Response; 
Coordinator: Environmental Protection Agency; 
* Oil and hazardous materials (chemical, biological, radiological, 
etc.) response; 
* Environmental short-and long-term cleanup. 

ESF-11: Agriculture and Natural Resources; 
Coordinator: Department of Agriculture; 
* Nutrition assistance; 
* Animal and plant disease and pest response; 
* Food safety and security; 
* Natural and cultural resources and historic properties protection; 
* Safety and well-being of household pets. 

ESF-12: Energy; 
Coordinator: Department of Energy; 
* Energy infrastructure assessment, repair, and restoration; 
* Energy industry utilities coordination; 
* Energy forecast. 

ESF-13: Public Safety and Security; 
Coordinator: Department of Justice; 
* Facility and resource security; 
* Security planning and technical resource assistance; 
* Public safety and security support; 
* Support to access, traffic, and crowd control. 

ESF-14: Long-Term Community Recovery; 
Coordinator: Department of Homeland Security (Federal Emergency 
Management Agency); 
* Social and economic community impact assessment; 
* Long-term community recovery assistance to states, tribes, local 
governments, and the private sector; 
* Analysis and review of mitigation program implementation. 

ESF-15: External Affairs; 
Coordinator: Department of Homeland Security; 
* Emergency public information and protective action guidance; 
* Media and community relations; 
* Congressional and international affairs; 
* Tribal and insular affairs. 

Source: National Response Framework, 2008. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Our objectives were to (1) evaluate the extent to which there is 
oversight of federal agencies' overall progress in implementing the 
nation's food and agriculture defense policy; (2) evaluate the steps 
the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has taken to implement its 
response and recovery responsibilities outlined in this policy, and 
identify challenges, if any, that the department faces in implementing 
these responsibilities; and (3) identify the circumstances under which 
USDA has coordinated the federal food and agriculture response during 
an emergency for which ESF-11 was activated, and challenges, if any, 
that the parties involved experienced. 

For our first objective regarding oversight of federal agencies' 
overall progress in implementing Homeland Security Presidential 
Directive (HSPD)-9, we reviewed presidential directives, including 
HSPDs 1, 5, 7, 8, and 9, which define agency roles in homeland 
security and food and agriculture defense. In addition, we compared 
federal efforts with those outlined in the Standards for Internal 
Control in the Federal Government.[Footnote 29] We interviewed 
officials from USDA, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the 
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), and the Environmental 
Protection Agency (EPA)--chosen because they have the most HSPD-9 
responsibilities--and received written responses from each of the four 
agencies about how they view federal oversight and coordination. We 
also analyzed status reports these agencies provided to the Homeland 
Security Council between 2007 and early 2009. We also met with an 
official from the National Security Staff--which now supports the 
Homeland Security Council--to discuss any current efforts they are 
coordinating to oversee agencies' HSPD-9 implementation progress. 

For our second objective regarding the steps USDA has taken to 
implement its HSPD-9 response and recovery responsibilities, we 
reviewed relevant laws, regulations, and presidential directives, 
including the Animal Health Protection Act, FDA Food Safety 
Modernization Act, Public Health Security and Bioterrorism 
Preparedness and Response Act of 2002, the Biennial Review and 
Republication of the Select Agent and Toxin List, and HSPD-9 and HSPD-
1. We also reviewed federal guidance, planning, and implementation 
documents, including the Federal Food and Agriculture Decontamination 
and Disposal Roles and Responsibilities document, DHS's National 
Response Framework, DHS's and the Department of Housing and Urban 
Development's draft National Disaster Recovery Framework, various 
National Animal Health Emergency Management System guidelines, USDA 
agencies' and offices' strategic plans, various federal departments' 
HSPD-9 implementation progress reports, various USDA financial 
disaster assistance programs, and the National Veterinary Stockpile's 
(NVS) service contracts for transportation and commercial support 
services. In addition, we reviewed and analyzed various documents 
including USDA's Risk Management Agency's report on Managing the 
Financial Risks of Terrorist Acts against Agriculture, National Plant 
Disease Recovery System (NPDRS) recovery plans, NVS state planning 
documents, and the NVS's contracts for vaccines. To determine how USDA 
agencies allocated and obligated funds to develop the NVS and NPDRS, 
we requested and reviewed budget data provided by the Animal and Plant 
Health Inspection Service (APHIS) and the Agricultural Research 
Service (ARS). 

For our second objective, we also interviewed officials from USDA 
agencies responsible for implementing the department's response and 
recovery responsibilities, and we interviewed relevant officials from 
DHS and HHS regarding USDA's interagency coordination efforts and 
received written responses from DHS, HHS, and EPA about how they view 
interagency coordination (see table 1 for a complete list of agencies 
and offices we interviewed). To inform this objective, we also 
interviewed USDA officials from the department's two regional offices 
in North Carolina and Colorado and, while in these two states, we also 
spoke with state-level agriculture and emergency management officials. 
In addition, we conducted interviews with officials representing 
industry associations for the top five U.S. agricultural commodities, 
as determined by cash receipt data available from USDA's Economic 
Research Service--cattle and calves, corn, soybeans, dairy products, 
and broiler chickens--about the impact of USDA's agriculture and food 
emergency response and recovery efforts on industry. We also met with 
officials from various relevant professional associations to learn 
more about USDA's HSPD-9 implementation efforts and any challenges or 
gaps related to these efforts (see table 2 for a complete list of 
organizations we interviewed). In addition, we met with officials from 
two DHS Centers of Excellence regarding food recalls and animal 
diseases, as well as veterinary specialists from a land grant 
university whom we selected for their technical expertise and previous 
experience working with USDA on emergency response and recovery 
issues. We also attended exercises, including a joint state-federal 
exercise on plant disease and a national-level exercise, and we 
reviewed lessons learned from previous key exercises. 

Moreover, for our second objective, we conducted a survey of animal 
health officials from all 50 states and five U.S. territories. The 
survey gathered information about states' and U.S. territories' 
perspectives regarding the NVS. The five territories we surveyed were 
American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the 
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Virgin Islands. We did not 
survey the District of Columbia because, according to the District of 
Columbia's lead veterinary medical officer, livestock are not 
permitted in the District, and federal agencies are responsible for 
responding to and recovering from any foreign animal disease outbreak 
that affects the National Zoological Park or the National Aquarium in 
the District of Columbia. We received responses from 52 of 55 animal 
health officials surveyed, for an overall response rate of 95 percent. 
More specifically, we received completed surveys from 49 of the 50 
states and from three of the five territories. We did not receive 
survey responses from one state, Georgia, and two territories, Guam 
and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. Because we 
surveyed the universe of state and U.S. territory animal health 
officials from all 50 states and five territories, our survey was not 
a sample survey and, therefore, had no sampling errors. However, the 
practical difficulties of conducting any survey may introduce other 
types of errors, commonly referred to as nonsampling errors. For 
example, difficulties in interpreting a particular question, sources 
of information available to respondents, or entering data into a 
database or analyzing them can introduce unwanted variability into the 
survey results. We took steps in developing the questionnaire, 
collecting the data, and analyzing them to minimize such nonsampling 
errors. For example, a social science survey methodologist helped 
design the questionnaire in collaboration with GAO staff that had 
subject-matter expertise. The questionnaire was also reviewed by an 
independent GAO survey specialist. The survey asked a combination of 
questions that allowed for open-ended and close-ended responses. We 
pretested the content and format of the questionnaire with four animal 
health officials--selected to represent both large and small 
agriculture producing states, as well as states with a variety of 
experience working with the NVS--to ensure that (1) the survey 
questions were clear, (2) the terms we used were precise, (3) the 
questionnaire did not place an undue burden on the respondents, and 
(4) the questions were unbiased. We received input on the survey and 
made changes to the content and format of the final questionnaire 
based on our pretest results. Since there were relatively few changes 
based on the pretests and we were conducting surveys with the universe 
of respondents--all state and U.S. territory animal health officials--
we did not find it necessary to conduct additional pretests. 

Following this work on developing a questionnaire to collect data in a 
standardized and structured manner, we sent the questionnaire by e-
mail on November 16, 2010, in an attached Microsoft Word form that 
respondents could return electronically after marking checkboxes or 
entering narrative responses into open-answer boxes. Follow-up e-mail 
messages or telephone calls were placed to respondents when answers 
were unclear or questions were unanswered. We analyzed the frequency 
and distribution of marked checkbox responses. We also conducted a 
content analysis on the open-ended narrative responses for trends and 
recurring themes. Data analysis was conducted by a GAO data analyst 
working directly with GAO staff with subject-matter expertise. A 
second, independent, analyst checked all of the computer programs for 
accuracy. 

For our third objective regarding the circumstances under which USDA 
has coordinated the federal food and agriculture response during an 
emergency for which ESF-11 was activated, we reviewed DHS's National 
Response Framework, including ESF-11, ESF-3, and ESF-6; the Stafford 
Act; and FEMA's Disaster Assistance Policy. We also reviewed and 
analyzed ESF-11-related mission assignments given to USDA by FEMA and 
after-action reports created by USDA for emergencies for which ESF-11 
was activated. In addition, we interviewed relevant officials from 
USDA--including from APHIS's office of Animal Care, the Food and 
Nutrition Service, and the Food Safety Inspection Service--and FEMA 
about coordination with each other and with states and regarding 
challenges related to ESF-11. We also requested and reviewed documents 
provided by both USDA and FEMA with the number of times ESF-11 has 
been activated since 2007. We compared the ESF-11 activations from 
USDA's and FEMA's lists to determine the extent to which the same 
events appeared in all data sets. As we are reporting, we found that 
the data are not sufficiently reliable for reporting purposes. USDA 
ultimately provided us with a list of about 28 ESF-11 activations, 
which is the number we are reporting to provide some context on the 
number of times these activations have occurred. We are making a 
recommendation regarding this finding. We did not review aspects of 
ESF-11 pertaining to the protection of natural and cultural resources 
and historic properties because our review focuses on emergencies 
affecting agriculture and food. 

For our third objective, we also conducted interviews in person or via 
telephone with federal and state agriculture and emergency management 
officials from a nonprobability sample of four states--Iowa, 
Massachusetts, Mississippi, and Texas--about their experience working 
with USDA and FEMA. We used a multistep process to select these four 
states: 

* First, we listed the states and territories that have experienced 
past emergencies for which ESF-11 was activated, which were determined 
by reviewing USDA-provided after-action reports. 

* Second, we narrowed that list down to states in which USDA conducted 
on-the-ground activities, which again was determined by reviewing USDA-
provided after-action reports. 

* Third, we divided the remaining states into two groups those in 
USDA's Eastern Region and those in USDA's Western Region to ensure 
that the selected states represented both regions. 

* Fourth, we identified the reason for each ESF-11 activation-- 
information that we obtained by reviewing USDA-provided after-action 
reports--to ensure that the states we selected experienced different 
types of emergencies. 

* Finally, we considered the states that have used available resources 
from the NVS, based on information provided by APHIS officials. 

Within each state, we interviewed relevant federal and state officials 
involved with the ESF-11 activations, such as state plant and animal 
officials, emergency management officials, USDA state and regional 
officials, and FEMA regional officials (see tables 1-3 for a complete 
list of departments, agencies, and organizations we interviewed). To 
maximize our resources and because HSPD-9 states that the Secretary of 
Agriculture shall work with state governments, among others, to 
develop the NVS and NPDRS, we also interviewed some of these federal 
and state officials regarding issues related to our second objective. 

We conducted this performance audit from June 2010 to August 2011, in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Table 1: Agencies, and Offices Interviewed: 

Department: U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

Component/agency: Agricultural Research Service: 
* Office of Pest Management Policy. 

Component/agency: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), 
Animal Care: 
* APHIS Animal Care Eastern Regional Office.
* APHIS Animal Care Western Regional Office. 

Component/agency: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, 
Emergency Management Leadership Council. 

Component/agency: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, ESF-11 
Coordinators: 
* ESF-11 National Coordinator.
* ESF-11 Eastern Region Coordinator.
* ESF-11 Western Region Coordinator.
* ESF-11 Coordinator for FEMA Region I.
* ESF-11 Coordinator for FEMA Region IV.
* ESF-11 Coordinator for FEMA Region VI.
* ESF-11 Coordinator for FEMA Region VII. 

Component/agency: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Plant 
Protection and Quarantine (PPQ): 
* APHIS PPQ Eastern Regional Office.
* APHIS PPQ Western Regional Office.
* APHIS PPQ state office in Colorado.
* APHIS PPQ state office in Iowa.
* APHIS PPQ state office in Massachusetts.
* APHIS PPQ state office in Mississippi.
* APHIS PPQ state office in North Carolina.
* APHIS PPQ state office in Texas. 

Component/agency: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, National 
Veterinary Stockpile. 

Component/agency: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, 
Veterinary Services (VS): 
* APHIS VS Eastern Regional Office.
* APHIS VS Western Regional Office.
* APHIS VS state office in Colorado.
* APHIS VS state office in Iowa.
* APHIS VS state office in Mississippi.
* APHIS VS state office in North Carolina.
* APHIS VS state office in Texas. 

Component/agency: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, 
Veterinary Services, National Veterinary Services Laboratories. 

Component/agency: Departmental Management, Office of Homeland Security 
and Emergency Coordination. 

Component/agency: Farm Service Agency. 

Component/agency: Food and Nutrition Service: 
* Food and Nutrition Service North East regional office. 

Component/agency: Food Safety and Inspection Service 
* Food Safety Inspection Service district office in North Carolina.
* Food Safety Inspection Service district office in Colorado.
* Office of Program Evaluation, Enforcement, and Review.
* Office of Data Integration and Food Protection.
* Office of Field Operations. 

Component/agency: National Institute of Food and Agriculture. 

Component/agency: Natural Resources Conservation Service. 

Component/agency: Office of the General Counsel. 

Component/agency: Risk Management Agency. 

Department: Department of Health and Human Services: 

Component/agency: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 
Strategic National Stockpile. 

Component/agency: Food and Drug Administration. 

Department: Environmental Protection Agency: 

Component/agency: Office of Homeland Security. 

Component/agency: Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Management. 

Component/agency: Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention. 

Component/agency: Office of Research and Development. 

Department: Department of Homeland Security: 

Component/agency: Federal Emergency Management Agency: 
* FEMA Region I.
* FEMA Region VI.
* Grant Programs Division.
* Recovery Directorate.
* Response Directorate.
Office of Health Affairs.
Office of General Counsel. 

Source GAO. 

[End of table] 

Table 2: Organizations Interviewed: 

* American Association of Swine Veterinarians.
* American Phytopathological Society.
* American Soybean Association.
* DHS Center of Excellence, National Center for Food Protection and 
Defense.
* DHS Center of Excellence, Foreign Animal and Zoonotic Disease Defense.
* Iowa Pork Producers Association.
* Iowa State University, Center for Food Security and Public Health.
* National Association of State Departments of Agriculture.
* National Cattlemen's Beef Association.
* National Chicken Council.
* National Corn Growers Association.
* National Milk Producers Federation.
* National Plant Board.
* National Pork Board. 

Source GAO. 

[End of table] 

Table 3: Agencies Interviewed: 

State: Colorado; 
Department/agency: 
Department of Agriculture. 

State: Iowa; 
Department/agency: 
* Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship.
* Department of Inspections and Appeals.
* Department of Public Defense. 

State: Massachusetts; 
Department/agency: 
* Department of Agricultural Resources.
* Department of Conservation and Recreation. 

State: Mississippi; 
Department/agency: 
* Board of Animal Health.
* Department of Agriculture and Commerce. 

State: North Carolina; 
Department/agency: 
* Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.
* Department of Crime Control and Public Safety. 

State: Texas; 
Department/agency: 
* Animal Health Commission.
* Department of Agriculture.
* Department of Public Safety. 

Source GAO. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: Seventeen Most Damaging Animal Diseases Identified for 
USDA's National Veterinary Stockpile: 

Animal disease: Highly pathogenic avian influenza; 
Animals affected: Chicken, turkey, wild birds, water fowl; 
Route of transmission: Body fluids; aerosols; fomites; 
Risk to human health: Yes, may be lethal. 

Animal disease: Foot-and-mouth disease; 
Animals affected: All cloven hoofed animals including cattle, sheep, 
goats, pigs; 
Route of transmission: Aerosol; direct contact; ingestion; fomites; 
Risk to human health: No. 

Animal disease: Rift Valley fever; 
Animals affected: Cattle, sheep, goats, dogs, cats, camels, monkeys; 
Route of transmission: Insect vectors (mosquitoes); direct contact 
with blood or tissue; 
Risk to human health: Yes, may be lethal. 

Animal disease: Exotic Newcastle disease; 
Animals affected: Poultry, other avian species; 
Route of transmission: Direct contact with body fluids; aerosols; 
feces or respiratory droplets; 
Risk to human health: Yes, minor effects. 

Animal disease: Nipah virus and Hendra virus; 
Animals affected: For Nipah virus pigs, horses, cats, dogs; 
For Hendra virus horses, cats, guinea pigs; 
Route of transmission: For Nipah virus close direct contact with 
contaminated tissue or body fluids. For Hendra virus direct contact; 
oranasal; ingestion of contaminated material; fruit bats; 
Risk to human health: Yes, may be lethal. 

Animal disease: Classical swine fever; 
Animals affected: Domestic pigs; 
Route of transmission: Ingestion (uncooked garbage); fomites; aerosol; 
direct contact; 
Risk to human health: No. 

Animal disease: African swine fever; 
Animals affected: Domestic and wild pigs; wart hogs; 
Route of transmission: Direct contact with body fluids, especially 
blood; fomites; tick vectors; 
Risk to human health: No. 

Animal disease: Bovine spongiform encephalopathy; 
Animals affected: Cattle; 
Route of transmission: Ingestion of infected cattle products (meat, 
bone-meal, nervous tissue); 
Risk to human health: Suspected. 

Animal disease: Rinderpest; 
Animals affected: Cattle, sheep, goats; 
Route of transmission: Direct or close contact with body fluids; 
Risk to human health: No. 

Animal disease: Japanese encephalitis; 
Animals affected: Horses, pigs; 
Route of transmission: Mosquitoes; 
Risk to human health: Yes, may be lethal. 

Animal disease: African horse sickness; 
Animals affected: Horses, zebras, donkeys, mules, camels; 
Route of transmission: Culicoides midges, mechanically by other 
insects; 
Risk to human health: No. 

Animal disease: Venezuelan equine encephalitis; 
Animals affected: All equine, bats, birds, rodents; 
Route of transmission: Mosquito (vectors) infected with virus; 
Risk to human health: Yes, may be lethal. 

Animal disease: Contagious bovine pleuropneumonia; 
Animals affected: Cattle; 
Route of transmission: Close contact with respiratory droplets and 
other body fluids; 
Risk to human health: No. 

Animal disease: Ehrlichia ruminantium (Heartwater); 
Animals affected: Cattle, sheep, goats, wild ruminants; 
Route of transmission: Ticks; 
Risk to human health: No. 

Animal disease: Eastern equine encephalitis; 
Animals affected: Horses; 
Route of transmission: Vectors infected with virus; 
Risk to human health: Yes, may be lethal. 

Animal disease: Coxiella burnetii; 
Animals affected: Cattle, sheep, goats, dogs, cats, rodents, rabbits; 
Route of transmission: Arthropods ticks; inhalation; 
infected animal body fluids (urine, milk, blood, birthing); 
Risk to human health: Yes, may be lethal. 

Animal disease: Akabane virus; 
Animals affected: Cattle, sheep, goats; 
Route of transmission: Unknown, thought to be various species of 
mosquitoes; 
Risk to human health: No. 

Sources: GAO analysis of materials obtained from NVS, Iowa State 
University's Center for Food Security and Public Health, and federal 
regulations. 

Note: These diseases are also select agents. Select agents are 
biological agents and toxins (1) that have the potential to pose a 
severe threat to public health and safety, to animal or plant health, 
or to animal or plant products, and (2) whose possession, use, and 
transfer are regulated by select agent rules (7 C.F.R. pt. 331, 9 
C.F.R. pt. 121, and 42 C.F.R. pt. 73). The CDC and USDA maintain a 
list of select agents and toxins. Congress passed several laws--
including the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and 
Response Act of 2002 (Bioterrorism Act)[Footnote 30]--that 
strengthened the oversight and use of select agents. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: Survey of State and U.S. Territory Animal Health Officials: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

Survey of Animal Health Officials regarding the Veterinary Stockpile: 

Introduction: 

The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) is an independent, non-
partisan legislative branch agency that assists the Congress in 
evaluating how the federal government spends taxpayer dollars. GAO 
supports the Congress in meeting its constitutional responsibilities 
and to help improve the performance and ensure the accountability of 
the federal government for the benefit of the American people.  

In response to a congressional request, we are evaluating federal 
agriculture and food response and recovery efforts, including the 
National Veterinary Stockpile (NVS). The NVS is the nation's 
repository of veterinary countermeasures, including supplies, 
equipment, field tests, vaccines, and commercial support services. It 
exists to provide States and Territories the resources they need to 
respond to catastrophic animal disease outbreaks that terrorists or 
nature may create.  

The goal of this survey is to gain your perspective regarding the NVS. 
You were selected for this survey because you were identified as the 
key contact in your State (including the District of Columbia) or U.S. 
Territory for the NVS.  

Deadline:  

To assist us, we ask that you complete and return this survey by 
December 3, 2010.  

Instructions for Completing This Survey: 
 
You can answer most of the questions easily by checking boxes. A few 
questions request narrative answers. Please note that the space 
provided will expand to accommodate your answer. You may write 
additional comments at the end of the survey. Before you start 
answering the questions, simply save this file to your computer hard 
drive, fill it out, resave the file, and then attach it to your return 
e-mail to GAO. The return email address is SahoSurvey@gao.gov. 

* Please use your mouse to navigate throughout the survey by clicking 
on the field or check box you wish to fill in. Do not use the "Tab" or 
"Enter" keys as doing so may cause formatting problems. 

* To select or deselect a check box, simply click or double click on 
the box. 

Contact Information: 

Thanks in advance for taking the time to complete this survey. If you 
have any questions about the survey, please contact either: 

Bill Colwell, GAO Analyst: 
Phone: 
E-mail: 

or: 

Amanda Krause, GAO Analyst-in-Charge: 
Phone:
E-mail: 

Thank you for your help. 

Contact Information: 

1. Several people may participate in the completion of this survey, 
but we ask that you provide contact information for the person 
coordinating the completion of the survey in case we need to follow-up 
with additional questions. 

Name: 
Title: 
Agency: 
State or Territory: 
Phone #: 
E-mail: 

2. How long have you been in this position? (Round up to the nearest 
year.) 

1-25 years = range; 
6.1 years = average. 

3. Are you the State Animal Health Official for your State or the 
equivalent for your Territory? (Mark only one response.)
38: Yes; 
14: No. 

Section A. Working with USDA Regarding the NVS: 

4. Did USDA work with your State or Territory to develop the NVS 
before it became operational in 2006? (Mark only one response.)
11: Yes; 
36: No; 
5: Missing/No Response. 

5. Did USDA work with your State or Territory regarding the NVS after 
it became operational in 2006? (Mark only one response.)
40: Yes; 
11: No; 
1: Missing/No Response. 

6. When working with USDA regarding the NVS, what aspects were 
positive? (Note: If your State or Territory has not worked with USDA 
regarding the NVS, enter 'Not Applicable.) 

40 respondents made a comment to this question. 

7. When working with USDA regarding the NVS, what aspects could be 
improved? (Note: If your State or Territory has not worked with USDA 
regarding the NVS, enter 'Not Applicable.) 

30 respondents made a comment to this question. 

8.  In which of the following venues, if any, did USDA share 
information with your State or Territory regarding the NVS? (Mark only 
one response for each row.) 

Venue: a. Conferences; 
Yes: USDA shared information in this venue: 44; 
No: USDA did not share information in this venue: 4; 
State or Territory did not participate in this venue: 2; 
Missing/No response: 2. 

Venue: b. Webinars; 
Yes: USDA shared information in this venue: 30; 
No: USDA did not share information in this venue: 9; 
State or Territory did not participate in this venue: 8; 
Missing/No response: 5. 

Venue: c. Training; 
Yes: USDA shared information in this venue: 27; 
No: USDA did not share information in this venue: 10; 
State or Territory did not participate in this venue: 12; 
Missing/No response: 3. 

Venue: d. Exercises; 
Yes: USDA shared information in this venue: 33; 
No: USDA did not share information in this venue: 5; 
State or Territory did not participate in this venue: 12; 
Missing/No response: 2. 

Venue: e. Individual meetings or phone calls between USDA and your 
State or Territory; 
Yes: USDA shared information in this venue: 34; 
No: USDA did not share information in this venue: 7; 
State or Territory did not participate in this venue: 9; 
Missing/No response: 2. 

Venue: f. Group meetings or phone calls with USDA and other States or 
Territories; 
Yes: USDA shared information in this venue: 39; 
No: USDA did not share information in this venue: 5; 
State or Territory did not participate in this venue: 6; 
Missing/No response: 2. 

9. In what other venues, if any, did USDA share information with your 
State or Territory regarding the NVS? 

31 respondents made a comment to this question. 

10. If USDA shared information with your State or Territory regarding 
the NVS, what information did it share? 

43 respondents made a comment to this question. 

11. In which of the following venues, if any, did USDA solicit input 
from your State or Territory regarding the NVS? Mark only one response 
for each row.) 

Venue: a. Conferences; 
Yes: USDA solicited input in this venue: 32; 
No: USDA did not solicited input in this venue: 13; 
State or Territory did not participate in this venue: 4; 
Missing/No response: 3. 

Venue: b. Webinars; 
Yes: USDA solicited input in this venue: 23; 
No: USDA did not solicited input in this venue: 15; 
State or Territory did not participate in this venue: 9; 
Missing/No response: 5. 

Venue: c. Training; 
Yes: USDA solicited input in this venue: 25; 
No: USDA did not solicited input in this venue: 15; 
State or Territory did not participate in this venue: 9; 
Missing/No response: 3. 

Venue: d. Exercises; 
Yes: USDA solicited input in this venue: 25; 
No: USDA did not solicited input in this venue: 12; 
State or Territory did not participate in this venue: 12; 
Missing/No response: 3. 

Venue: e. Individual meetings or phone calls between USDA and your 
State or Territory; 
Yes: USDA solicited input in this venue: 28; 
No: USDA did not solicited input in this venue: 13; 
State or Territory did not participate in this venue: 10; 
Missing/No response: 1. 

Venue: f. Group meetings or phone calls with USDA and other States or 
Territories; 
Yes: USDA solicited input in this venue: 31; 
No: USDA did not solicited input in this venue: 12; 
State or Territory did not participate in this venue: 8; 
Missing/No response: 1. 
   
12. In what other venues, if any, did USDA solicit input from your 
State or Territory regarding the NVS? 

16 respondents made a comment to this question. 

13. If USDA solicited input from your State or Territory regarding the 
NVS, what issues did it ask about? 

29 respondents made a comment to this question. 

Section B. NVS-Specific Plans: 

14. Has your State or Territory taken any steps to create a written 
NVS-specific plan? (Mark only one response.) 
40: Yes; 
12: No. 

15. Does your State or Territory have a written NVS-specific plan? 
(Mark only one response.) 
17: Yes: Please attach a copy of this plan to your e-mail: Skip To 
Question #17; 
35: No. 

16. What barriers or challenges exist, if any, that prevent your State 
or Territory from having a written NVS-specific plan? 

27 respondents made a comment to this question. 

Section C. Receiving NVS Resources: 

17. Has your State or Territory identified specific facility locations 
to receive NVS resources? (Mark only one response.)
20: Yes; 
31: No 4: Skip To Question #20; 
1: Don't know: 4: Skip To Question #20. 

18. Are these specific facility locations to receive NVS resources 
identified in your State's or Territory's written NVS-specific plan? 
(Mark only one response.) 
13: Yes; 
1: No; 
6: Not applicable since State or Territory does not have a written NVS-
specific plan. 

19. Has your State or Territory identified a facility location(s) 
capable of holding temperature-sensitive NVS resources such as 
antiviral medications, vaccines, or diagnostic test kits? (Mark only 
one response.)
17: Yes; 
2: No; 
1: Don't know. 

20. How clear or unclear is the process for requesting NVS resources? 
(Mark only one response.) 
26: Very clear; 
20: Somewhat clear; 
2: Somewhat unclear; 
1: Very unclear; 
3: Don't know. 
    
Section D. Concerns about NVS Resources: 

21. Does your State or Territory have any of the following concerns  
about NVS personal protective equipment (PPE)? (Mark only one response 
for each row.)  

Concern: a. Sufficiency of the amount of PPE contained in the NVS;     
No: 40; 
Yes: 12; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 0. 

Concern: b. Appropriateness of NVS PPE to respond to the most damaging 
animal diseases; 
No: 40; 
Yes: 11; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 1. 

Concern: c. Capability of the NVS to deploy PPE within 24 hours of an 
outbreak; 
No: 35; 
Yes: 15; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 2. 
  
22. What other concerns, if any, does your State or Territory have 
regarding NVS PPE? 

17 respondents made a comment to this question.  

23. Does your State or Territory have any of the following concerns 
about NVS diagnostic test kits? (Mark only one response for each row.) 

Concern: a. Sufficiency of the amount of diagnostic test kits 
contained in the NVS; 
No: 32; 
Yes: 16; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 4. 
 
Concern: b. Appropriateness of NVS diagnostic test kits to respond to 
the most damaging animal diseases; 
No: 32; 
Yes: 16; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 4. 

Concern: c. Capability of the NVS to deploy diagnostic test kits 
within 24 hours of an outbreak; 
No: 34; 
Yes: 14; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 4. 
 
24. What other concerns, if any, does your State or Territory have 
regarding NVS diagnostic test kits?  

25 respondents made a comment to this question. 
     
25. Does  your State or Territory have any of the following concerns 
about NVS antiviral medication? (Mark only one response for each row.) 

Concern: a. Sufficiency of the amount of antiviral medication 
contained in the NVS; 
No: 32; 
Yes: 17; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 3. 

Concern: b. Appropriateness of NVS antiviral medication to respond to 
the most damaging animal diseases; 
No: 34; 
Yes: 16; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 2. 

Concern: c. Capability of the NVS to deploy antiviral medication 
within 24 hours of an outbreak; 
No: 30; 
Yes: 17; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 5. 

26. What other concerns, if any, does your State or Territory have 
regarding NVS antiviral medication?  

26 respondents made a comment to this question. 

27. Does your State or Territory have any of the following concerns 
about NVS vaccines? (Mark only one response for each row.) 

Concern: a. Sufficiency of the amount of vaccines contained in the NVS; 
No: 20; 
Yes: 30; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 2. 

Concern: b. Appropriateness of NVS vaccines to respond to the most 
damaging animal diseases; 
No: 24; 
Yes: 26; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 2. 

Concern: c. Capability of the NVS to deploy vaccines within 24 hours 
of an outbreak; 
No: 24; 
Yes: 26; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 2. 

28. Does your State or Territory have any of the following concerns 
about NVS animal-handling equipment? (Mark only one response for each 
row.) 

Concern: a. Sufficiency of the amount of animal-handling equipment 
contained in the NVS; 
No: 23; 
Yes: 26; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 3. 

Concern: b. Appropriateness of NVS animal-handling equipment to 
respond to the most damaging animal diseases; 
No: 29; 
Yes: 19; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 4. 

Concern: c. Capability of the NVS to deploy animal-handling equipment 
within 24 hours of an outbreak; 
No: 27; 
Yes: 22; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 3. 

30. What other concerns, if any, does your State or Territory have  
regarding NVS animal-handling equipment? 

20 respondents made a comment to this question. 
   
31. Does your State or Territory have any of the following concerns   
about NVS depopulation, disposal and decontamination (3D) commercial 
support services? (Mark only one response for each row.) 
  
Concern: a. Sufficiency of the amount of commercial support services 
available from the NVS; 
No: 28; 
Yes: 23; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 1. 

Concern: b. Appropriateness of NVS 3D commercial support services to 
respond to the most damaging animal diseases; 
No: 28; 
Yes: 22; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 2. 

Concern: c. Capability of the NVS to deploy commercial support 
services within 24 hours of an outbreak; 
No: 27; 
Yes: 21; 
If yes, please note any specific concerns: 
Missing/No response: 4.  
   
32. What other concerns, if any, does your State or Territory have   
regarding NVS 3D commercial support services? 

22 respondents made a comment to this question. 

33. Does your State or Territory have any concerns regarding any other 
specific NVS resource(s)?  

10 respondents made a comment to this question. 
     
Section E. Use of NVS Resources: 

34. Has your State or Territory requested any NVS resources since 2006 
to respond to an incident?  (Mark only one response.) 
3: Yes; 
49: No. 
     
35. Has your State or Territory received any NVS resources since 2006 
to respond to an incident? (Mark only one response.) 
3: Yes; 
49: No: 4: Skip To Question #40. 

36. Overall, how satisfied or dissatisfied were you with the 
assistance you received from the NVS? (Mark only one response.) 
2: Very satisfied; 
1: Somewhat satisfied; 
0: Neither satisfied nor dissatisfied; 
0: Somewhat dissatisfied; 
0: Very dissatisfied. 

37. Why did you rate your level of satisfaction with the NVS 
assistance you received at this level? 

3 respondents made a comment to this question. 

38. What improvements, if any, could be made in the assistance 
provided by the NVS? 

3 respondents made a comment to this question. 

39. Did USDA solicit feedback from your State or Territory about the 
NVS assistance you received? (Mark only one response.) 
2: Yes; 
1: No; 
0: Don't know. 

Section F. Additional Information: 

40. Please provide any additional comments you would like to share 
regarding the NVS. 

26 respondents made a comment to this question. 

[End of section] 

Appendix VI: Thirteen High-Consequence Plant Diseases with Completed 
Recovery Plans for USDA's NPDRS: 

Plant disease: Citrus variegated chlorosis; 
Plants affected: Sweet oranges and other citrus species; 
Route of transmission: Budding using infected budwood sources, natural 
root grafts, vectored by xylem-feeding insects; 
Impact: The potential economic impact is high because the disease 
lowers yields, makes fruit unmarketable, and there is a likely loss of 
domestic and international export markets by embargo. 

Plant disease: Downy mildews of corn; 
Plants affected: Corn, sugarcane, some sorghum cultivars, and many 
weedy grass species; 
Route of transmission: Spores produced by nearby infected hosts or 
soil borne over-wintering spores, spread by wind and rain; 
Impact: On sweet corn, losses of 100% have been reported in the 
Philippines. It was estimated that the national yield loss in the 
Philippines in the 1974-1975 growing season was $23 million. 

Plant disease: Huanglongbing of citrus; 
Plants affected: All citrus plants, including sweet oranges, tangelos, 
and mandarins; 
Route of transmission: Grafting with diseased budwood, vectored by 
citrus psyllids; 
Impact: Severe yield losses result from infections of citrus trees, 
which usually die in 3 to 8 years. Infected trees produce fruit that 
is bitter and generally unsuitable for sale as fresh fruit or for 
juice. 

Plant disease: Late wilt of corn; 
Plants affected: Corn; 
Route of transmission: Spread primarily through movement of infested 
soil, crop residue, or seeds; 
Impact: Corn yield losses approached 40% in Egypt before the 
introduction of resistant varieties. All areas in the United States 
could be seriously impacted by the disease, in part, because of 
favorable environmental conditions. 

Plant disease: Laurel wilt of redbay; 
Plants affected: Trees in the laurel family; 
Route of transmission: Vectored by beetles; 
Impact: The disease poses the greatest threat to the commercial 
avocado industry. Other economic impact may include decreased property 
values and lost revenue to nurseries. 

Plant disease: Plum pox; 
Plants affected: Plums, peaches, nectarines, apricots, and almonds; 
Route of transmission: Graft transmission, vectored by aphids; 
Impact: The disease can cause significant economic loss due to a 
reduction in fruit quality and yield and due to premature tree death. 
In 1999, the yearly value of production of peaches, nectarines, plums, 
apricots, and almonds nationally was approximately $1.8 billion. 

Plant disease: Potato wart; 
Plants affected: Potatoes; 
Route of transmission: Infected seed potatoes, movement of fungal 
spores in soil or water, infested manure from animals that have fed on 
infected tubers; 
Impact: The economic impact is not from direct disease losses but from 
loss of international trade markets, long-term quarantines, and 
regulatory restrictions placed on infested areas and the buffer zones 
surrounding infested land. 

Plant disease: Ralstonia bacterial wilt of potato and geraniums; 
Plants affected: Various row crops including pepper, tobacco, tomato, 
and potato, as well as some ornamentals such as geraniums; 
Route of transmission: Primarily a soilborne and waterborne pathogen; 
Impact: The disease is one of the most damaging pathogens on potato 
worldwide and has been estimated to affect 3.75 million acres in 
approximately 80 countries with global damage estimates exceeding $950 
million per year. 

Plant disease: Rathayibacter poisoning; 
Plants affected: Forage grasses, often resulting in fatal poisoning of 
grazing animals; 
Route of transmission: Transferred from infested soils into plants by 
plant parasitic nematodes; 
Impact: Thousands of sheep and cattle, as well as some horses, died 
from ailments attributed to the disease in Australia, where loss of 
production and cost of control has been in the millions of dollars. 

Plant disease: Red leaf blotch of soybean; 
Plants affected: Soybeans; 
Route of transmission: Rain splashes the fungus from soil onto leaf 
surfaces, where germination and infection occur; 
Impact: Yield losses of up to 50% were reported in Zambia and 
Zimbabwe. The disease could threaten soybean production anywhere in 
the United States. 

Plant disease: Scots pine blister rust; 
Plants affected: Eurasian pine trees; 
Route of transmission: Spread by windborne spores, may also be carried 
on plant material; 
Impact: The greatest economic impacts may be to nurseries and 
Christmas tree plantations that grow Scots pine. Movement restrictions 
and eradication of infected material could cause enormous economic 
losses amounting to millions of dollars. 

Plant disease: Stem rust of wheat; 
Plants affected: Wheat and barley; 
Route of transmission: Rain splash and wind-dispersal; 
Impact: The disease has been one of the most important diseases of 
cereal crops since the emergence of western civilization. Regional 
epidemics have occurred numerous times in the United States, with 
losses of over 50% recorded in Minnesota and North Dakota in 1935. 

Plant disease: Phytophthora kernoviae; 
Plants affected: Forest trees and shrubs such as beech and 
rhododendron; 
Route of transmission: Dispersed by splashes, through contaminated 
runoff water, in infested soil, and through long-distance dispersal on 
logs, wood products , and ornamental nursery stock; 
Impact: The potential for the disease to become established in U.S. 
hardwood forests is considered high, as is the likelihood of it 
causing extensive mortality, therefore, the potential economic and 
ecological impact to U.S. natural resources due to pathogen 
establishment is potentially very high. 

Source: GAO analysis of NPDRS recovery plans. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix VII: USDA List of 28 ESF-11 Activations between 2007 and 2011: 

Year: 2007; 
Emergency: Tornado; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Kansas. 

Year: 2007; 
Emergency: Wildfires; 
States and U.S. territories affected: California. 

Year: 2007; 
Emergency: Tropical Storm Erin; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Texas. 

Year: 2007; 
Emergency: Severe winter storms; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska. 

Year: 2007; 
Emergency: Hurricane Dean; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Louisiana, Texas. 

Year: 2008; 
Emergency: Severe storms and flooding; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Indiana, Iowa. 

Year: 2008; 
Emergency: Hurricane Omar; 
States and U.S. territories affected: U.S. Virgin Islands. 

Year: 2008; 
Emergency: Hurricane Dolly; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Texas. 

Year: 2008; 
Emergency: Hurricane Gustav; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, 
Texas. 

Year: 2008; 
Emergency: Hurricane Ike; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Texas. 

Year: 2008; 
Emergency: Hurricane Fay; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Florida. 

Year: 2008; 
Emergency: Tropical Storm Hanna; 
States and U.S. territories affected: North Carolina. 

Year: 2008-2009; 
Emergency: Severe winter storms; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Massachusetts. 

Year: 2009; 
Emergency: Earthquake and tsunami; 
States and U.S. territories affected: American Samoa. 

Year: 2009; 
Emergency: Flooding; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Washington. 

Year: 2009; 
Emergency: Severe storm and flooding; 
States and U.S. territories affected: North Dakota. 

Year: 2009; 
Emergency: 56th Presidential Inauguration[A]; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Washington, D.C- 

Year: 2010; 
Emergency: Flooding; 
States and U.S. territories affected: North Dakota. 

Year: 2010; 
Emergency: Hurricane Alex; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Texas. 

Year: 2010; 
Emergency: Hurricane Earl; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Massachusetts, New York, North 
Carolina. 

Year: 2010; 
Emergency: Severe flooding; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Massachusetts. 

Year: 2010; 
Emergency: Haiti earthquake; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Florida[B]. 

Year: 2011; 
Emergency: Severe storms; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Connecticut. 

Year: 2011; 
Emergency: Severe storms and flooding; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Arizona. 

Year: 2011; 
Emergency: Honshu tsunami; 
States and U.S. territories affected: California, Washington. 

Year: 2011; 
Emergency: Severe storms, tornadoes, and flooding; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Missouri. 

Year: 2011; 
Emergency: Flooding; 
States and U.S. territories affected: Louisiana. 

Year: 2011; 
Emergency: Flooding; 
States and U.S. territories affected: South Dakota. 

Source USDA. 

[A] According to USDA officials, ESF-11 was activated as a 
precautionary measure to feed and shelter individuals in the event 
that an improvised explosive devise was detonated. 

[B] ESF-11 was activated to assist states with planning efforts to 
address agriculture concerns with U.S. citizens returning to the 
United States from Haiti. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix VIII: Comments from the U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

USDA: 
United States Department of Agriculture: 
Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Coordination: 
1400 Independence Avenue SW: 
Washington, DC 20250: 
 
To: Lisa Shames: 
Director: 
Natural Resources and Environment: 
 
From: [Signed by] Todd H. Repass, Jr. 
Director: 
Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Coordination: 

Subject: U.S. Department of Agriculture Response: 

The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) appreciates the 
opportunity to respond to the Government Accountability Office's (GAO) 
Draft Report titled Homeland Security: Actions Weeded to Improve 
Response to Potential Terrorist Attacks and Natural Disasters 
Affecting Food and Agriculture (GAO-11-652). 

USDA concurs with the Recommendations in this report. However as 
outlined below, USDA concurs, with discussion, on two of the five 
recommendations. 

GAO Recommendation: 

To ensure the most effective use of resources, we recommend the 
Secretaries of Agriculture and Health and Human Services jointly 
determine if there are opportunities, where appropriate, for the 
National Veterinary Stockpile (NVS) to leverage Strategic National 
Stockpile mechanisms or infrastructure as directed by HSPD-9. If such 
opportunities exist, the two Agencies should formally agree upon a 
process for the NVS to use the identified mechanisms and 
infrastructure. 

USDA Response: 

USDA agrees with this recommendation. The Centers for Disease Control 
and Prevention (CDC's) Strategic National Stockpile (SNS) and USDA's 
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service's (APHIS) National 
Veterinary Stockpile (NVS) have collaborated since the NVS began 
operations in 2006. The SNS has provided technical assistance and 
shared lessons learned, planning documents, and numerous guidance 
documents that were subsequently utilized by the NVS. The SNS and the 
NVS met as recently as February 2011, and in this meeting the SNS 
shared information with the NVS on current capabilities as well as 
challenges/lessons learned. APHIS and CDC will continue to explore 
opportunities for which the NVS may leverage Strategic National 
Stockpile mechanisms or infrastructure as directed in HSPD-9. If there 
are any opportunities, the NVS will develop a document that describes 
the process on how the NVS will use the mechanisms or infrastructure. 
If not, NVS will document the findings as appropriate. 

GAO Recommendation: 

Develop and implement a documented, systematic process to track 
research gaps identified in the NPDRS recovery plans and monitor 
progress in fillings these gaps. 

USDA Response: 

USDA concurs with this recommendation. 

GAO Recommendation: 

Develop and implement a mechanism to ensure NPDRS recovery plans are 
shared with key state and federal plant health officials. 

USDA Response: 

USDA concurs with this recommendation and will expand its efforts to 
share recovery plans more broadly. Currently, the Department conducts 
outreach with the American Phytopathological Society (APS), which has 
over 3,000 professional plant pathologists as members representing 
about 90 percent of all plant pathologists in the United States. NPDRS 
recovery plans are posted in the APS newsletter and on the NPDRS 
webpage. Federal plant health officials are notified of recently 
developed plans on a regular basis through an email network as well as 
the NPDRS webpage. Officials also meet with state and federal experts 
on an annual basis in a NPDRS workshop where current activities and 
problems are reviewed and discussed, and future activities are planned. 

GAO Recommendation: 

To ensure that USDA is fulfilling its responsibilities to protect the 
nation's food and agriculture systems, we recommend that the Secretary 
of Agriculture develop a department-wide strategy for implementing 
HSPD-9 responsibilities. Such a strategy would include an overarching 
framework for setting priorities, as well as allocating resources. 

USDA Response: 

USDA concurs with this recommendation. 

GAO Recommendation: 

To improve USDA's performance as EST-11 coordinator and to address 
issues experienced by key parties, such as pet sheltering, we 
recommend that the Secretary of Agriculture develop a process for 
ensuring that: (1) following all ESF-11 activations, after-action 
reports are consistently completed and shared with key parties 
involved in each activation; (2) the perspectives of key parties are 
incorporated in these reports; (3) any identified gaps and/or 
challenges are addressed through corrective actions; and (4) the 
completed after-action reports are used to provide a complete, 
accurate, and consistent count of ESF-11 activations over time, in 
turn producing sufficiently reliable data on ESF-11 activations. 

USDA Response: 

USDA agrees with this recommendation. Since 2008, the APHIS ESF-11 
coordinator has developed a consistent approach for developing After 
Action Reports (AAR). The AARs are modeled after the Department of 
Homeland Security Federal Emergency Management Agency's AARs, which 
include identifying successes and areas needing improvement. These ESF 
#11 I AARs are posted on the ESF #11 Web site, [hyperlink, 
http://www.aphis.usda.goviemergency_response/esf_11/esf11_resources.shtm
l], and are available for key parties to review. In the future, APHIS 
plans to e-mail the AARs directly to ESE #11 stakeholders. 

The AAR process includes the perspectives of key parties that 
participate in ESF 411 responses. The ESF 411coordinator will seek 
even broader input to incorporate the perspectives of all key parties 
that participate in ESF 411 responses. Since 2008, APHIS and the other 
ESF #11 partner Agencies have been meeting regularly to discuss any 
identified gaps or challenges and to plan and execute appropriate 
corrective actions. Lastly, existing ESF #11 reporting processes and 
AAR reporting processes allow for the compilation of complete, 
accurate, consistent, and reliable data on ESF-11 activations. 

USDA again thanks GAO for its review of actions needed to improve 
responses to potential terrorist attacks and natural disasters 
affecting food and agriculture. If there are any additional questions, 
please questions Jennifer Wendel at (202) 205-4441. 

[End of section] 

Appendix IX: Comments from the Department of Health and Human Services: 

Department Of Health And Human Services: 
Office Of The Secretary: 
Assistant Secretary for Legislation: 
Washington, DC 20201: 

July 7, 2011: 

Lisa Shames, Director: 
Natural Resources and Environment: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street N.W. 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Ms. Shames: 

Attached are comments on the U.S. Government Accountability Office's 
(GAO) draft report entitled, "Homeland Security: Actions Needed to 
Improve Response to Potential Terrorist Attacks and Natural Disasters 
Affecting Food and Agriculture" (GAO 11-652). 

The Department appreciates the opportunity to review this report prior 
to publication. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Jim R. Esquea: 
Assistant Secretary for Legislation: 

Attachment: 

[End of letter] 

General Comments Of The Department Of Health And Human Services (HHS) 
On The Government Accountability Office's (GAO) Draft Report Entitled, 
"Homeland Security: Actions Needed To Improve Response To Potential 
Terrorist Attacks And Natural Disasters Affecting Food And 
Agriculture," (GA0-11-652): 

The Department appreciates the opportunity to review and comment on 
this draft report. 

GAO Recommendation for HHS: 

To ensure the most effective use of resources, we recommend the 
Secretaries of Agriculture and Health and Human Services jointly 
determine if there are opportunities, where appropriate, for the NVS 
to leverage Strategic National Stockpile mechanisms or infrastructure 
as directed by HSPD-9. If such opportunities exist, the two agencies 
should formally agree upon a process for the NVS to use the identified 
mechanisms and infrastructure. 

HHS Response: 

The Department concurs with the recommendation that HHS, in 
collaboration with USDA, should determine whether opportunities exist 
for NVS to leverage SNS mechanisms or infrastructure as directed by 
HSPD-9. In February 2011, both CDC/DSNS and USDA/NVS examined possible 
resource sharing in the areas of transportation, warehousing, and 
state and local resources used for the receipt and distribution of SNS 
assets. However, no real opportunities for resource sharing have been 
identified to date. If an opportunity arises in the future, as 
determined by HHS and USDA, HHS will work to ensure that the 
appropriate agreements are in place to fully comply with rules and 
regulations governing interagency agreements. 

The specific areas the report cites where leveraging can occur are 
incorrect. The SNS does not currently provide an inventory management 
system for state or local use. Most states have adopted various 
commercial inventory management systems to meet their particular needs 
for managing SNS provided inventory. The vast majority of the 
influenza antiviral medications contained in the SNS are pre-allocated 
for states on a pro-rata basis based on human population. NVS 
maintains its own stock of anti-virals that it believes is sufficient 
for NVS purposes. 

[End of section] 

Appendix X: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

U.S. Department of Homeland Security: 
Washington, DC 20528: 

July 18, 2011: 

Lisa Shames: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Re: Draft Report GA0-11-652, "Homeland Security: Actions Needed to 
Improve Response to Potential Terrorist Attacks and Natural Disasters 
Affecting Food and Agriculture" 

Dear Ms. Shames: 

Thank you for the opportunity to review and comment on this draft 
report. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) appreciates the 
U.S. Government Accountability Office's (GAO's) work in planning and 
conducting its review and issuing this report. 

The Department is pleased to note the report's positive acknowledgment 
of its role and that of the Federal Emergency Management Agency 
(FEMA), related to protecting the nation's critical infrastructure — 
including U.S. food and agriculture systems — and responding to 
terrorist attacks, major disasters, and other large-scale emergencies, 
as appropriate. The Department remains committed to continuing its 
work with interagency partners, such as the U.S. Department of 
Agriculture (USDA) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 
to ensure effective implementation of Homeland Security Presidential 
Directive (HSPD)-9. 

The draft report contained two recommendations directed at DHS, with 
which DHS concurs. Specifically, to help ensure that the federal 
government is effectively implementing the nation's food and 
agriculture defense policy, GAO recommended that the Secretary of
Homeland Security: 

Recommendation 1: Resume the Department of Homeland Security's efforts 
to coordinate agencies' overall HSPD-9 implementation efforts. 

Response: Concur. DHS will work to coordinate overall HSPD-9 
implementation efforts. Within DHS, several components have expertise 
to contribute to improving the response to terrorist attacks and 
natural disasters affecting food and agriculture. For example, the DHS
Office of Health Affairs (OHA) has a mechanism in place to coordinate 
HSPD-9 progress with the Defense of Food and Agriculture Dashboard. 
The Dashboard has always been available to the interagency to use at 
their discretion. In 2008, OHA established, in coordination with the 
inter-agency, the Defense of Food and Agriculture Dashboard which is 
hosted on the Office of Management and Budget's MAX collaboration 
portal. DHS coordinated HSPD-9 progress from the EPA, U.S. Department 
of Health and Human Services (HHS), and the USDA and reported this 
information publicly to the Federal community on the Dashboard. DHS 
maintains its departmental progress of HSPD-9 on the Dashboard and 
actively engages the interagency community on HSPD-9 activities by 
establishing several working groups with HHS and USDA to effectively 
coordinate and collaborative on food and agriculture defense 
activities. OHA, and other DHS components, will continue to support 
interagency coordination activities of HSPD-9 implementation efforts. 

To expedite response and recovery from major emergencies, GAO also 
recommended that the Secretary of Homeland Security direct the 
Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, in 
coordination with key agencies, to: 

Recommendation 2: Provide guidance that clarifies the roles and 
responsibilities agencies will have regarding the disposal of animal 
carcasses in emergencies for which ESF-11 is activated. 

Response: Concur. FEMA serves as one of the support agencies and will 
continue to work with and provide guidance to our federal partners to 
better define the roles and responsibilities regarding the disposal of 
animal carcasses. However, clarifying roles and responsibilities will 
necessitate our federal partners to review their authorities and 
determine their agency's specific responsibility for the action during 
Emergency Support Function (ESF)-11 activations. 

Again, thank you for the opportunity to review and comment on this 
draft report. Technical comments on the report have been provided 
under separate cover. We look forward to working with you on future 
Homeland Security engagements. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Jim H. Crumpacker: 
Director: 
Departmental GAO/OIG Liaison Office: 

[End of section] 

Appendix XI: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Lisa Shames, (202) 512-3841, or shamesl@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, Mary Denigan-Macauley, 
Assistant Director; Kevin Bray; William Colwell; Bridget Grimes; 
Amanda Krause; and Terry Richardson made key contributions to this 
report. 

Other important contributors included Nancy Crothers, Joyce Evans, 
Diana Goody, Emily Hanawalt, Joshua Hurd, Jan Montgomery, Jeremy 
Sebest, Benjamin Shouse, and Cynthia S. Taylor. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Former Senator Bob Graham and Former Senator Jim Talent, 
Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction 
Proliferation and Terrorism, Prevention of WMD Proliferation and 
Terrorism Report Card (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 26, 2010). 

[2] See GAO, Homeland Security: Much Is Being Done to Protect 
Agriculture from a Terrorist Attack, but Important Challenges Remain, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-214] (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 8, 2005). 

[3] See: GAO, High-Risk Series: An Update, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-310] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 31, 
2007); GAO, High-Risk Series: An Update, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-271] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 22, 
2009); GAO, High-Risk Series: An Update, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-278] (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 16, 
2011). See also: GAO, Federal Food Safety Oversight: Food Safety 
Working Group Is a Positive First Step but Governmentwide Planning Is 
Needed to Address Fragmentation, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-289] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 18, 
2011). 

[4] See: [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-289]; GAO, 
Oversight of Food Safety Activities: Federal Agencies Should Pursue 
Opportunities to Reduce Overlap and Better Leverage Resources, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-213] (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 30, 2005); GAO, Food Safety and Security: Fundamental Changes 
Needed to Ensure Safe Food, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-02-47T] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 10, 
2001). 

[5] GAO, Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1] 
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 1, 1999). 

[6] Members include the President and Vice President; the Attorney 
General; Secretaries of Defense, Health and Human Services, 
Transportation, Treasury; the Directors of FEMA, the Federal Bureau of 
Investigation, and Central Intelligence; the Assistant to the 
President for Homeland Security; and others the President may 
designate. Other heads of agencies--including the Secretary of 
Agriculture and the Administrator of the EPA--may also be invited to 
attend meetings. The establishment of the Homeland Security Council 
was codified in statute with the enactment of the Homeland Security 
Act of 2002. See Pub. L. No. 107-296 § 901, 116 Stat. 2135, 2258. 

[7] We did not review aspects of ESF-11 pertaining to the protection 
of natural and cultural resources and historic properties because our 
review focuses on emergencies affecting food and agriculture. 

[8] In 2005, we reported that, since the terrorist attacks of 2001, 
agencies had formed numerous working groups to protect agriculture. 
For example, DHS created a Food and Agriculture Sector Coordinating 
Council to help the federal government and industry share ideas about 
how to mitigate the risk of an attack on agriculture. See GAO-05-214. 

[9] DHS refers to this online forum as the "Defense of Food and 
Agriculture Dashboard." 

[10] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1]. 

[11] According to the NVS Business Plan, APHIS uses the term "State" 
for brevity to denote all jurisdictions, including tribes and 
territories, that may request NVS assistance. 

[12] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-214]. 

[13] GAO, Avian Influenza: USDA Has Taken Important Steps to Prepare 
for Outbreaks, but Better Planning Could Improve Response, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-652] (Washington, D.C.: June 11, 
2007). 

[14] For more information on soybean rust, see GAO, Agriculture 
Production: USDA Needs to Build on 2005 Experience to Minimize the 
Effects of Asian Soybean Rust in the Future, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-337] (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 24, 
2006). 

[15] The National Science and Technology Council is the principal 
means within the executive branch to coordinate science and technology 
policy across the federal government. 

[16] GAO, Veterinarian Workforce: Actions Are Needed to Ensure 
Sufficient Capacity for Protecting Public and Animal Health, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-178] (Washington, D.C.: 
Feb. 4, 2009). 

[17] Animal Health Protection Act, Pub. L. No. 107-171, tit. X, 
subtit. E, 116 Stat. 494 (codified as amended at 7 U.S.C. §§ 8301-
8317). 

[18] FDA Food Safety Modernization Act, Pub. L. No. 111-353, § 208, 
124 Stat. 3885, 3944. 

[19] GAO, Food Safety: USDA and FDA Need to Better Ensure Prompt and 
Complete Recalls of Potentially Unsafe Food, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-51] (Washington D.C.: Oct. 6, 2004). 

[20] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-278]. 

[21] See GAO, Combating Terrorism: Evaluation of Selected 
Characteristics in National Strategies Related to Terrorism, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-408T] (Washington, 
D.C.: Feb. 3, 2004); GAO, Aviation Security: A National Strategy and 
Other Actions Would Strengthen TSA's Efforts to Secure Commercial 
Airport Perimeters and Access Controls, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-399] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 30, 
2009); GAO, Rebuilding Iraq: More Comprehensive National Strategy 
Needed to Help Achieve U.S. Goals, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-788] (Washington, D.C.: July 11, 
2006). 

[22] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-399]. 

[23] GAO, Catastrophic Disasters: Enhanced Leadership, Capabilities, 
and Accountability Controls Will Improve the Effectiveness of the 
Nation's Preparedness, Response, and Recovery System, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-618] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 6, 
2006). 

[24] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-618]. 

[25] GAO, Results-Oriented Government: Practices That Can Help Enhance 
and Sustain Collaboration among Federal Agencies, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-15] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 21, 
2005). 

[26] GAO, Government Auditing Standards (July 2007 Revision), 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-731G] (Washington, 
D.C.: July 2007). 

[27] Three of these 28 emergencies occurred in spring 2011 and, 
therefore, would not have developed after-action reports at the time 
we completed our audit work. 

[28] The White House, The Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina: 
Lessons Learned (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 26, 2006). 

[29] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1]. 

[30] Pub. L. No. 107-188, 116 Stat. 594, 637-662 (June 12, 2002). 

[End of section] 

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