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Saving Response Forces' which was released on December 7, 2011. 

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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Report to Congressional Requesters: 

December 2011: 

Homeland Defense and Weapons of Mass Destruction: 

Additional Steps Could Enhance the Effectiveness of the National 
Guard's Life-Saving Response Forces: 

GAO-12-114: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-12-114, a report to congressional requesters. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The 2010 National Security Strategy emphasizes the importance of 
strengthening our security and resilience at home and building 
capability to respond to and recover from major chemical, biological, 
radiological, nuclear, and high-yield explosive (CBRNE) incidents. The 
National Guard has established 17 CBRNE Enhanced Response Force 
Packages (CERFP), which are staffed with National Guard part-time 
personnel, to provide life-saving capabilities in response to a CBRNE 
event. The teams are intended to coordinate operations with multiple 
response partners at the local, state, and federal levels—-including 
Department of Defense (DOD) forces. The National Guard Bureau (NGB) is 
responsible for managing the CERFP program. GAO assessed (1) how well 
CERFPs are prepared to perform their mission and how such readiness is 
measured and reported; (2) how effectively CERFPs coordinate with 
incident response partners and how well this is evaluated; and (3) the 
effectiveness of the CERFPs’ command and control framework. GAO 
reviewed program documentation, surveyed National Guard and emergency 
management officials from 27 states, observed training exercises, and 
interviewed DOD, NGB, and CERFP officials. 

What GAO Found: 

The National Guard’s CERFPs face personnel, training, and equipment 
challenges that have adversely affected their preparedness to 
effectively execute the CBRNE mission. For example, state National 
Guard and CERFP officials cited ongoing difficulty in maintaining 
adequate numbers of personnel with the proficiency needed to execute 
many specialized tasks they are to perform, and stated that additional 
equipment may be needed to perform the mission. These challenges 
highlight that NGB has not established a process to comprehensively 
review and validate personnel, training, and equipment requirements. 
In addition, CERFPs’ readiness information is not comprehensively 
available to potential DOD response partners because such information 
is not yet included in DOD’s centralized readiness-reporting system, 
and final plans to do so have not yet been developed. In the absence 
of accurate requirements and comprehensive readiness information, NGB 
is unable to effectively prioritize funding and mitigate resource 
deficiencies that could jeopardize the CERFPs’ preparedness levels. 

CERFPs coordinate with some of their potential response partners—such 
as local and state organizations—through activities such as briefings 
but have achieved varying levels of success in educating such partners 
about CERFP capabilities because of insufficient guidance on how to 
conduct interagency coordination. Existing coordination guidance is 
imprecise on the frequency and targeting of coordination activities, 
thereby providing little direction for prioritizing responsibilities. 
Additionally, opportunities exist to enhance regional coordination 
through interstate agreements and planning. Such agreements would 
allow more effective pooling and sharing of resources across state 
boundaries; however, few interstate agreements exist between states 
with and without CERFPs. NGB is taking steps to assess the CERFPs’ 
performance of coordination activities, but NGB’s evaluation tool, 
based on existing guidance, does not have coordination standards 
against which CERFP performance can be measured. In the absence of 
sufficient interagency coordination guidance and evaluation standards, 
NGB is unable to foster a consistent approach to coordination that 
improves the CERFPs’ ability to respond to regional events. 

NGB has a framework in place for the operational command and control 
of CERFPs that outlines how teams will integrate with civilian and 
military command structures. However, the command and control of 
operations involving CERFPs may be limited because of (1) inadequate 
communications equipment; (2) the absence of required agreements 
between some CERFPs and their out-of-state elements; and (3) 
infrequent opportunities to practice potential command and control 
arrangements in a realistic response environment. For example, the 
CERFPs’ authorized communications equipment is not interoperable with 
the equipment used by some other response organizations, such as first 
responders, and has a limited range. In addition, NGB has initiated 
plans to introduce 10 new forces—-called Homeland Response Forces-—to 
assist civil authorities in responding to disasters of all kinds. This 
plan will affect the existing command and control framework, but NGB 
has not issued updated command and control guidance to the CERFPs. As 
a result of these factors, NGB lacks assurance that CERFP operations 
can be commanded and controlled effectively. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that DOD take a number of actions to increase CERFP 
preparedness, strengthen pre-incident coordination with potential 
response partners, and ensure the effective command and control of 
operations involving CERFPs. DOD agreed with the recommendations. 

View GAO-12-114 or key components. For more information, contact Janet 
St. Laurent at (202) 512-4300 or stlaurentj@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

CERFPs Face Personnel, Training, and Equipment Requirements 
Challenges, and Readiness Is Not Comprehensively Reported: 

Opportunities Exist to Enhance Coordination with Other Response 
Organizations: 

A Command and Control Framework Is in Place, but Several Factors May 
Inhibit CERFPs' Operational Effectiveness: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: CERFP Interagency Training, 2008-2010: 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Related GAO Products: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Number of CERFPs with Authorized Levels of Personnel 
Available to Perform Mission Tasks All of the Time, as Reported by 
State Adjutants General: 

Table 2: Number of CERFPs That Had Authorized Quantities of Equipment 
as of October 2010: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: States That Have CERFPs within the 10 FEMA Regions: 

Figure 2: Approximate Time Frames within Which Some DOD CBRNE 
Consequence Management Forces Are Expected to Deploy after an Incident: 

Figure 3: CERFPs Are Formed from the State's National Guard: 

Figure 4: States That Will Host CERFPs and Homeland Response Forces by 
September 2012: 

Figure 5: Adjutants General Responses on CERFP Interaction with Local, 
State, Regional, and Federal Response Organizations: 

Figure 6: Command and Control Structure for State Active Duty and 
Title 32 CERFP Response Operations: 

Figure 7: Potential CERFP Incident Site Response Partners and 
Communications Pathways: 

Figure 8: CERFP Joint Field Training with Select Potential Response 
Partners, 2008-2010: 

Figure 9: CERFP Joint Field Training with Emergency Management 
Agencies from States with CERFPs, 2008-2010: 

Figure 10: CERFP Joint Field Training with Emergency Management 
Agencies from States without CERFPs, 2008-2010: 

Figure 11: CERFP Joint Field Training with State National Guards from 
States without CERFPs, 2008-2010: 

Abbreviations: 

CBRNE: chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, and high-yield 
explosive: 

CCMRF: CBRNE Consequence Management Response Force: 

CERFP: CBRNE Enhanced Response Force Package: 

CST: Civil Support Team: 

DCRF: Defense CBRN Response Force: 

DOD: Department of Defense: 

DRRS: Defense Readiness Reporting System: 

EMAC: Emergency Management Assistance Compact: 

FEMA: Federal Emergency Management Agency: 

HRF: Homeland Response Force: 

NGB: National Guard Bureau: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

December 7, 2011: 

Congressional Requesters: 

The potential use of weapons of mass destruction—characterized by the 
Department of Defense (DOD) as chemical, biological, radiological, 
nuclear, and high-yield explosive (CBRNE) material—-presents a 
continuing threat to the United States and its citizens. The 2010 
National Security Strategy emphasizes the importance of strengthening 
our security and resilience at home and building our capability to 
respond to and recover from major CBRNE incidents.[Footnote 1] 

A catastrophic CBRNE incident in the United States would require a 
unified national response involving entities at the local, state, and 
federal levels. Responding to a major CBRNE incident would include 
such response partners as local and state police and fire departments, 
state National Guard forces, and federal agencies—including the 
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and possibly federal 
military forces, such as the U.S. Marine Corps’s Chemical Biological 
Incident Response Force. 

The National Guard provides governors with a wide array of 
capabilities to assist in mitigating the consequences of a CBRNE 
incident—referred to as consequence management. These capabilities 
include (1) CBRNE detection/identification, which is provided by the 
Weapon of Mass Destruction Civil Support Teams (CST), and (2) search 
and rescue, patient decontamination, and medical capabilities that are 
provided by CBRNE Enhanced Response Force Packages (CERFP). Both of 
these National Guard capabilities are under the command of the 
respective state governors via the state adjutants general[Footnote 2] 
but could also be part of a federal response, if so designated by the 
President. In the latter case, these National Guard forces would most 
likely come under the command of DOD’s U.S. Northern Command. 

The National Guard established 12 CERFPs in 2004 in order to perform 
the CBRNE response mission and has placed at least one of them in each 
of the 10 FEMA regions. In 2006, Congress authorized end strengths for 
the Army National Guard and Air National Guard that, according to the 
conference report accompanying the National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2006, would allow for the creation of five additional 
CERFP teams for a total of 17 CERFPs.[Footnote 3] DOD has described 
the CERFP program as the life-saving bridge between local and state 
responders and a federal DOD response. Because these packages are 
formed from existing units primarily staffed with part-time National 
Guard personnel who usually are also responsible for other missions, 
concerns have arisen regarding their ability to respond effectively 
during a major CBRNE incident. The National Guard Bureau (NGB) is 
responsible for managing the CERFP program and is a principal channel 
of communication between DOD and the states. [Footnote 4] In fiscal 
year 2010 the federal government provided the CERFP program 
approximately $20 million through the Departments of the Army and of 
the Air Force for personnel, training, and equipment. At the state 
level each adjutant general provides command and oversight to the 
CERFP in that state (as part of the National Guard). Each state also 
has some form of emergency management agency that coordinates 
emergency response plans and activities for the governor.[Footnote 5] 

This report is the latest in a body of work GAO has issued since 2006 
on elements of National Guard and active DOD CBRNE consequence 
management capabilities. In May 2006, we reported that the CSTs were 
generally organized and prepared for their mission, although we 
highlighted management challenges that needed to be addressed. 
[Footnote 6] DOD has since taken action on all of the recommendations, 
including clarifying the teams’ mission and establishing a 
standardized evaluation program to evaluate the teams. We did not 
include the CERFPs in our scope at the time because the program was 
just getting started. We reported in 2009 that as part of a federal 
response, DOD planned to provide needed capabilities for CBRNE 
consequence management through the brigade-sized CBRNE Consequence 
Management Response Forces (CCMRF) but that this response may be 
insufficient, and that challenges remain in force structure planning 
and in ensuring personnel and equipment for the CCMRF.[Footnote 7] 
Further, the 2010 Quadrennial Defense Review initiated changes to the 
existing structure of DOD’s consequence management response efforts. 
[Footnote 8] These changes included shifting National Guard resources 
to create new Homeland Response Forces (HRF) in each of the 10 FEMA 
regions. DOD intends to use these forces to provide, among other 
things, command and control to CERFPs. 

As requested and agreed with your office, we are reporting on the 
CERFPs as part of our body of work on DOD’s CBRNE consequence 
management response capabilities. This report assesses (1) how well 
CERFPs are prepared to perform their mission based on comprehensively 
evaluated requirements and how such readiness is measured and 
reported; (2) how effectively CERFPs are coordinating with response 
partners and how well this effectiveness is evaluated; and (3) the 
extent to which an effective framework has been established to command 
and control the CERFPs during CBRNE consequence management operations. 

To address our objectives, we reviewed regulations, studies and 
memorandums regarding the status of the CERFP program and compared the 
current status of the program with the requirements set forth in DOD 
and NGB guidance. To further address our objectives, we conducted five 
site visits to observe CERFP field training exercises including those 
where CERFPs were being evaluated on their mission proficiency and 
those where CERFPs were training with other response partners. To 
obtain views at both the state National Guards and state emergency 
management agencies, we developed and administered surveys to (1) 
State Adjutants General of all 17 states that host CERFPs, (2) state 
level emergency managers in all 17 of the states that host CERFPs, and 
(3) State Adjutants General and state-level emergency managers from 10 
non-randomly selected states that do not host CERFPs, including one 
from each of the 10 FEMA regions. All of the 17 State Adjutants 
General and 13 of the 15 emergency managers in states that host CERFPs 
responded to our survey. Also, all of the 10 State Adjutants General 
and 7 out of the 9 emergency managers we surveyed from states that did 
not host CERFPs responded.[Footnote 9] These surveys addressed 
questions regarding command, control and coordination, collective 
training, and issues related to the implementation of the HRF program. 
Additionally, the survey given to state Adjutants General in states 
that host CERFPs also addressed their preparedness. To supplement this 
information, we conducted interviews with representatives of all 17 
CERFPs, as well as officials from DOD and NGB, and performed content 
analysis of the CERFP interview responses to identify recurring themes 
and perspectives. 

To further identify the extent to which the CERFPs are prepared to 
execute their mission in terms of required equipment, staffing, 
training, and funding, we also reviewed readiness data within the 
National Guard’s CERFP-specific, spreadsheet-based readiness system 
and CERFP readiness data from the DOD’s Defense Readiness Reporting 
System (DRRS) to determine the mechanisms for and the processes 
involved in CERFP readiness reporting. 

We conducted this performance audit from December 2009 to December 
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. Appendix I 
provides additional details on the scope and methodology of this 
report. 

Background: 

The National Response Framework establishes the principles that guide 
all response partners in preparing for and providing a unified 
national response to disasters--including those involving chemical, 
biological, radiological, nuclear, and high-yield explosive materials. 
[Footnote 10] Under the Framework, disaster response is tiered; local 
governments and agencies typically respond immediately following an 
incident. When additional resources are requested, a state may provide 
assistance with its capabilities, including its National Guard, or may 
request assistance from other states through interstate mutual 
agreements or the Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC). 
[Footnote 11] If an incident requires capabilities beyond those 
available at the local and state levels, the governor can seek federal 
assistance. The Department of Homeland Security--via FEMA--is usually 
the primary federal agency for coordinating federal assistance, 
including that provided by DOD. 

Responding to CBRNE-related incidents can be especially challenging 
because of the additional measures needed to work in a contaminated 
environment and to treat victims who may have been exposed to 
contaminants. DOD plays a support role in managing the consequences of 
CBRNE incidents, including providing those capabilities needed to save 
lives, alleviate hardship or suffering, and minimize property damage 
caused by the incident. DOD has developed specialized CBRNE response 
capabilities that could augment a federal CBRNE response and 
contribute to the organization, training, and equipping of state-
controlled National Guard capabilities focused on CBRNE response. 
These capabilities include those provided by the: 

* National Guard CSTs, which are comprised of 22 full-time personnel, 
with at least one team located in each state, the District of 
Columbia, U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, and Guam. There are a 
total of 57 civil support teams. 

* National Guard CERFPs, which are comprised of roughly 200 personnel, 
with at least one team located in each of the 10 Federal FEMA regions. 
There are a total of 17 CERFPs. (See figure 1): 

* DOD's Defense Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear 
Response Force (DCRF), consisting of approximately 5,200 troops 
separated into two force packages to provide federal military 
assistance in response to a request for assistance from a state 
governor, a lead federal agency, or at the direction of the President 
when a CBRNE incident exceeds local and state capabilities--including 
the CSTs and CERFPs. DOD previously referred to this force as the 
CCMRF. 

Figure 1: States That Have CERFPs within the 10 FEMA Regions: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated U.S. map] 

CBRNE Enhanced Response Force Package states: 

Region 1: 
Massachusetts. 

Region 2: 
New York. 

Region 3: 
Virginia; 
West Virginia. 

Region 4: 
Florida; 
Georgia. 

Region 5: 
Illinois; 
Minnesota; 
Ohio. 

Region 6: 
Texas. 

Region 7: 
Missouri; 
Nebraska. 

Region 8: 
Colorado. 

Region 9: 
California. 

Region 10: 
Washington. 

Source: GAO analysis of NGB and DOD information. 

[End of figure] 

The CERFPs are intended to provide state governors with the 
capabilities that could relieve or augment first responders within the 
first few hours after an incident. CERFPs also serve to bridge the 
capability gap between the time local and state civilian first 
responders arrive and the time a federal response--including 
federalized DOD capabilities--is likely to be available during a large-
scale CBRNE incident. Figure 2 shows the approximate time frames that 
the forces listed above are expected to deploy to a CBRNE incident 
after being notified to respond. 

Figure 2: Approximate Time Frames within Which Some DOD CBRNE 
Consequence Management Forces Are Expected to Deploy after an Incident: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

CBRNE Incident: 

National Guard Weapon of Mass Destruction Civil Support Teams Response: 
immediate to 24 hours. 

National Guard CBRNE Enhanced Response Force Packages: 
6 to 48 hours. 

Defense Chemical, biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Response Force 
(DCRF): 
24 hours to 96 hours. 
  
Source: GAO from DOD information. 

[End of figure] 

As National Guard units, CERFP personnel may operate in Title 10 
status, Title 32 status or state active duty status.[Footnote 12] 
Personnel in a Title 10 status are federally funded and under the 
command and control of the President. Personnel in a Title 32 status 
are federally funded, but under the command and control of the 
governor. Title 32 status is the status in which National Guard 
personnel typically perform training for their federal mission. 
Personnel in state status are under the command and control of the 
governor and are state funded. 

NGB is responsible for managing the CERFP program and is the principal 
channel of communication between DOD and the states. The CERFPs are 
comprised primarily of part-time reservists who are drawn from 
National Guard units in the host state or, in some cases, from other 
states. These reservists who comprise the CERFPs also support their 
reserve unit's dual missions--wartime and domestic missions. They are 
expected to train for both traditional military responsibilities and 
specialize in CBRNE consequence management responsibilities. Figure 3 
shows how CERFP units are built from other National Guard elements. 

Figure 3: CERFPs Are Formed from the State's National Guard: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

State National Guard: 
Unit members serve part-time; 
Occasional rotation of parent units including to serve in overseas 
contingencies. 

Parent units contain multiple personnel and those assigned to CERFP. 

CERFP elements are comprised of personnel from National Guard units. 
     
Parent unit: Battalion or Squadron Headquarters: 
CERFP elements[A]: Command and Control: 
* Authorized number of personnel: 16; 
* Direct the employment of CERFP response elements; 
* Coordinate with military and civilian response partners; 
* Establish communications operations. 

Parent unit: Medical Group: 
CERFP elements[A]: Medical: 
* Authorized number of personnel: 45; 
* Medical triage; 
* Emergency medical care; 
* Patient tracking, 

Parent unit: Engineer Company: 
CERFP elements[A]: Search and Extraction; 
* Authorized number of personnel: 50; 
* Victim search and extraction operations; 
* Confined space rescue and recovery operations. 

Parent unit: Chemical Company: 
CERFP elements[A]: Decontamination; 
* Authorized number of personnel: 75; 
* Mobile and immobile victim decontamination and monitoring; 
* Contaminant monitoring. 

Parent unit: Fatality Search and Recovery Team: 
CERFP elements[A]: Fatality Search and Recovery Team; 
* Authorized number of personnel: 11; 
* Fatality search and recovery operations; 
* Movement of fatalities to transfer points designated by the Incident 
Commander. 
                   
Source: GAO analysis of NGB information. 

[A] The CERFP elements are usually geographically separated within the 
host state, and occasionally across multiple states. 

[End of figure] 

The CERFPs are formed from existing units within a state. Typically, 
Army National Guard chemical units and engineering units are the 
sources of the decontamination element and the search and extraction 
element, respectively. Air National Guard medical units are the source 
of the medical element. National Guard battalion or squadron 
headquarters units are the source of the command and control element. 

The CERFP regulation requires all CERFPs to undergo formal external 
evaluations of their mission capability when initially established and 
that they be reevaluated periodically, between months 24 and 36 in the 
CERFP training cycle, or earlier if the state determines it is 
necessary.[Footnote 13] In order to prepare the CERFPs for their 
mission, NGB has allotted CERFP members 14 additional training days 
beyond the 39 traditional days allotted to most other National Guard 
members. CERFP members use this additional time to conduct required 
individual training in domestic operations and to train collectively 
at least twice a year. 

DOD measures a unit's readiness based on its ability to perform the 
functions necessary to execute the mission for which it was designed, 
based on identified indicators; these include possessing the required 
personnel, equipment, and training, and having established reporting 
systems to communicate readiness status. On June 3, 2002, DOD 
established the Defense Readiness Reporting System (DRRS)--a 
capabilities-based, adaptive, near-real-time readiness reporting 
system--which measures and reports on the readiness of military forces 
and the supporting infrastructure to perform mission essential tasks. 
In addition, in June 2004, the Secretary of Defense directed the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness to develop DRRS in a 
manner that would support the data requirements of various users of 
readiness information, such as the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of 
Staff, the combatant commands, the secretaries of the military 
departments, and the Chief of the National Guard Bureau, including 
their requirements for data on the availability, readiness, and 
redeployment of forces.[Footnote 14] 

The 2010 Quadrennial Defense Review introduced several key changes to 
DOD's CBRNE response strategy to enhance the life-saving capabilities 
and flexibility of its forces and reduce response times. These changes 
include plans to restructure two of its three CBRNE response forces in 
order to establish 10 state-controlled Homeland Response Forces (HRF)-
-one in each of the 10 FEMA regions.[Footnote 15] The HRFs are to be 
comprised of elements from existing National Guard forces and are 
expected to be able to deploy within 6 to12 hours of an incident. 
Eight of the HRFs will be hosted by single states, while the other two 
will be sourced from multiple states within those regions. 

Each HRF will be composed of approximately 570 personnel including a 
brigade-sized command and control headquarters organization. In 
addition, HRFs will possess the same life-saving capabilities as a 
CERFP and will also have a security force element. Each HRF will be 
capable of providing command and control for up to five CSTs and three 
CERFPs and will be expected to focus on planning, training, and 
exercising within its FEMA region, with the goal of establishing links 
between the local, state, and federal authorities. 

The first two HRFs, hosted by Ohio and Washington, are expected to be 
operational by the end of fiscal year 2011; the remaining eight--New 
York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, California, Texas, Missouri, 
Georgia and Utah--are expected to follow by September 2012. Each of 
the HRFs, except Utah's, will be converted from an existing CERFP. In 
order to maintain the National Guard's prescribed force structure of 
17 CERFPs, new ones will be established in 9 states to replace the 
CERFPs converting to HRFs. Figure 4 shows the placement of existing 
CERFPs and the anticipated placement of future CERFPs and HRFs. 

Figure 4: States That Will Host CERFPs and Homeland Response Forces by 
September 2012: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated U.S. map] 

Region 1: 
CERFP state: 
Maine; 
HRF state: 
Massachusetts. 

Region 2: 
CERFP state: 
Puerto Rico; 
HRF state: 
New York. 

Region 3: 
CERFP states: 
Kentucky; 
Virginia; 
West Virginia.
HRF state: 
Pennsylvania. 

Region 4: 
CERFP states: 
Alabama; 
Florida; 
HRF state: 
Georgia. 

Region 5: 
CERFP states: 
Indiana; 
Illinois; 
Minnesota; 
Wisconsin
HRF state: 
Ohio. 

Region 6: 
CERFP state: 
Louisiana; 
HRF state: 
Texas. 

Region 7: 
CERFP state: 
Nebraska; 
HRF state: 
Missouri. 

Region 8: 
CERFP state: 
Colorado; 
HRF state: 
Utah. 

Region 9: 
CERFP states: 
Hawaii; 
Nevada; 
HRF state: 
California. 

Region 10: 
CERFP state: 
Oregon; 
HRF state: 
Washington. 

Source: GAO analysis of NGB and DOD information. 

[End of figure] 

CERFPs Face Personnel, Training, and Equipment Requirements 
Challenges, and Readiness Is Not Comprehensively Reported: 

The National Guard's CERFPs face personnel, training, and equipment 
challenges that increase the risk that they are not fully prepared to 
effectively execute their domestic CBRNE consequence management 
mission. State Adjutants General and CERFP officials cite that CERFPs 
often have the authorized levels of personnel and equipment but that 
these levels don't reflect actual needs. They also further cite 
personnel, training, and equipment deficiencies that may reduce the 
effectiveness of a potential CERFP response. In part, this can be 
attributed to NGB's not systematically reevaluating personnel, 
training, and equipment requirements to determine if they are 
appropriate. CERFPs also have difficulty maintaining proficiency in 
many of the specialized tasks they could be called on to perform 
during a CBRNE incident, because they train infrequently or not at all 
on key deployment tasks and with all CERFP elements and interagency 
response partners. NGB has developed new training goals but does not 
have a strategy to assure CERFP progress in achieving these goals. In 
addition, comprehensive CERFP readiness information is not available 
to potential DOD response partners, because such information is 
captured in an informal spreadsheet and not yet available in DOD's 
centralized readiness reporting system. This impedes the ability of 
all response partners to know how prepared CERFPs are to fit into a 
broader CBRNE consequence management response. NGB does not have a 
plan with timelines for completing the transition of reporting CERFP 
readiness data into DOD's readiness reporting system. 

CERFPs Are Challenged in Maintaining Adequate Numbers of Personnel to 
Execute the CERFP Mission: 

The CERFPs are intended to provide state governors and incident 
commanders with life-saving capabilities that could relieve or augment 
first responders after an incident. NGB guidance states that CERFPs 
must be fully trained and prepared to deploy when notified of a CBRNE 
event. Each CERFP is expected to be ready at all times to deploy to a 
regional or national level response within 6 hours. The CERFPs are 
staffed primarily with traditional National Guard personnel, who are 
part-time. But NGB also provides some full-time staff to carry out the 
day-to-day administrative and preventive equipment maintenance 
activities of the CERFP. Each CERFP is currently authorized a total of 
186 personnel; five of whom are designated as full-time.[Footnote 16] 
This full-time staffing level contrasts with other DOD CBRNE-related 
capabilities staffed with higher percentages of full-time personnel. 
For example, all 22 personnel assigned to each of the CSTs who respond 
to events to ascertain the type of chemical or biological attack that 
has occurred, are full-time.[Footnote 17] Also, the Marine Corps' 
Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, which served as the model 
for the CERFP, uses all full-time personnel. Both state Adjutants 
General and CERFP officials stated that five full-time personnel are 
not enough to meet the day-to-day requirements. For example, 10 of the 
17 state Adjutants General we surveyed responded that their state's 
CERFPs did not have a sufficient number of full-time personnel to 
support their daily planning and operating requirements. Similarly, 
officials from 13 of the 17 CERFPs we interviewed also said that an 
insufficient number of full-time personnel challenged their ability to 
adequately perform tasks, such as training personnel, maintaining 
equipment, and coordinating with other response organizations. 
Additionally, CERFP officials stated that having a larger core of full-
time personnel could better ensure preparedness for responding to 
potential CERFP deployments.[Footnote 18] According to the NGB 
officials we spoke with, the CERFPs have raised the need for 
additional full-time staff positions and stated that NGB plans to add 
five full-time personnel to each CERFP between fiscal years 2012 and 
2013 for a total of ten full-time personnel, but no specific study had 
been performed to determine whether ten full-time personnel would be 
sufficient to perform the CERFP's daily planning and operating 
requirements. 

State Adjutants General we surveyed reported that authorized levels of 
personnel for each aspect of the mission were generally available but 
would not meet the program requirements of being available and 
qualified all of the time. As shown in table 1, just over half of the 
17 state Adjutants General reported that, as of October 2010, their 
CERFPs' authorized levels of personnel would not meet program 
requirements to be available to conduct selected aspects of their 
mission all of the time. 

Table 1: Number of CERFPs with Authorized Levels of Personnel 
Available to Perform Mission Tasks All of the Time, as Reported by 
State Adjutants General: 

Authorized levels of personnel have been available and qualified to: 
Perform command and control of CERFP operations; 
All of the time: 13; 
Less than all of the time: 4. 

Authorized levels of personnel have been available and qualified to: 
Perform intended mission; 
All of the time: 8; 
Less than all of the time: 9. 

Authorized levels of personnel have been available and qualified to: 
Perform hazardous materials operations; 
All of the time: 8; 
Less than all of the time: 9. 

Authorized levels of personnel have been available and qualified to: 
Perform search and rescue operations; 
All of the time: 8; 
Less than all of the time: 9. 

Source: GAO Survey of CERFP State Adjutants General. 

Note: These numbers are based on a total of 17 CERFPs. 

[End of table] 

NGB's authorized levels of personnel for the CERFPs are considered 
insufficient by CERFP officials and state Adjutants General. Officials 
from 11 of the 17 CERFPs we interviewed stated that these levels were 
insufficient for at least one of the elements (medical, search and 
extraction, decontamination, command and control) of their CERFP. For 
example, several CERFP officials stated that the personnel 
authorization for the decontamination element should be doubled in 
order for decontamination personnel to be able to perform sustained 
operations, or because of the need to frequently cycle replacement 
personnel who suffer fatigue from operating in protective suits and 
respirators. During some field training exercises, we observed 
personnel suffering from heat-related injuries, thereby reducing the 
number of available personnel. Exercise evaluators present at one of 
the training exercises we observed stated that more typical summer 
temperatures would have further reduced the amount of time that 
personnel could spend in the protective suits, increasing the need for 
replacements. To address these insufficiencies, some states have been 
assigning additional personnel in order to have better assurance that 
their states have a sufficient number of personnel to perform the 
mission. State Adjutants General we surveyed reported that they use 
different approaches to ensure that they have a sufficient number of 
people to execute the CERFP mission. The following reflect some of the 
comments we received regarding how different states individually 
address personnel deficiencies: 

* Assigns close to 280 personnel to ensure that the CERFP will have 
the 186 personnel authorized for the CERFP. 

* Plans to assign the entire company of 160 to perform decontamination 
tasks, instead of the authorized 75 personnel for this element. 

* Assigns an entire battalion headquarters staff to perform CERFP 
command and control functions, instead of the 16 personnel authorized. 

* Assigns 420 personnel in order to have 186 personnel mission-ready. 

NGB officials stated that the CERFP was initially developed in 2003 as 
a prototype capability and was developed quickly to fill a gap in 
DOD's CBRNE response capabilities. Accordingly, CERFPs, including 
their size, were designed largely based on the composition of the 
Marine Corps' Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, which was 
the only DOD CBRNE response capability at that time. Initial personnel 
authorizations have been modified by field experience during the 
prototype period, but no comprehensive CERFP unit-level study has been 
conducted to determine if the number of assigned personnel could meet 
workload requirements, such as stated victim-throughput goals, 
subsequent to the CERFP's being approved as a formal DOD program in 
2008. NGB officials stated that some of the discrepancy between the 
number of personnel used by individual CERFPs and the number of 
personnel authorized is caused by differences in assumptions about 
whether individual CERFPs will be operating continuously for 24 hours. 
NGB envisions that additional CERFPs from other states, as well as 
future Homeland Response Forces, could provide augmentation for larger 
scale incidents that could mitigate the number of personnel needed by 
individual CERFPs. However, unless these personnel challenges that 
have been frequently raised by CERFPs and the states Adjutant Generals 
are addressed in a comprehensive and systematic manner, there is 
reduced assurance that individual CERFPs have the proper number of 
personnel. 

CERFPs Are Challenged to Maintain a Trained and Ready Response Force 
and Do Not Have a Training Strategy or a Mechanism to Track CERFP 
Participation: 

CERFPs face challenges in maintaining a trained and ready response 
force because there are (1) limited opportunities for all elements to 
train collectively and with other civilian and military response 
partners, (2) competing demands from other missions, and (3) limited 
training opportunities on key deployment tasks that CERFPs could be 
called on to perform during a CBRNE incident. NGB recently published 
new collective training goals that provide promise for focusing future 
training, but NGB does not have a programwide strategy for CERFPs to 
achieve these goals within the time and funding that CERFPs are 
provided or a mechanism to track whether CERFPs are receiving 
opportunities to conduct the necessary training. 

To achieve mission proficiency, National Guard guidance requires the 
personnel of each CERFP element to participate in collective training 
exercises, among other kinds of training. One purpose cited is to 
bring all CERFP elements together to conduct the collective tasks in a 
realistic training environment. National Guard guidance and joint 
training guidance also require CERFPs to conduct at least two state or 
national level collective training exercises annually under realistic 
conditions, and to be externally evaluated periodically, between 
months 24 and 36 in the CERFP training cycle or earlier if the state 
determines it is necessary.[Footnote 19] Upon successful completion of 
an external evaluation, state Adjutants General validate that their 
CERFP is properly staffed, equipped, trained and ready to respond, and 
will submit a validation letter to the NGB. According to NGB 
officials, all 17 original CERFPs were evaluated as "trained" during 
their most recent external evaluation exercises, which were conducted 
between 2009 and 2011 and were validated by the state Adjutants 
General. NGB officials do not track whether CERFPs meet the annual 
collective training exercise goals found in guidance, but CERFP 
officials we interviewed stated that the collective training field 
exercises are conducted infrequently. As a result, CERFP officials 
stated that units lose proficiency as skills acquired during these 
exercises decline over time. For example, officials from six CERFPs 
stated that because of the time that had elapsed from their prior 
collective field training exercises, their CERFP needed several days 
of training before regaining proficiency. More specifically, one CERFP 
commander stated that because some critical skills are perishable, it 
is difficult to maintain proficiency between external evaluations. 
Similarly, another CERFP commander noted that maintaining skill 
proficiency with limited training opportunities is a challenge and 
that it takes his CERFP several days of field training to "knock the 
rust off" of skills necessary to perform their mission requirements. 
An official from another CERFP stated that the infrequency of training 
makes it feel as if they are starting from scratch each time they 
train collectively. Moreover, all elements that comprise the CERFP are 
not always present for all collective field exercises. For example, 
officials from 8 of the 17 CERFPs we interviewed told us that their 
CERFP had never trained with its Fatality, Search, and Recovery Team 
element, and nine of the CERFPs we interviewed told us that their 
medical elements are often unable to participate in all collective 
field training exercises because funding or personnel are unavailable. 

Regulations and training guidance require CERFPs to conduct at least 
two state or national level collective training exercises annually 
under realistic conditions, but we found that interagency 
participation in CERFP training events is similarly limited, creating 
few opportunities for CERFPs to integrate with other response 
organizations that may be present during a large-scale incident. For 
example, according to the results of our four surveys, most CERFPs 
have had limited opportunities to train with other key partners, such 
as federal DOD response organizations and state emergency management 
agencies. For additional information regarding interagency 
participation in CERFP training events, see appendix II. As a result, 
CERFPs have little assurance that they can operate effectively with 
other potential response partners. As we discuss later, such limited 
interaction between CERFPs and interagency partners also affects the 
establishment of viable command and control relationships. 

Moreover, we found that NGB training guidance is vague regarding the 
extent to which CERFPs should participate with potential interagency 
response partners and that NGB has not articulated a strategy for 
ensuring that CERFPs conduct interagency training or developed a 
methodology to track the extent that CERFPs train with these partners. 
According to the 2008 CERFP Joint Training Plan, CERFPs were 
encouraged to include potential response partners in collective team 
training exercises and were required to participate in at least one 
regional exercise in fiscal year 2008 or 2009 in an interagency 
environment under the control of the CERFP's state National Guard 
headquarters.[Footnote 20] NGB has not provided specific guidance for 
participation in interagency field exercises (including the frequency 
of that participation) beyond 2009.[Footnote 21] 

CERFPs also face challenges in maintaining proficiency because the 
CBRNE mission is not the only mission that units are responsible for 
performing. The dual capability nature of the National Guard 
necessitates that units meet operational and training requirements for 
both the CERFP and the wartime mission. For example, officials from a 
majority of the CERFPs we interviewed stated that unit rotations are a 
challenge to maintaining proficiency as new personnel have to be 
trained. Officials from 13 of the 17 CERFPs we interviewed stated that 
they had had at least one element replaced by personnel from another 
unit because of unit rotations necessitated by, among other things, 
overseas deployments. One state Adjutant General commented that the 
current requirement to deploy within 6 hours after notification 
requires additional study because it is difficult to achieve in a part-
time environment. This Adjutant General believed that the 6-hour 
requirement was based on the National Guard CST model, which provides 
22 full-time personnel who are solely dedicated to the civil support 
mission. Moreover, preparing for both the CERFP and wartime mission 
while in a part-time status is also difficult. For example, 10 of the 
17 state Adjutants General we surveyed reported most or all of their 
CERFP elements have had difficulty in managing competing requirements 
from other domestic or warfighting missions, and officials from 14 of 
the 17 CERFPs we interviewed stated that balancing such competing 
requirements is a challenge. 

Maintaining a trained force is also challenging because CERFPs have 
not conducted key deployment exercises that could enhance their 
assurance that they could deploy rapidly throughout the country. 
National Guard guidance states that an incident taking place beyond a 
500-mile radius of a CERFP's home station could warrant the use of 
aircraft rather than ground transportation to move necessary equipment 
and personnel.[Footnote 22] This guidance states that training CERFPs 
for air transport activities allows these forces to become familiar 
with the loading and unloading of equipment in the event that units 
must travel by air. However, 11 of the 17 State Adjutants General we 
surveyed stated that their CERFP had never practiced loading or 
transporting equipment and personnel by aircraft to either a real-
world or simulated event. Consequently, if a CBRNE incident occurred 
more than 500 miles from the nearest CERFP's home station or if road 
travel became infeasible, then more than half of the 17 CERFPs would 
not be adequately trained to rapidly deploy by air to an incident. 
Also, rapid response organizations conduct exercises to evaluate their 
ability to respond without prior notice to a simulated operational 
emergency, under conditions similar to those that may be encountered 
during an actual emergency. Officials from 13 of 17 CERFPs told us 
that their CERFP had not conducted a no-notice deployment exercise to 
test the ability to assemble and conduct deployment activities within 
time frames required for the mission. However, officials from 6 CERFPs 
told us that they have conducted telephone or other alert exercises to 
confirm the extent that their personnel can be located and estimate 
how long it may take to arrive at a designated area. A common theme 
from CERFP officials was that it would be impractical to conduct such 
exercises because it would strain relations between Guardsmen and 
their full-time employers as it would further increase the time that 
personnel may be away from their workplaces. 

NGB recognizes the need to improve aspects of CERFP field training 
exercises. To improve training focus, it has recently issued new 
training guidance in March 2011 that establishes several new 
collective training goals that CERFPs should address during the fiscal 
year.[Footnote 23] Specifically, fiscal year 2011 training goals 
include: 

* working to demonstrate interoperability with other CERFPs and other 
National Guard CBRNE organizations; 

* exercising within local and State Incident Command Systems and with 
first responders; 

* conducting air movement training to include load-planning, 
deployment, and redeployment operations; 

* conducting at least two no-notice recall exercises; 

* conducting joint training with active duty and other DOD CBRNE 
response organizations; 

* expansion of CERFP liaison with local, state, and regional agencies; 
and: 

* increasing opportunities to exercise with and evaluate the Fatality, 
Search, and Recovery Team. 

Moreover, NGB officials stated that they are developing plans to have 
CERFPs train in regional and national level exercises, including 
exercises with U.S. Northern Command's Defense CBRN Response Force. 

These training goals provide promise for focusing future training, but 
they do not provide a programwide framework for how all CERFPs will 
achieve these goals within the time and funding that CERFPs are 
provided, particularly if all of these goals are to be met every 
fiscal year. CERFP officials have identified instances where training 
was not accomplished in the past because funding was unavailable or 
personnel were unavailable because of their part-time status. Without 
a strategy for accomplishing this training across the CERFP program, 
NGB has reduced assurance that all CERFPs will achieve and maintain 
proficiency and will be prepared to integrate effectively with local, 
regional, and federal response partners. Additionally, NGB's process 
for managing and tracking the CERFPs' inclusion in these exercises is 
decentralized, providing little assurance that all CERFPs have such 
opportunities. For example, NGB selects the CERFPs that participate in 
these events on a volunteer rather than a rotational basis; as a 
result, participation is partially driven by CERFP initiative and 
availability, which varies across the CERFP program. Further, NGB 
training officials told us that they do not comprehensively track 
CERFP participation in interagency exercises to determine how 
frequently each CERFP trains with interagency partners. Without 
specific and reliable data to track participation, NGB has little 
assurance that all CERFPs are getting access to the range of potential 
response partners that they may have to work with during a CBRNE 
incident. 

CERFPs Generally Have Their Authorized Equipment, but Additional 
Equipment May Be Needed to Adequately Perform Mission: 

The NGB has deemed certain specialized equipment critical for the 
CERFPs' mission and has authorized the CERFPs to have specific 
quantities of this equipment. This specialized equipment, much of 
which is different from the equipment authorized for wartime missions, 
includes commercial-off-the-shelf items such as collapsed-structure 
listening devices, search cameras, specialized respiratory masks, 
extraction tool kits, and mass decontamination equipment. Most 
Adjutants General reported that their CERFPs had the authorized 
quantities of equipment all or most of the time. Table 2 shows the 
Adjutants General survey responses regarding the number of CERFPs that 
generally had their authorized quantities of equipment needed to 
perform four types of tasks as of October 2010. 

Table 2: Number of CERFPs That Had Authorized Quantities of Equipment 
as of October 2010: 

CERFPs had the authorized levels of equipment needed to: Conduct mass 
casualty decontamination; 
All of the time: 12; 
Most of the time: 5; 
Some of the time: 0. 

CERFPs had the authorized levels of equipment needed to: Extract 
victims from contaminated environments; 
All of the time: 10; 
Most of the time: 7; 
Some of the time: 0. 

CERFPs had the authorized levels of equipment needed to: Provide 
emergency medical triage services; 
All of the time: 11; 
Most of the time: 6; 
Some of the time: 0. 

CERFPs had the authorized levels of equipment needed to: Perform 
command and control; 
All of the time: 12; 
Most of the time: 4; 
Some of the time: 1. 

Source: GAO survey of State Adjutants General. 

Note: Numbers are based on a total of 17 CERFPs. 

[End of table] 

However, despite reporting that CERFPs generally have the equipment 
they are authorized, CERFPs stated that they do not have some critical 
equipment specific to the CBNRE mission. Specifically, our surveys and 
interviews showed some CERFPs were concerned about the adequacy of 
their protection and transportation equipment. For example, some CERFP 
officials we interviewed stated that the authorized quantity of 
protective equipment (suits and respirators) provided to CERFPs and 
the level of protection it provides is inadequate for responding to a 
domestic CBRNE incident in some instances.[Footnote 24] CERFP 
officials stated that the current protective suits worn by CERFP 
personnel are not well suited for domestic CBRNE incidents because 
they do not protect against the full range of potential toxic 
materials CERFP personnel may be exposed to. Another CERFP official 
stated that the respirators do not provide the appropriate level of 
protection. A CERFP working group has raised concerns to NGB about the 
adequacy of protection provided by the currently authorized protection 
equipment, but no solution has been identified. Officials from one 
CERFP expressed concern that the issue has not received high priority. 
To the extent that equipment shortfalls exist, CERFPs' effectiveness 
in responding to domestic incidents will be limited. 

State Adjutants General and CERFP officials told us that because 
authorized quantities of equipment are not always adequate to 
successfully operate in a domestic CBRNE environment, state National 
Guards have provided CERFPs with extra equipment, predominately to 
facilitate their transportation and communication. For example, 11 of 
the 17 state Adjutants General reported in our survey that their 
state's National Guard had provided their CERFPs with equipment beyond 
what is authorized so that the CERFP could better execute its mission. 
They commonly cited vehicles to transport CERFP personnel and 
communications equipment. Officials from a majority of CERFPs stated 
in interviews that their authorized vehicles are not sufficient to 
transport the entire CERFP to an incident site. To correct the 
transportation equipment deficiency, NGB has plans to provide a 
standardized solution to transporting CERFPs by providing buses and 
vans during fiscal year 2011 to provide ground transportation for 
CERFP personnel. 

National Guard Has Not Established an Annual Requirement Review and 
Validation Process: 

National Guard guidance states that integrated working groups will be 
established to annually review and validate CERFP personnel, training, 
and equipment.[Footnote 25] NGB has taken steps to establish and 
maintain various mechanisms to identify deficiencies in the CERFPs' 
personnel, training, and equipment capabilities, but these efforts 
have not yet led to a process that would comprehensively review 
program requirements. For example, various working groups and 
conferences are used as forums to discuss potential resource 
deficiencies, corrective actions, and other mitigation strategies. 
However, a formal process is not yet in place that could validate 
shortfalls and determine solutions. NGB drafted a CERFP working group 
charter in November 2009 that provides the basis for annually 
reviewing and validating program requirements raised by the working 
groups. But the charter has never been approved, and thus the formal 
process has not been established. NGB has addressed some deficiencies 
such as transportation equipment and is evaluating communication 
equipment deficiencies, but without a formal review process, it is 
unable to comprehensively assess program requirements to address 
potential deficiencies in personnel, training and equipment. 

CERFP Readiness Data Is Not Transparent or Complete and Cannot Be 
Efficiently Disseminated to Other DOD Response Partners: 

NGB has not yet implemented a readiness reporting system that can 
comprehensively report readiness data and share it with DOD 
stakeholders and the data being collected is not complete. NGB is 
currently using a stand-alone spread-sheet-based system as the primary 
method for measuring the CERFPs' readiness, but it is not integrated 
with other readiness systems that are used by DOD units, and there is 
no plan with timelines for completing the transition to integrated 
CERFP readiness with these other DOD readiness systems. CERFP 
readiness information is also found in other DOD readiness systems, 
but it is not standardized, comprehensive, or consistently reported. 
As such, NGB cannot facilitate efficient dissemination of complete and 
accurate readiness data to potential response partners in order to 
strengthen coordination on preparedness for CBRNE consequence 
management. Moreover, to the extent that program requirements have not 
been regularly reviewed, as previously mentioned, CERFP readiness will 
be limited by being assessed against potentially unrealistic 
authorization levels for the appropriate number and type of personnel, 
equipment, and training needed to carry out the CERFP mission. 

In 2007, we reported that DOD recognized the need to have greater 
visibility over the National Guard's capabilities for domestic 
missions and that DOD had begun taking steps to assess the Guard's 
preparedness for those missions.[Footnote 26] To achieve this improved 
visibility, DOD planned to include in its Defense Readiness Reporting 
System (DRRS) information on the National Guard's readiness to perform 
both its warfighting missions and domestic missions.[Footnote 27] DRRS 
draws from selected DOD computer information systems and databases and 
is intended to capture DOD readiness data from multiple sources into a 
single integrated, authoritative source and provide these data to DOD 
decision makers and other stakeholders. 

National Guard guidance requires NGB to establish and maintain a 
standardized reporting and information analysis system,[Footnote 28] 
and NGB established a spreadsheet-based system in which CERFPs report 
on both the readiness of the separate elements that comprise the 
CERFP, in terms of various indicators of their CERFP's operational 
status, including personnel, equipment, and training levels. CERFPs 
also report on an overall assessment of the entire CERFP to perform 
mission tasks. This information is reported through secure networks 
through the state National Guard, which in turn is submitted to NGB. 
Although NGB uses this information to assess CERFP readiness, the 
spreadsheets are incompatible with other readiness reporting systems 
that feed into DRRS, which is intended to allow a more comprehensive, 
DOD-wide picture of readiness to execute critical missions of all 
kinds. NGB officials told us that they have been sharing CERFP 
readiness information with other DOD response partners, such as U.S. 
Northern Command, through informal methods like briefing charts, but 
only sporadically. 

NGB's goal is to eliminate the spreadsheet-based readiness system and 
instead incorporate CERFP readiness information directly into DRRS, 
which would improve the consistency and access to readiness 
information to all DOD commands with CBRNE response responsibilities. 
As of September 2011, NGB had not achieved this goal and did not have 
a plan with timelines for completing the steps needed to complete the 
transition. At that time, some individual "parent" units were 
reporting their wartime readiness in DRRS as well as information on 
the elements that those units supply to CERFPs.[Footnote 29] However, 
our analysis shows that the readiness information about CERFPs that 
was included in DRRS was inconsistently reported by different parent 
units or was incomplete compared to information found in the CERFP 
spreadsheet-based readiness system. For example, information on the 
readiness of any entire CERFP is not available in DRRS. NGB officials 
said this is because the CERFP is not a separate reporting entity in 
established readiness systems. Rather, CERFP elements' readiness is 
reported as a component of the parent units' reporting of their 
readiness. We found that 10 parent units, which supply personnel and 
equipment to CERFPs, reported on some aspect of CERFP readiness in 
addition to their wartime readiness in the Army DRRS. These 10 units 
were associated with 4 of the 17 CERFPs (each CERFP may be supplied by 
up to 5 units). As we have previously stated, the CERFP mission is 
considered an additional mission to the units' wartime mission. As 
such, most of the readiness information for those units in DRRS was 
related to the unit's wartime mission or core mission. The readiness 
information in DRRS for CERFPs was less detailed than information 
provided in the NGB CERFP spreadsheet-based readiness reporting 
system, which includes details on personnel, equipment, and training 
status. As a result, comprehensive and standardized information on 
CERFP readiness is not available in DRRS, where it could be shared 
with all DOD organizations that have access to the system. 

NGB officials confirmed that DRRS contained incomplete CERFP readiness 
data and that it does not currently have a mechanism to display the 
readiness of the entire CERFP in one place even if all parent units 
were accurately and comprehensively reporting on CERFP readiness. NGB 
officials stated that they continue to work toward the goal of 
eliminating the spreadsheet-based system and instead incorporating all 
CERFP readiness information directly into DRRS. This step would make 
CERFP readiness status accessible to their DOD response partners. 
According to these officials, CERFP readiness information is not yet 
visible in DRRS and will not be until NGB has completed the 
implementation of its planned reporting mechanism that could 
distinguish CERFP readiness information within DOD's centralized 
readiness reporting system. NGB's efforts to complete the development 
of this mechanism have been delayed several times beyond the original 
October 1, 2010, planned completion date. As of September 2011, NGB 
had not developed new timelines for completing its efforts. According 
to NGB officials, time frame extensions have been granted to implement 
new reporting guidance and to establish two new DRRS Centers of 
Excellence.[Footnote 30] NGB also has plans to increase state National 
Guards' access to DRRS by providing additional secure workstations to 
state Guard personnel that would link to DRRS--providing contractor 
support to states to assist with DRRS and increasing the number of 
state National Guard personnel who are trained to use the DRRS system. 
But NGB has not developed a plan for completing these steps. In 
addition, NGB officials stated that funding delays have directly 
affected their ability to add the personnel who they believe are 
necessary to reach full CERFP reporting visibility in DRRS. However, 
they told us that they are making progress in other areas that will 
contribute to including CERFP readiness information in DRRS, for 
example: 

* In January 2011, DOD issued a new Directive requiring State National 
Guard Joint Force Headquarters to report readiness capability in DRRS, 
[Footnote 31] and NGB officials stated that it plans to publish an 
order that will provide CERFPs with compliance requirements for 
reporting readiness information. As of September 2011, NGB officials 
stated that a timetable has not been established to publish the order. 

* NGB is refining mission essential tasks by CERFP units' core 
missions and operations, and it plans to coordinate with all 54 states 
and territories as well as the Joint Staff Headquarters to develop a 
joint CERFP mission-essential task list. 

* Absent a mechanism to disseminate complete CERFP readiness 
information within DOD's readiness reporting system, potential DOD 
response partners and stakeholders will not be informed of CERFPs' 
capacity to perform their mission. Without more consistent, 
comprehensive and accessible reporting of CRFP readiness, the ability 
of all response partners to know how prepared CERFPs are to fit into a 
broader CBRNE consequence management response is impeded. Furthermore, 
without this kind of information, NGB cannot effectively prioritize 
funding and mitigate resource deficiencies that could jeopardize the 
CERFPs' preparedness levels. 

Opportunities Exist to Enhance Coordination with Other Response 
Organizations: 

CERFPs achieved varying levels of success in coordinating with some of 
their potential response partners because of challenges, including (1) 
insufficient guidance for how CERFPs should conduct coordination 
activities, (2) limited awareness of guidance, and (3) limited time 
for conducting coordination activities. NGB is taking steps to 
formally evaluate the CERFPs' performance of pre-incident coordination 
activities, but NGB's evaluation tool does not have coordination 
standards against which CERFP performance can be measured. 
Additionally, NGB has identified having interstate agreements between 
states with and without CERFPs, as well as advanced planning, as key 
to enhancing regional preparedness. Such agreements, however, 
generally do not exist, and our review showed that CERFPs are 
generally not included in state and local response plans. 

CERFPs Achieved Varying Levels of Success in Coordinating with Some of 
Their Potential Response Partners: 

CERFPs coordinate with some of their potential response partners 
through various formal and informal activities, but our review found 
that these activities have achieved varying levels of success in terms 
of educating potential response partners about CERFP capabilities. 
National Guard guidance directs CERFPs to participate in local, state, 
and federal emergency response planning meetings and to ensure that 
CERFP capabilities are understood and integrated appropriately. 
According to the CERFP concept of operations, establishing 
relationships with these other response organizations is vital and can 
be accomplished through response planning meetings as well as 
briefings, fact sheets, and other activities. The concept of 
operations also notes that CERFPs can enhance coordinated operations 
by ensuring other response organizations are aware of their 
capabilities and the processes for requesting support. Most of the 
CERFP officials we interviewed stated that they coordinate with some 
potential response partners through such activities, as well as 
through other mediums, such as conferences. 

CERFPs make efforts to coordinate with potential response partners, 
but we found these efforts vary in frequency and reach, in part 
because there are numerous potential response partners within the 
CERFPs' host states, in the related FEMA regions, and at the national 
level. For example, officials from 10 of the 17 CERFPs stated that 
they are unable to coordinate frequently with most other response 
organizations. In addition, about half of the state emergency managers 
we surveyed responded that there was little to no coordination with 
the CERFPs hosted in their states. The Adjutants General we surveyed 
from states that host CERFPs reported a higher opinion of coordination 
between their states' CERFPs and emergency management offices. Our 
interviews and surveys also indicate that the extent to which CERFPs 
interact with local, state, and federal response organizations 
differs, and that coordination with federal organizations is 
particularly limited. For example, officials from most of the CERFPs 
we interviewed said that they interact with the CSTs but have little 
to no interaction with other federal response organizations, such as 
U.S. Northern Command. These views were also held by the 17 Adjutants 
General in CERFP host states whom we surveyed and who generally 
reported that with the exception of the CSTs, their states' CERFPs 
have limited interaction with potential federal response partners. 
Figure 5 shows the response of Adjutants General to our survey, 
capturing their perspectives regarding the extent to which CERFPs 
interact with various local, state, and federal response 
organizations. The extent of views on CERFP interaction with the 
listed response organizations varies. Although such variability is 
reasonable in some cases, the results also capture instances in which 
some of the CERFPs have little to no interaction with key response 
organizations at the local, state, and federal levels. 

Figure 5: Adjutants General Responses on CERFP Interaction with Local, 
State, Regional, and Federal Response Organizations: 

[Refer to PDF for image: stacked horizontal bar graph] 

Entities: 

Local or regional entity: 

Fire departments: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 15; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 2. 

Law enforcement: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 9; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 8. 
 
Emergency management agencies: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 13; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 4. 

Hazardous materials teams: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 10; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 7. 

State entity: 

Hazardous materials teams: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 7; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 10. 

Police: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 7; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 10. 

Fire Marshal: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 6; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 11. 

Emergency Management Agency: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 13; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 4. 

Office of Environmental Management: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 4; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 13. 

Federal entity: 

Weapons of Mass Destruction Civil Support Teams (CST): 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 16; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 1. 
 
CBRNE Consequence Management Response Forces (CCMRF): 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 3; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 14. 

Chemical Biological Incident Response Force (CBIRF): 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 3; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 14. 

U.S. Northern Command: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 4; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 13. 

Joint Task Force-Civil Support: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 1; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 16. 

FEMA response teams: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 10; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 7. 

EPA response teams: 
CERFPs Interaction: 
Great or some extent: 0; 
Little or no extend, not sure: 17. 

Source: GAO Survey of CERFP State Adjutants General on State CBRNE 
Response Capabilities. 

[End of figure] 

Our surveys and interviews show that the CERFPs' coordination efforts 
have achieved varying levels of success in educating response partners 
about CERFP capabilities. For example, about half of the CERFPs we 
interviewed said that many potential response partners--such as first 
responders--have little knowledge of the CERFP's capabilities. In 
particular, officials from one CERFP told us that despite coordination 
efforts, civilians are generally unfamiliar with CERFP capabilities, 
that integration of capabilities within the region is poor, and that 
the military lacks understanding of civilian and military force 
integration. As an example, they cited a recent exercise in which the 
civilian organizations with which they were training thought they were 
there to provide site security, whereas CERFPs are designed to augment 
first responders with life-saving CBRNE capabilities. Officials from 
another CERFP noted that the CERFP concept may be difficult for others 
to understand until they have had an opportunity to see the team 
operate, such as during a training event. Four of the 13 state-level 
emergency managers from states that host CERFPs that responded to our 
surveys also said that they had a limited understanding of the roles 
and capabilities of their states' CERFPs. For example, one emergency 
manager contrasted his office's levels of familiarity with his state's 
CERFP and its CST, noting that his office coordinates frequently with 
his state's CST, but that he was unfamiliar with CERFPs. Another 
emergency manager from a state with a CERFP similarly noted that CSTs 
are a constant presence in his state, but that CERFPs and other DOD 
assets are less well-known. 

Insufficient Coordination Guidance, Limited Awareness of Guidance, and 
Other Challenges Inhibit Coordination Efforts: 

CERFPs face potential obstacles to conducting successful coordination 
with other response organizations, including insufficient guidance for 
conducting pre-incident coordination activities, limited CERFP 
awareness of guidance, and limited time for conducting coordination 
activities. Nearly half of the CERFPs we interviewed and Adjutants 
General we surveyed believed that existing DOD and NGB interagency 
coordination guidance--including CERFP-specific guidance such as 
National Guard Regulation 500-4/Air National Guard Instruction 10-2504 
and the CERFP concept of operations--was insufficient, or they were 
unsure whether the guidance was sufficient to facilitate the 
development and maintenance of cooperative relationships between 
CERFPs and relevant federal, state, and local organizations. Many of 
the comments that we received from our interviews and surveys 
reflected the theme that guidance had limited usefulness in informing 
coordination efforts, for example: 

* Officials from 5 of the 17 CERFPs told us that their coordination 
activities are driven more by their own initiative than by guidance, 
suggesting that the utility of existing CERFP coordination guidance is 
limited. 

* One host state Adjutant General we surveyed responded that guidance 
indicates the most likely relationships for various types of 
emergencies, but that it does not prescribe the nature and frequency 
of coordination efforts, and that state and regional planning efforts 
provide more concrete guidance for CERFP coordination. 

* Officials from one CERFP we interviewed told us that the guidance 
does not detail when and how to seek out interagency partners. 

* Officials from another CERFP told us that guidance helped guide 
interactions within the state, but not with other states. 

We also found that the CERFP guidance addressing coordination is not 
specific on where coordination efforts should be focused--such as on 
key state or metropolitan area response organizations. NGB officials 
told us that CERFPs should coordinate with major response 
organizations within their areas or responsibility, including 
metropolitan organizations, state agencies tasked with major disaster 
response, federal installations, and other DOD response elements. 
However, while CERFP coordination guidance stresses the need to 
establish relationships with local, state, and federal response 
organizations, such as state emergency management agencies and first 
responders, it does not include the level of detail noted by NGB 
officials, and in particular, it does not (1) delineate the desired 
frequency of coordination efforts, (2) define the CERFP area of 
responsibility for coordination, (3) specify where CERFPs should focus 
their efforts within that area of responsibility, or (4) fully 
identify the key types of organizations that CERFPs should target--
particularly at the state and federal levels, and across state lines. 
Without more specific guidance, full-time CERFP staff may be unable to 
optimize their limited time for coordination activities. 

We also found that awareness of coordination guidance within the 
CERFPs is limited. For example, officials from 7 of the 17 teams we 
interviewed were unaware that CERFP-specific coordination guidance 
existed. Officials from one such CERFP told us that they believe 
coordination to be the sole responsibility of their state National 
Guard. Similarly, officials from another CERFP told us that they 
coordinate with local organizations, but that coordinating with state 
and federal organizations was the responsibility of their state 
National Guard. Ultimately, deficiencies in the clarity of existing 
CERFP coordination guidance, coupled with poor awareness of guidance 
within the CERFPs, hamper existing coordination efforts and fail to 
foster a consistent approach to coordination that is conducive to 
achieving the intended outcomes of these activities. By clarifying 
CERFP coordination responsibilities in existing guidance and 
increasing awareness of such guidance within the CERFPs, NGB could 
better ensure the ability of CERFPs to effectively target their 
coordination efforts and achieve desired outcomes. 

CERFPs face an array of other challenges in coordinating with 
potential response partners. Chief among these is limited time to 
conduct coordination activities. Officials from 10 of the 17 CERFPs we 
interviewed cited this as a challenge to establishing and maintaining 
cooperative relationships with relevant federal, state, and local 
organizations. Moreover, officials from one CERFP we interviewed told 
us that because they had a limited number of full-time staff, they 
simply did not have the time to establish and maintain such 
relationships. Further, 12 of the 17 Adjutants General we surveyed 
from states with CERFPs reported challenges to coordination and 
communication between CERFPs and potential response partners, most 
commonly citing insufficient personnel and limited time. 

The CERFPs we interviewed and Adjutants General and emergency managers 
we surveyed also cited several other challenges to establishing and 
maintaining relationships with potential response partners, such as 
the frequent turnover of personnel and cultural differences between 
civilian and military response organizations. For example, one 
emergency manager from a state with a CERFP reported that personnel 
turnover in both the National Guard and state agencies can hamper 
coordination. Similarly, officials from one CERFP told us that 
turnover in one of their CERFP's full-time positions had disrupted the 
continuity of coordination efforts. As an example of cultural 
differences, officials from two CERFPs told us that the military does 
not know how to communicate effectively with civilian responders. 
Similarly, an emergency manager we surveyed from a state with a CERFP 
reported that differences in civilian and military methods of 
communication and terminology are an impediment to successful 
coordination. 

As previously mentioned, the NGB officials we spoke with said that 
CERFPs face challenges because of the current allotment of full-time 
CERFP staff and stated that they plan to provide each CERFP with five 
additional full-time positions by the end of fiscal year 2013. If 
implemented, NGB's plans to increase full-time staff for the CERFPs 
could help to alleviate the existing resource constraints. However, it 
is unclear to what extent such an increase will improve coordination 
without accompanying changes to guidance and because a requirements 
evaluation had not been performed to determine the appropriate size of 
the increase, according to NGB officials. 

NGB's Tool for Evaluating the CERFPs' Coordination Efforts Is Limited 
by Current Guidance: 

NGB is taking steps to evaluate the effectiveness of some CERFP-led 
coordination efforts as part of its overall assessment of the CERFPs' 
compliance with program guidance. However, NGB's evaluation tool has 
not been fully implemented. Moreover, because existing CERFP 
coordination guidance--which forms the basis of the coordination 
segment of NGB's evaluation tool--does not provide standards against 
which CERFP coordination efforts can be measured, NGB's evaluation 
tool will likely supply program officials with limited data regarding 
the extent and success of coordination activities. 

We have previously reported that federal agencies can enhance and 
sustain their collaborative efforts in part by developing mechanisms 
to monitor their results.[Footnote 32] We further reported that 
reporting on these activities can provide program officials with the 
data necessary to improve coordination policy and practice. [Footnote 
33] NGB guidance recognizes that the standardization and continual 
improvement of activities are key to ensuring consistency and 
interoperability among CERFPs. Accordingly, NGB is implementing a 
standardization and evaluation program to assess the CERFPs' 
performance of a wide array of required activities--including those 
pertaining to pre-incident coordination--and to provide NGB management 
with detailed information for use in program management decisions. 
[Footnote 34] For example, the program assesses whether CERFPs have 
coordinated with local, state, and federal military response 
organizations to ensure they understand the CERFP mission and 
capabilities, and whether CERFPs are involved in local, state, and 
federal regional response planning meetings. However, this program is 
still in the beta test phase, with full implementation not scheduled 
until July 2012. Moreover, because coordination guidance is imprecise 
with regard to the frequency and targeting of coordination activities, 
as previously mentioned, the evaluation tool is without established 
standards against which CERFP performance can be measured. For 
example, NGB officials told us that there are no published criteria 
for evaluators to measure the CERFPs' performance of pre-incident 
coordination activities and that evaluation is at this time 
subjective. We were similarly told by an evaluation program 
representative that there is currently "no degree of compliance" in 
evaluations in the sense that no distinction is made between minimal 
and extensive coordination efforts. NGB officials expect this to 
change as the CERFPs and the evaluation program mature. These same 
officials also noted, however, that as part of the evaluation, 
evaluators will need to assess the CERFP's interaction with major 
response organizations within the CERFP's area of responsibility, 
[Footnote 35] including metropolitan area organizations, state 
agencies tasked with major disaster response, federal installations, 
and other DOD response elements. Yet because such information is not 
formalized by guidance, the CERFPs' approach to pre-incident 
coordination will likely vary, and NGB is without specific criteria 
that could provide a uniform approach to evaluating CERFP coordination 
efforts--thus reducing NGB's assurance that its evaluation results can 
provide program officials with data sufficient to shape coordination 
policy and practice. 

Additional State-to-State Compacts Could Enhance Regional CBRNE 
Coordination through Planning: 

CERFPs were designed to be regional assets, but we found that states 
that host CERFPs generally do not have agreements specific to their 
interstate deployment and that CERFPs are generally not included in 
state and local response plans. The EMAC establishes a structure for 
member states to request and deploy assistance, reimburse states that 
provide assistance, and confer liability and workers' compensation 
protections.[Footnote 36] As the most widely adopted state-to-state 
mutual aid agreement, EMAC constitutes an important mechanism for 
interstate resource sharing, and states have increasingly relied on 
EMAC during disasters as a means of accessing resources, such as 
National Guard assets, from other states. 

National Guard guidance recognizes the value of EMAC, but notes that 
EMAC is generally for the use of the National Guard personnel in a 
State Active Duty Status, not a Title 32 status.[Footnote 37] The 
guidance also notes that states may develop other state-to-state 
compacts to facilitate National Guard CERFP deployments between states 
for response outside of EMAC agreements. Additionally, the CERFP 
concept of operations encourages states to develop state-to-state 
compacts and memorandums of agreement, outside of the EMAC, to enhance 
preparedness, and facilitate a more effective response. NGB stated 
that other agreements may be useful in enabling CERFPs to respond to 
non-emergency events in other states and in allowing CERFPs to deploy 
in advance of preplanned events, such as the Super Bowl or another 
major event that CERFPs have supported in the past. The National 
Response Framework identifies planning as a cornerstone of 
preparedness, providing a common blueprint for activity in the event 
of an emergency. For incidents that may occur without notice--such as 
those involving CBRNE materials--advanced planning can be of increased 
importance. As it relates to interstate response operations involving 
CERFPs, planning can establish response coordination and operating 
procedures and help ensure that CERFP capabilities are understood and 
integrated appropriately--thus improving the timeliness of CERFP 
deployments and the efficacy of interstate response operations. 

Our surveys of state Adjutants General and state-level emergency 
managers indicate that few interstate agreements exist between states 
with and without CERFPs and that CERFP roles and responsibilities are 
generally not integrated with state and local response plans. For 
example, only 1 of 17 Adjutants General and 2 of 13 emergency manager 
survey respondents from states with CERFPs stated that their National 
Guard or states were party to an agreement outside of EMAC that would 
facilitate the interstate deployment of their states' CERFPs. 
Similarly, only 1 of 10 Adjutants General and 1 of 7 emergency manager 
survey respondents from states without CERFPs reported that their 
National Guard or states were party to an agreement outside of EMAC 
that would facilitate their states' use of another state's CERFP. 
Those that indicated they were party to such an agreement generally 
reported that, although the agreement was not specific to CERFPs, it 
could facilitate their interstate deployment. Several other Adjutants 
General we surveyed and state National Guard representatives we 
contacted stated that they believed EMAC to be sufficient to 
facilitate interstate deployments and were unsure why other agreements 
might be needed, indicating that opportunities exist for NGB to inform 
relevant stakeholders as to how these agreements could facilitate more 
effective responses. 

Consistent with CERFP guidance, several of the after-action reports we 
reviewed from National Guard exercises highlighted the potential 
utility of such agreements. For example, reports from the Vigilant 
Guard exercises identified interstate agreements as a vehicle to 
specify how states receiving support from out-of-state CERFPs would 
use those CERFPs. [Footnote 38] Another Vigilant Guard report 
recommended that, because resources obtained through EMAC may arrive 
slowly in a terrorist-related scenario in which multiple states are 
threatened, states should explore establishing additional agreements 
whereby regional resources might be more effectively pooled or shared 
across regional boundaries. As previously stated, NGB guidance 
recognizes the benefits of agreements outside of EMAC, and NGB is well-
positioned to facilitate National Guard support among states, but NGB 
officials told us that they have not taken a role in the development 
of such agreements between states. 

Regarding planning, the Adjutants General and state-level emergency 
managers we surveyed generally reported that broader National Guard 
roles, responsibilities, or capabilities are included in their states' 
emergency response plans. The overwhelming majority of CERFPs we spoke 
with also said that they participate in joint response planning 
meetings with federal, state, and local response organizations at 
least to some extent. However, only 3 of 13 emergency managers from 
states with CERFPs reported in our survey that CERFP roles, 
responsibilities, or capabilities were specifically outlined in their 
state's CBRNE response plan, emergency response plan, or incident 
annexes. Moreover, the overwhelming majority of Adjutants General and 
emergency managers we surveyed from CERFP states, and officials from 
14 of the 17 CERFPs we interviewed, were unaware of their CERFP's 
inclusion in local emergency response plans within their state. 

NGB officials told us that the integration of civilian and military 
plans is a major challenge and that they are in the process of 
developing initiatives to foster this type of collaboration. For 
example, officials stated that they expect to leverage the planned 
HRFs as regional planning mechanisms to coordinate with FEMA regional 
offices and state emergency management agencies to ensure that their 
plans reflect military capabilities. According to the draft HRF 
concept of operations, between three and eight planners will be 
provided to each HRF to develop and synchronize CBRNE plans within 
each FEMA region--although their specific activities and 
responsibilities have not yet been formalized. Another option cited by 
NGB officials is to place National Guard personnel in each FEMA 
regional office to allow for ongoing integrated planning. These 
efforts, if implemented, could enhance coordination and preparedness, 
but it remains unclear how they would affect interstate CERFP 
deployments. Specific deployment agreements between states that host 
CERFPs and those that may receive CERFPs could improve regional CERFP 
support and response planning--specifying, for example, command and 
control relationships for interstate operations--and thereby 
substantially enhance regional preparedness for CBRNE events. 

A Command and Control Framework Is in Place, but Several Factors May 
Inhibit CERFPs' Operational Effectiveness: 

NGB has a general framework in place for the operational command and 
control of CERFPs, outlining how teams will integrate with civilian 
and military command structures and operate in support of civil 
authorities when under state control or when federalized.[Footnote 39] 
However, our review showed that command and control of consequence 
management operations involving the CERFPs may be limited because (1) 
CERFPs' capabilities for communicating with other response 
organizations are inadequate; (2) there are no agreements between 
CERFPs and their out-of-state Fatality, Search, and Recovery Teams; 
and (3) opportunities to practice and evaluate potential command and 
control arrangements in a realistic response environment are 
infrequent. Moreover, NGB is establishing 10 HRFs, which--as currently 
planned--will affect the existing command and control framework for 
the CERFPs by altering their communications and relationships with 
other response organizations. 

NGB Has Established a Command and Control Framework for CERFP 
Operations: 

National Guard guidance and the CERFP concept of operations establish 
a general framework for the operational command and control of CERFPs, 
outlining how teams are to integrate with civilian and military 
command structures and operate in support of civil authorities when 
under state control and when federalized.[Footnote 40] For example, 
according to the CERFP concept of operations, the CERFP is assigned to 
the state and operationally committed to support a civilian incident 
commander through the military chain of command. NGB's framework is 
predicated on national guidance for domestic incident response 
delineated by the National Response Framework and National Incident 
Management System, as well as military civil support and CBRNE 
consequence management doctrine.[Footnote 41] In accordance with 
national response protocols, CERFP and other National Guard or federal 
military response operations are conducted in support of civil 
authorities in a three-tiered approach.[Footnote 42] During 
operations, the chain of command that CERFPs operate under corresponds 
to the CERFP's duty status and is generally determined by the size and 
scope of an incident. CERFPs may operate in state active duty status, 
Title 32 status, or Title 10 federal duty status. The state Governor 
and Adjutant General provide command and control for state National 
Guard forces, such as the CERFP, operating in state active duty status 
or operating under the authorities of Title 32 of the U.S. Code. The 
President provides command and control of National Guard forces 
operating under Title 10 of the U.S. Code. While operating in Title 10 
status during large-scale incidents, CERFPs will operate under the 
command and control of the designated joint military response 
headquarters. In most cases, DOD's federal response within the U.S. 
would be under U.S. Northern Command. 

According to the National Guard Bureau, CERFPs would normally operate 
as an element of a state-level response under a state National Guard 
command and control structure in either state active duty or Title 32 
status. Each state National Guard has established a standing Joint 
Force Headquarters under the Adjutant General--referred to as Joint 
Force Headquarters-State. The Joint Force Headquarters-State controls 
National Guard forces within the state's borders, either directly or--
in large scale incident responses--through a Joint Task Force-State. 
When established, the Joint Task Force-State provides day-to-day 
command, control, coordination, and logistical support to deployed 
National Guard forces within the state's borders. At the CERFP level, 
operations are commanded and controlled by the CERFP Command and 
Control element. Among other things, the CERFP Command and Control 
element employs the appropriate CERFP capabilities to accomplish the 
incident mitigation objectives of the Incident Commander, and 
maintains communications with the Incident Commander and Joint Force 
Headquarters-State to ensure the synchronization of CERFP actions. 
Figure 6 shows the basic command and control structure for State 
Active Duty and Title 32 CERFP response operations. 

Figure 6: Command and Control Structure for State Active Duty and 
Title 32 CERFP Response Operations: 

[Refer to PDF for image: structure illustration] 

Top level: Governor. 

Second level, command relationship with Governor: 
State Emergency Management Agency; 
State Adjutant General; 
Coordination relationship between the 2 entities. 

Third level, command relationship with State Adjutant General: 
State Joint Force Headquarters. 

Fourth level, support relationship with State Joint Force Headquarters: 
Joint Task Force - State (if activated[A]); also has a command 
relationship with State Adjutant General. 

Fifth level, command relationship with Joint Task Force - State: 
CERFP Command and Control Element; 
Support relationship with: 
Civilian Incident Commander. 

Sixth level, command relationship with CERFP Command and Control 
Element: 
Search and Extraction Element; 
Medical Element; 
Decontamination Element; 
Fatality, Search and Recovery Team. 
      
Source: GAO analysis of NGB information. 

[A] A Joint Task Force-State may be established under the Joint Force 
Headquarters-State to provide day-to-day command, control, 
coordination, and logistical support of deployed National Guard 
response forces. 

[End of figure] 

In addition to operations within their states, CERFPs may deploy 
outside their states based on requests for assistance and in 
accordance with established mutual aid agreements. In such cases, 
command and control is conducted according to provisions of the 
agreement and applicable military plans and orders. States are 
encouraged to develop state-to-state compacts to facilitate regional 
CERFP support and response. In the case of an emergency and in the 
absence of formal or informal agreements, National Guard guidance 
states that the Governor and Adjutant General of a state providing 
support may agree with the Governor and Adjutant General of a 
supported state or develop a simple memorandum of agreement on CERFP 
support on a case-by-case basis. The governor of an affected state may 
also request assistance through the NGB for the deployment of a CERFP. 
NGB serves a coordinating function to facilitate such requests but 
does not have command authority over National Guard forces. 

Inadequate Communications Capabilities May Hamper the Command and 
Control of Operations Involving CERFPs: 

Communications are central to the execution of command and control 
functions, allowing commanders to exercise authority and direction and 
enabling the information sharing necessary to maintain situational 
awareness, but the CERFPs are not assured access to communications 
equipment that would enable them to share and manage information with 
military and civilian response organizations during a CBNRE incident. 
The National Response Framework and DOD respectively identify 
communications interoperability as a critical component of 
preparedness and a key factor in the effective use of the National 
Guard under state control, enabling coordination, cooperation, and 
information sharing among federal, state, and local responders. 
Moreover, draft NGB guidance addresses possible sources for a 
dedicated, deployable long-range communications capability for CERFPs 
and states that dedicated communications equipment is essential to 
establishing "technical reach-back" capability for the CERFP.[Footnote 
43] However, we found that the hand-held radios provided to the CERFPs 
as part of their baseline authorization are not interoperable and have 
limited range and that the communications platforms provided by state 
National Guards to CERFPs are not dedicated to them, reducing 
assurance that they would be available during an incident. For 
example, officials from 11 of the 17 CERFPs we interviewed cited the 
lack of interoperability of CERFP radios with communications equipment 
used by other response organizations, such as first responders, as a 
challenge. Further, officials from three of the CERFPs we interviewed 
noted that the range of these handheld radios is limited, to the 
extent that one CERFP representative commented that it will allow you 
to communicate with other individuals if they are at the end of the 
block--if a building does not get in the way. Such communication 
limitations could severely impede information sharing and situational 
awareness between the CERFP command and control element and the other 
CERFP elements, and between the CERFP and the civilian Incident 
Commander it supports--particularly when the CERFP Command and Control 
element is not located close to the other CERFP elements or the 
Incident Commander. Moreover, as shown in figure 7, CERFPs may 
interact with various other potential response partners, requiring 
communication pathways for maintaining situational awareness. 

Figure 7: Potential CERFP Incident Site Response Partners and 
Communications Pathways: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

Communications Pathways: to and from CERFP Command and Control element: 
Joint Operations Center; 
Local hospital; 
State National Guard Joint Force Headquarters/Joint Task Force 
Commander; 
Incident Commander and staff; 
CERFP Incident Commander Liaison Officer; 
CERFP Medical element; 
CERFP Decontamination element; 
CERFP Search and Extraction element; 
CERFP Fatality Search and Recovery Team; 
Other CERFPs civil support teams, and on-site DOD assets 

Other communication pathways: 
Local hospital and CERFP Medical element; 
Incident Commander and staff and CERFP Incident Commander Liaison 
Officer; 
Incident Commander and staff and local, state, and federal responders; 
CERFP Search and Extraction element and other on-site extraction teams; 
CERFP Fatality Search and Recovery Team and other on-site recovery 
teams.   
      
Source: GAO analysis of NGB information. 

[End of figure] 

To mitigate communications limitations, CERFPs may be able to access 
equipment with the aforementioned key capabilities from other state 
National Guard organizations. According to National Guard guidance and 
the CERFP concept of operations, CERFPs may access this equipment 
through either their state's National Guard headquarters or state CST, 
if the latter is tasked to support the CERFP. However, while officials 
from nine CERFPs that told us their state could provide such 
equipment, officials from seven of these nine also stated that there 
are no specific agreements for accessing state-owned communications 
equipment--such as the Joint Incident Site Communications 
Capability.[Footnote 44] As a result, CERFP access could be limited by 
competing requests from other entities during a large-scale incident. 
Similarly, CERFPs' access to the CST's Unified Command Suite is also 
dependent on the availability of these systems and whether a CERFP 
operates within close proximity to the CST at an incident site. 
[Footnote 45] 

NGB officials said that they believe that state National Guards would 
provide CERFPs with the communications equipment necessary to 
accomplish the mission. Nevertheless, these officials also stated that 
NGB recognizes that the CERFPs face a communications equipment gap 
related to interoperability and reach-back access, among other things. 
NGB has initiated a study to determine interoperability and reach-back 
requirements for CERFP communications equipment and has begun to 
explore potential equipment options--one of which would entail the 
reassignment of state National Guard Joint Incident Site 
Communications Capability systems to each CERFP command and control 
element. These same officials also noted, however, that there are 
challenges related to states having insufficient numbers of personnel 
to operate and maintain this equipment. During a working group session 
focused on communications shortfalls, several CERFP representatives 
echoed these concerns, stating that the CERFPs do not have the 
manpower to maintain such equipment or the training time necessary to 
sustain operational proficiency. Because the absence of interoperable 
communications equipment with long-range and reach-back capabilities 
may impede the timely, continuous flow of critical information about 
site hazards and response requirements between CERFPs and other 
response entities--particularly the Joint Force Headquarters and 
Incident Commander--the collective ability of all responders to 
maintain situational awareness and coordinate movements may be 
diminished. 

Some CERFPs Do Not Have Agreements with Their Out-of-State Elements: 

According to the CERFP concept of operations, CERFPs are comprised of 
individual units from the host state if the state has the required 
structure. When a state lacks the force structure necessary to support 
all of the CERFP mission capabilities, units from another state may 
provide the capability. If elements of a CERFP are from more than one 
state, NGB guidance states that memorandums of agreement, laying out a 
clear chain of command and activation authority, must be established. 
The number of states that rely on units from other states to compose 
their CERFPs may ebb and flow over time as a result of force 
allocation challenges--such as the overseas deployment of CERFP 
personnel--that may affect a state's ability to support the entire 
CERFP mission. For example, we found that there were nine CERFPs whose 
Fatality, Search, and Recovery Teams were sourced outside of the CERFP 
host state.[Footnote 46] Officials from these CERFPs told us that they 
had not established the required formal agreements with their out-of-
state Fatality, Search, and Recovery Team components, although 
officials from two of the nine CERFPs told us that they had agreements 
that were in draft form, one of which was awaiting approval from NGB. 

According to NGB officials, NGB has not had a role in facilitating the 
development of these agreements, nor has it attached consequences to 
noncompliance with requirements to establish the agreements. In the 
absence of such agreements, NGB has no assurance that CERFPs with out-
of-state elements, such as Fatality, Search, and Recovery Teams, will 
deploy and operate as unified forces. 

Opportunities to Exercise and Evaluate Command and Control in a 
Realistic Response Environment Are Limited: 

Because CERFPs must support the goals and objectives of a civilian 
incident commander while adhering to the military chain of command, 
practicing command and control relationships is critical to ensuring 
operational effectiveness. Some of the training and exercise issues we 
previously noted, such as the gaps in exercise participation by 
critical CERFP elements and potential interagency and DOD response 
partners, produce command and control challenges and directly affect 
the level of assurance that all response partners have about the 
viability of command and control relationships. For example, the 
limited opportunities that CERFPs have had to train with their 
Fatality, Search, and Recovery Team elements, and in some cases, their 
medical elements, limits the ability of the CERFP to practice critical 
command and control mechanisms in advance of an actual event. 

As we have previously stated, despite guidance emphasizing the 
importance of training with interagency partners, CERFPs have trained 
to a limited extent in interagency environments, creating few 
opportunities for CERFPs to exercise and evaluate certain command and 
control structures--such as those that would be in place during a 
large-scale incident under federal control. For example, according to 
the results of our four surveys, in each of the last 3 years, three or 
fewer CERFPs had trained with DOD's federal CBRNE Consequence 
Management Response Forces or Marine Corps Chemical, Biological, 
Incident Response Force, and only around half trained with U.S. 
Northern Command. Limited interagency participation in CERFP training 
events increases the risk that command and control mechanisms between 
CERFPs and other military and nonmilitary partners will not function 
effectively during an actual incident. For additional information 
regarding interagency participation in CERFP training events, see 
appendix II. As previously mentioned in our discussion of training 
challenges, NGB neither comprehensively tracks the CERFPs' 
participation in interagency exercises nor provides specific 
participation goals that could be used to measure progress. As a 
result, NGB has little assurance that all CERFPs, which are considered 
regional and national assets, have opportunities to practice command 
and control in an interagency environment. 

Moreover, formal evaluations of CERFP command and control do not 
provide realistic testing of command and control relationships because 
they occur in controlled environments that typically do not include 
interagency response partners. According to the 2008 Joint Training 
Plan, external evaluations should preferably be conducted during 
regional exercises focused on performing tasks in an interagency 
environment under the command and control of the state National Guard 
Joint Force Headquarters or Joint Task Force-State. However, in two of 
the three formal evaluations that we attended, interagency 
organizations observed these exercises but played no active role. At 
the third evaluation, one organization participated to a limited 
extent by conducting an initial assessment of the incident scene at 
the onset of the evaluation. We also found that during these events, 
key players--such as the civilian Incident Commander and National 
Guard Joint Force Headquarters--are often simulated by evaluators. 
According to several exercise officials, NGB prefers to simulate these 
roles since the evaluators are familiar with CERFP operations and 
therefore can more efficiently provide orders and control the pace of 
the exercise. Officials we spoke with from two CERFPs provided a 
contrasting view, noting that such conditions contribute to a 
fabricated environment that ultimately fails to stress the command and 
control system. One of the after-action reports we reviewed for an 
exercise that included interagency partners similarly noted that it 
was vital to have interagency participation, not just simulation, to 
achieve the goals of the exercise. 

As indicated previously in our discussion of training challenges, NGB 
officials have recognized the need to improve aspects of CERFP field 
training and exercises by, for example, including in its annual 
training guidance, issued in March 2011, collective training goals 
related to exercising with local, state, and federal responders. 
However, as noted, it is unclear whether units will be able to meet 
collective training goals and participate in proposed exercises, as 
challenges related to the CERFPs' part-time status and funding have 
limited the CERFPs' participation in training in the past. Without a 
strategy to ensure that such opportunities to practice and evaluate 
command and control are provided across the program, the CERFPs are at 
risk of decreased effectiveness when they operate in diverse response 
environments that include the full range of local, state, and federal 
response organizations. 

The Introduction of New Homeland Response Forces Will Affect Command 
and Control of CBRNE Capabilities: 

The advent of HRFs will materially affect the command and control 
framework for CERFPs by altering how CERFPs interact with other 
response partners. The first two HRFs and the replacement CERFPs are 
scheduled to become operational by the end of fiscal year 2011. When 
deployed in response to an incident, NGB officials told us that the 
HRFs are supposed to establish a regional command and control 
structure to synchronize State Active Duty and Title 32 National Guard 
CBRNE response forces--including CERFPs--and prepare for follow-on 
forces. In this capacity, HRFs may command and control multiple CERFPs 
during large-scale consequence management operations and thereby 
affect both the nature and extent of the CERFPs' interactions with 
military and civilian command structures. For example, when operating 
under the HRFs, CERFPs may coordinate directly with the HRF instead of 
the state National Guard Joint Force Headquarters. Similarly, while 
NGB officials told us that the HRF will not act as a communication 
layer between the CERFP and Incident Commander during such incidents, 
NGB has not issued guidance delineating command and control 
relationships for joint HRF-CERFP operations, making it unclear 
whether the CERFPs will continue to coordinate directly with the 
civilian Incident Commander, or if that coordination will become the 
duty of the HRF. 

According to NGB officials, NGB has postponed its initial plans to 
update existing CERFP guidance by late summer 2011 to reflect the new 
command and control relationships associated with the HRF construct. 
These officials told us that they now plan to concomitantly update and 
develop existing CERFP and new HRF guidance to create an overarching 
guidance manual. This approach will delay issuance by approximately 6 
months. The delay, according to NGB, is acceptable given the expected 
benefits of combining the guidance. However, because NGB does not plan 
to update its CERFP command and control guidance before the first two 
HRFs become operational at the end of fiscal year 2011, CERFPs will 
likely face a range of operational ambiguities during joint HRF-CERFP 
operations that could limit prospects for the seamless integration of 
military and civilian response operations. For example, without new 
guidance, CERFPs may not have a clear understanding of how they are to 
interact with the state National Guard Joint Force Headquarters and 
the civilian Incident Commander during joint HRF-CERFP operations, 
resulting in confusion and inefficiencies that could lead to reduced 
operational effectiveness. 

Conclusions: 

CERFPs are considered a critical component--within DOD's overall CBRNE 
response strategy--to support local and state responders during a 
significant or catastrophic CBRNE-related incident. The fact that 
CERFPs are staffed by National Guard soldiers and airmen who do not 
train and prepare for the mission on a full-time basis adds to the 
challenge to be fully ready to rapidly respond anywhere within the 
United States and its territories within hours and be capable of 
integrating with other response partners--including other CERFPs and 
DOD's other CBRNE response capabilities. Gaps that we identified in 
NGB's CERFP management efforts--gaps that include (1) evaluating the 
resources and capabilities necessary for the CERFP mission; (2) 
providing guidance for CERFP participation in key training and 
exercises; and (3) capturing and reporting CERFP readiness data--
represent further challenges to the long-term success of the program. 
Now that the CERFP program has gained some maturity, a more 
comprehensive approach to address these gaps can build on efforts DOD 
and NGB already have under way to better ensure that CERFPs can 
provide an effective emergency response. 

A successful response to a large-scale domestic CBRNE incident 
requires the synchronization of response efforts across local, state, 
and federal-level response organizations, including DOD. This 
integration, in turn, requires extensive pre-incident coordination. As 
state and regional assets, CERFPs are uniquely positioned to 
coordinate their efforts with civilian and military response 
organizations at various levels of government. Likewise, the NGB--as 
manager of the CERFP program and a key channel of communication 
between DOD and the states--is well positioned to guide CERFP 
coordination practice and to facilitate interstate planning for the 
use of CERFPs across state lines. Addressing the challenges that have 
led to sporadic coordination efforts between CERFPs and other 
potential response partners--challenges such as gaps in the areas of 
(1) existing guidance that specifies direction for CERFP coordination 
efforts; (2) awareness and understanding of that guidance by the 
CERFPs; (3) standards that would allow NGB and DOD to assess the 
effectiveness of CERFP coordination with military and civilian 
response partners; and (4) agreements between states regarding 
interstate CERFP deployments--all represent opportunities for DOD, 
NGB, and the individual CERFPs to improve their existing coordination 
efforts and thereby further solidify the concept of a unified national 
response that is at the heart of the nation's emergency planning. 

To effectively respond to incidents of varying scale in support of 
civil authorities, it is crucial that CERFPs be able to seamlessly 
integrate with civilian and military command structures as well as 
response organizations at the local, state, and federal levels. Gaps 
in the areas of (1) communications and interoperability; (2) 
agreements between CERFPs and other states that host a team's 
Fatality, Search, and Recovery component; and (3) practicing and 
evaluating key command and control relationships could each inhibit 
the ability of CERFPs to operate effectively in interagency 
environments. The advent of HRFs amplifies such challenges by 
introducing a new set of relationships and procedures that will affect 
the framework of integration for military and civilian response 
operations. Without an updated command and control framework that 
clearly delineates relationships related to the HRFs, CERFPs are 
likely to experience confusion and inefficiencies during joint 
operations that could lead to reduced operational effectiveness and 
weaken the overall national response structure. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To address these issues, we recommend that the Secretary of Defense 
take the following three actions: 

(1) To increase assurance that CERFPs can effectively conduct CBRNE 
consequence management in support of civil authorities, we recommend 
that the Secretary of Defense direct the Chief of the National Guard 
Bureau, in coordination with the Secretaries of the Army and Air 
Force, the state Adjutants General, and the Under Secretary of Defense 
for Personnel and Readiness, as appropriate, to: 

* implement a well-defined process to systematically examine and 
validate total resources and capabilities necessary to successfully 
conduct the CERFP mission including personnel, training, and equipment 
requirements; 

* develop a training strategy linked to specified goals to guide 
CERFPs' participation in the range of field collective training 
exercises and systematically track progress that CERFPs are making in 
achieving the specified training goals; and: 

* develop and implement a plan--with timelines--to complete the 
implementation of the standardized mechanism for capturing and 
reporting readiness data within DOD's centralized readiness reporting 
system. 

(2) To enhance regional CBRNE preparedness and facilitate the CERFPs' 
ability to respond to regional events, we recommend that the Secretary 
of Defense direct the Chief of the National Guard Bureau in concert 
with the Secretaries of the Army and Air Force and the state Adjutants 
General, where appropriate, to: 

* strengthen existing guidance related to interagency coordination by 
specifying, for example, the key types of response organizations with 
which CERFPs should coordinate in their geographical areas of 
responsibility; 

* increase awareness and understanding of coordination guidance within 
the CERFPs; 

* establish agreed-upon coordination evaluation standards by 
incorporating updated coordination guidance in the Standardization, 
Evaluation, and Assistance Team checklist(s) or another coordination 
evaluation tool; and: 

* take steps to encourage states to develop state-to-state compacts 
regarding CERFP interstate deployment and coordination to supplement 
EMAC. 

(3) To ensure the effective command and control of consequence 
management operations involving CERFPs and to make certain that CERFPs 
are able to integrate effectively with military and civilian response 
partners, we recommend that the Secretary of Defense direct the Chief 
of the National Guard Bureau, in concert with the Secretaries of the 
Army and Air Force and the state Adjutants General, where appropriate, 
to: 

* formalize an interim solution--as NGB conducts it long-term review--
to ensure that CERFPs responding to an event will have access to 
equipment providing key communications capabilities--including 
interoperability with military and first responder equipment, long-
range connectivity, and technical reach-back; 

* foster the development of memorandums of agreement between states 
that host CERFPs and states that provide out-of-state elements such as 
Fatality, Search, and Recovery teams; 

* develop a strategy to ensure that all CERFPs are able to practice 
and be evaluated on command and control relationships within realistic 
environments that include the range of interagency partners that 
CERFPs are likely to encounter; and: 

* issue interim guidance to clarify the new command and control 
relationships resulting from the changes to DOD's consequence 
management strategy: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

In written comments on a draft of this report, DOD concurred with the 
recommendations. DOD also provided technical comments, which we have 
incorporated into the report where appropriate. 

DOD provided additional comments with respect to the first and third 
recommendations that addressed CERFP training and exercises. DOD 
stated that US Northern Command and NGB are provided resources for 
approximately eight full-scale exercise opportunities per year that 
allow National Guard units (CERFPs or other units) to train with 
military and interagency partners and that additional funding and 
dedicated National Guard "man-days" would be required to exercise all 
17 CERFPs and 10 HRFs each year or each time a new force assumes the 
mission. Further, DOD stated that given the large amount of training 
(for individuals, units, and with interagency partners) for the 
complex mission, stabilization of the assigned CBRNE consequence 
management forces for 3 years or more is needed. We agree that 
expanding the scope of the exercise program for CERFPs (and other 
CBRNE units) to encompass full-scale interagency exercises for each 
unit every year would tax the existing structure and resources for 
CBRNE consequence management exercises. We continue to believe that if 
DOD implements our recommendations to develop strategies to (1) guide 
CERFP participation in the range of field exercises and tracking 
progress in participating in such exercises and (2) ensure that all 
CERFPs are able to practice and be evaluated on command and control 
relationships within realistic environments and with a range of 
interagency partners, the CERFPs will benefit from improved standards 
and goals to increase the effectiveness of their exercises. In some 
cases, this may mean increased frequency of exercises. However, the 
current fiscal environment is not likely to allow dramatic increases 
in both the frequency and scope of major exercises. Successful 
development and implementation of the strategies we recommend would 
allow NGB to better utilize existing resources to more evenly 
distribute training opportunities--and thereby better ensure a 
consistent level of preparedness--across the CERFP program. 

We also agree that providing some stability to the CERFPs in terms of 
the units assigned for a period similar to the 3 years or more, as DOD 
suggested in response to our third recommendation, would help improve 
the effectiveness of existing and planned training and exercises, as 
it will allow a unit as a whole to benefit from that experience for 
longer than is now the case. 

DOD's comments are reproduced in their entirety in appendix III. 

We are distributing this report to the appropriate congressional 
committees, the Secretary of Defense, and other interested parties. In 
addition, the report will be available at no charge on GAO's Web site 
at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-4300 or stlaurentj@gao.gov. Contact 
information for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public 
Affairs may be found on the last page of this report. Key contributors 
to this report are listed in appendix IV. 

Signed by: 

Janet A. St. Laurent: 
Managing Director Defense Capabilities and Management: 

List of Requesters: 

The Honorable Joseph I. Lieberman: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Susan M. Collins: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Adam Smith: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Armed Services: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable W. "Mac" Thornberry: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable James R. Langevin: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Emerging Threats and Capabilities: 
Committee on Armed Services: 
House of Representatives: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To address our objectives, we held discussions with the Office of the 
Assistant Secretary of Defense, Reserve Affairs, and the Assistant 
Secretary of Defense, Homeland Defense and Americas' Security Affairs, 
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and NGB operations, training, and readiness 
officials and reviewed regulations, studies, briefings and memoranda 
to gain perspectives on the status of the CERFP program. We compared 
the current status of the program with the requirements set forth in 
DOD and NGB guidance, such as NGB's CERFP Concept of Operations, 
[Footnote 47] NGB's CERFP Management regulation,[Footnote 48] NGB's 
CERFP training guidance,[Footnote 49] and the Army's final draft of 
CERFP operations doctrine.[Footnote 50] We reviewed NGB's future plans 
related to the implementation of its Standardization Evaluation and 
Assistance Team Program to determine NGB's planned framework for 
providing oversight of the CERFP program, and reviewed future plans 
that affect the CERFPs' role in DOD's restructured plan for providing 
CBRNE response capabilities, including those related to the Homeland 
Response Forces. We also conducted five site visits to observe a total 
of six CERFPs conducting training during various types of field 
exercises, including three field exercise where CERFPs were preparing 
for, and being evaluated on, their mission proficiency. We attended 
the other two field training exercises to observe CERFPs training with 
some of their potential response partners, such as local fire chiefs 
and fire departments, sheriff departments, state level rescue 
organizations, FEMA search and rescue teams, other National Guard 
response capabilities, and the Marine Corps' Chemical Biological 
Incident Response Force. We held discussions with exercise 
participants and exercise evaluators that were part of, or working in 
support of, the NGB's Joint Interagency Training and Education Center, 
which provides training support to CERFPs. These exercises were 
conducted in Colorado, Florida, Ohio, Virginia and Wisconsin. 

To gain the perspectives of both the state National Guard and state-
level emergency management officials who would be involved in planning 
or executing a CBRNE emergency response, we designed and implemented 
separate web-based surveys of (1) state Adjutants General from all 17 
states that host CERFPs (2) state Adjutants General from 10 states 
that do not host CERFPs, (3) state-level emergency managers from all 
17 states that host CERFPs, and (4) state-level emergency managers 
from 10 states that do not host CERFPs. For states that do not host 
CERFPs, one state or territory was non-randomly selected from each of 
the ten FEMA regions to reflect different geographical and population 
characteristics. The ten additional states that were selected were 
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Connecticut, Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, 
Montana, New Mexico, and Puerto Rico.[Footnote 51] In total, 51 
surveys were sent via email invitation across 27 states (17 CERFP host 
states and 10 non-host states) and were conducted between September 
and October 2010. Contact information for each state Adjutant General 
was provided by the National Guard Bureau and verified against contact 
information available on state National Guard Web sites. Contact 
information for each state emergency management official was provided 
by the National Emergency Management Association and verified against 
state emergency management Web sites. We took steps to minimize 
nonsampling errors by pretesting the survey instruments in July and 
August 2010 with officials from eight of the states eventually 
surveyed. The surveys addressed CERFP planning, coordination, command 
and control, and collective training, and the new DOD CBRNE 
consequence management strategy articulated by the 2010 Quadrennial 
Defense Review. Additionally, the survey given to state Adjutants 
General in states that host CERFPs also addressed CERFP preparedness. 

To maximize our response rate, we sent reminder emails and contacted 
non-respondents by telephone. In total, we obtained responses from 47 
of the 51 survey recipients (92 percent). We received responses from 
all 17 Adjutants General from states that host CERFPs and from all 10 
Adjutants Generals from the states we selected that do not host 
CERFPs. We received responses from 13 of the 15 state-level emergency 
managers from states that host CERFPs and from 7 of the 9 emergency 
managers from the states we selected that do not host CERFPs.[Footnote 
52] Despite repeated inquiries, emergency management officials from 
Maryland, New Mexico, Texas, and Washington did not respond to the 
surveys. 

We supplemented our survey results with semi-structured telephone 
interviews of key representatives from each of the 17 CERFPs. These 
interviews consisted of both standardized and variable questions to 
capture tactical-level perspectives on a range of issues related to 
CERFP readiness; coordination; collective planning and training; and 
DOD's new CBRNE consequence management strategy. We performed content 
analysis of the interview responses to identify recurring themes and 
perspectives. 

To identify the extent to which the CERFPs are prepared to execute 
their mission in terms of required equipment, staffing, training, and 
funding, we reviewed readiness data within the National Guard's CERFP-
specific spreadsheet-based readiness system dated from October 2006 
through January 2011and data from the Defense Readiness Reporting 
System (DRRS) dated January 2011 to determine the mechanisms for and 
the processes involved in CERFP readiness reporting. We also reviewed 
our prior work on National Guard readiness and DRRS to supplement our 
work.[Footnote 53] We reviewed CERFP-specific readiness briefings and 
CERFP specific-readiness spreadsheets to determine the extent that 
readiness data is being reported to NGB. Additionally, we used the 
Army Readiness Management System to review Army unit reported 
readiness data. The Army reports its readiness data through DRRS-Army, 
which is one of the interconnected systems within DRRS. We reviewed 
this data in order to determine whether units that were identified by 
the National Guard as having the CERFP mission could be seen as 
reporting their readiness for that mission as part of their unit 
readiness reports. We used the Army's system because typically at 
least two of the four CERFP elements come from Army National Guard 
units. To the extent that CERFP readiness data was found in the Army 
unit reported readiness data, we compared this data to the type of 
data found in NGB's readiness spreadsheets. We also interviewed 
readiness and program officials to determine their plans for 
integrating CERFP data from the stand-alone spreadsheets into DRRS. We 
assessed the reliability of the DRRS data and determined that the data 
is sufficiently reliable for the purpose of assessing the consistency 
of the implementation of the current readiness reporting policies and 
discussing the findings in this report. 

To determine the extent to which (1) existing coordination mechanisms 
facilitate future CERFP operations, and the effectiveness of CERFP-led 
coordination activities is evaluated, and (2) NGB has established an 
effective framework to command and control the CERFPs during 
consequence management operations, we reviewed and analyzed an array 
of relevant program and issue area documentation, law, and literature; 
interviewed military stakeholders; conducted site visits to observe 
CERFP field training; attended CERFP working group sessions; and 
collected and analyzed information from our four surveys. We examined 
CERFP-related documents, including DOD and NGB guidance; briefings; 
training materials and after action reports; and memorandums regarding 
the status of the CERFP program. We also reviewed law relevant to 
disaster response and the domestic employment of National Guard 
troops, including the Stafford Act and certain provisions of Titles 32 
and 10 of the United States Code. We examined an array of 
documentation related to DOD's other CBRNE consequence management 
assets, including DOD reports, testimonies, and initial plans related 
to DOD's CBRNE enterprise restructuring efforts. We also examined 
national-level policy pertaining to response coordination and 
planning, such as the National Response Framework and National 
Incident Management System, and reviewed relevant literature related 
to response operations, the Emergency Management Assistance Compact, 
and state-to-state mutual aid. 

We conducted this performance audit from December 2009 to December 
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. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: CERFP Interagency Training, 2008-2010: 

NGB's training guidance covering 2008-2010 encouraged CERFPs to 
include potential response partners in collective team training 
exercises and to participate in at least one regional training event 
in fiscal year 2008 or fiscal year 2009 that focused on performing 
collective tasks in an interagency environment including local, state, 
federal, or other DOD response partners.[Footnote 54] Figures 8, 9, 
10, and 11 illustrate the results of our surveys of state Adjutants 
General and state-level emergency managers regarding the extent to 
which CERFPs have trained with various potential response partners in 
2008, 2009, and 2010. 

Our surveys show that most CERFPs have trained with some key response 
partners over the last 3 years, but have had limited opportunities to 
train with other key response partners, such as DOD response 
organizations and state emergency management agencies. For example, in 
each of the last 3 years, three or fewer CERFPs had trained with DOD's 
federal CBRNE Consequence Management Response Forces or Marine Corps 
Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, and only around half 
trained with U.S. Northern Command--DOD's federal response lead for 
most domestic CBRNE incidents. Additionally, the state-level emergency 
managers we surveyed reported high levels of training with CSTs, but 
only about half or less from those states with CERFPs had trained with 
a CERFP in each of the last 3 years and only one from a state without 
a CERFP had trained with a CERFP in 2009 and 2010. 

Figure 8: CERFP Joint Field Training with Select Potential Response 
Partners, 2008-2010: 

[Refer to PDF for image: vertical bar graph] 

Survey response: 

Exercise: Other CERFPs; 
2008, Yes: 6; 
2008, No: 11; 
2009, Yes: 10; 
2009, No: 7; 
2010, Yes: 12; 
2010, No: 5. 

Exercise: Civil Support Teams; 
2008, Yes: 15; 
2008, No: 2; 
2009, Yes: 12; 
2009, No: 5; 
2010, Yes: 14; 
2010, No: 3. 

Exercise: CBRNE Consequence Management Response Force; 
2008, Yes: 1; 
2008, No: 16; 
2009, Yes: 2; 
2009, No: 15; 
2010, Yes: 3; 
2010, No: 14. 

Exercise: Chemical Biological Incident Response Force; 
2008, Yes: 1; 
2008, No: 16; 
2009, Yes: 2; 
2009, No: 15; 
2010, Yes: 3; 
2010, No: 14. 

Exercise: U.S. Northern Command; 
2008, Yes: 9; 
2008, No: 8; 
2009, Yes: 9; 
2009, No: 8; 
2010, Yes: 8; 
2010, No: 9. 

Exercise: Federal Emergency Management Agency; 
2008, Yes: 10; 
2008, No: 7; 
2009, Yes: 10; 
2009, No: 7; 
2010, Yes: 7; 
2010, No: 10. 

Exercise: Other federal partners; 
2008, Yes: 10; 
2008, No: 7; 
2009, Yes: 9; 
2009, No: 8; 
2010, Yes: 12; 
2010, No: 5. 

Exercise: Local agencies; 
2008, Yes: 14; 
2008, No: 3; 
2009, Yes: 14; 
2009, No: 3; 
2010, Yes: 15; 
2010, No: 2. 

Source: GAO Survey of CERFP State Adjutants General on State CBRNE 
Response Capabilities. 

[End of figure] 

Figure 9: CERFP Joint Field Training with Emergency Management 
Agencies from States with CERFPs, 2008-2010: 

[Refer to PDF for image: 3 pie-charts] 

2008: 
Not checked: 23%; 
No: 38%; 
Yes: 38%. 

2009: 
Not checked: 15%; 
No: 31%; 
Yes: 54%. 

2010: 
Not checked: 15%; 
No: 46%; 
Yes: 38%. 

Source: GAO of CERFP State Emergency Managers on State CBRNE Response 
Capabilities. 

Note: Numbers may not add to 100 percent due to rounding. 

[End of figure] 

Figure 10: CERFP Joint Field Training with Emergency Management 
Agencies from States without CERFPs, 2008-2010: 

[Refer to PDF for image] 

2008: 
Not checked: 29%; 
No: 71%; 
Yes: 0. 

2009: 
Not checked: 14%; 
No: 71%; 
Yes: 14%. 

2010: 
Not checked: 14%; 
No: 71%; 
Yes: 14%. 

Source: GAO Survey of CERFP State Emergency Managers on State CBRNE 
Response Capabilities. 

Note: Numbers may not add to 100 percent due to rounding. 

[End of figure] 

Figure 11: CERFP Joint Field Training with State National Guards from 
States without CERFPs, 2008-2010: 

[Refer to PDF for image: 3 pie-charts] 

2008: 
No: 70%; 
Yes: 30%. 

2009: 
No: 60%; 
Yes: 40%. 

2010: 
No: 40%; 
Yes: 60%. 

Source: GAO of CERFP State Adjutants General on State CBRNE Response 
Capabilities. 

[End of figure] 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Office of The Assistant Secretary Of Defense: 
Reserve Affairs: 
1500 Defense Pentagon: 
Washington, DC 20301-1500:   

November 15, 2011: 

Memorandum For: Mr. Joseph Kirschbaum Assistant Director, Defense 
Capabilities and Management, U.S. Government Accountability Office. 
 
Subject: GAO draft report, GAO-12-1148, Homeland Defense and Weapons 
of Mass Destruction. 
 
Thank you for the opportunity to coordinate on the Department of 
Defense {DOD) response to the GAO draft report, GAO-12-114, Homeland 
Defense and Weapons of Mass Destruction: Additional Steps Could 
Enhance the Effectiveness of the National Guard's Life-Saving Response 
Forces, dated November 2011 (GAO Code 351401).  

The DoD concurs with the recommendations. Detailed responses to each 
recommendation are attached. Additionally, we reviewed the entire 
report for accuracy and clarity of content. The attachment also 
provides recommended editorial changes. The point of contact for this 
matter is Col. John M. Fruge at 571-256-4579 or e-mail john.fruge@osd.  

Signed by: 

Paul Patrick, for: 

David L. McGinnis: 
Acting:  

[End of letter] 

GAO Draft Report Dated November 2011: 
GAO-12-114 (GAO Code 351401): 
"Homeland Defense and Weapons of Mass Destruction: Additional Steps 
Could Enhance The Effectiveness of The National Guard's Life-Saving 
Response Forces" 

Department Of Defense Comments To The GAO Recommendations And Report: 

DOD Comments To The Recommendations: 

Recommendation 1: To increase assurance that CERFPs can effectively 
conduct CBRNE consequence management in support of civil authorities, 
we recommend that the Secretary of Defense direct the National Guard 
Bureau, in coordination with the Secretaries of the military services, 
the states' Adjutants General, and the Under Secretary of Defense for 
Personnel and Readiness, as appropriate, to: 

* Implement a well-defined process to systematically examine and 
validate total resources and capabilities necessary to successfully 
conduct the CERFP mission including personnel, training, and equipment 
requirements; 

* Develop a training strategy linked to specified goals to guide 
CERFPs participation in the range of field collective training 
exercises and systematically track progress that CERFPs are making in 
achieving the specified training goals: and; 

* Develop and implement a plan-with timelines-to complete the 
implementation of the standardized mechanism for capturing and 
reporting readiness data within DOD's centralized readiness reporting 
system. 

DoD Response: Concur with comment. NORTHCOM and NGB are resourced for 
and provide approximately 8 full-scale exercise opportunities per year 
which allow National Guard CBRN units to train with the full spectrum 
of military and inter-agency partners. (4 VIGILANT GUARD REGIONAL 
exercises, NORTHCOM's ARDENT SENTRY, VIGILANT SHIELD and VIBRANT 
RESPONSE, and NGB's PATRIOT exercise). 

Additional resources in the form of National Guard Man-days, 
transportation and funding for exercise support (Trainers, facility 
use, simulation and consumables) are required to exercise the 17 
CERF-P's and 10 HRF's each year or each time a new force assumes the 
mission. 

With these additional resources, the 8 existing exercises can 
accommodate additional CBRN units participation, training and 
evaluation. In order to provide such an opportunity for every unit, at 
the above frequency, additional exercises would have to be established. 

Given the large amount of individual, collective, unit (C2 and 
sustainment) and interagency training required for this complex 
mission, stabilization of the assigned CBRN forces for a period 3 
years or more is needed and most cost effective. 

Recommendation 2: To enhance regional CBRNE preparedness and 
facilitate the CERFPs' ability to respond to regional events, we 
recommend that the Secretary of Defense direct the Chief of NGB, in 
concert with the Secretaries of the Army and Air Force and the state 
Adjutants General, where appropriate, to: 

* Strengthen existing guidance related to interagency coordination by 
specifying, for example, the key types of response organizations that 
CERFPs should coordinate with in their geographical areas of 
responsibility; 

* Increase awareness and understanding of coordination guidance within 
the CERFPs; 

* Establish agreed-upon coordination evaluation standards by 
incorporating updated coordination guidance in the Standardization, 
Evaluation, and Assistance Team checklist(s) or another coordination 
evaluation tool; 

* Take steps to encourage states to develop state-to-state compacts 
regarding CERFP interstate deployment and coordination to supplement 
EMAC. 

DoD Response: Concur. 

Recommendation 3: To ensure the effective command and control of 
consequence management operations involving CERFPs and to make certain 
that CERFPs are able to integrate effectively with military and 
civilian response partners, we recommend that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the Chief of the National Guard Bureau, in concert with the 
Secretaries of the Army and Air Force and the state Adjutants
General, where appropriate to: 

* Formalize an interim solutions-as NGB conducts it long-term review-
to ensure that CERFPs responding to an event will have access to 
equipment providing key communications capabilities-including 
interoperability with military and first responder equipment, long-
range connectivity, and technical reach back; 

* Foster the development of memoranda of agreement between states that 
host CERFPs and states that provide out-of-state elements such as 
Fatality, Search, and Recovery terms; 

* Develop a strategy to ensure that all CERFPs are able to practice 
and be evaluated on command control relationships within realistic 
environments that include the range of interagency partners that 
CERFPs are likely to encounter; and; 

* Issue interim guidance to clarify the new command and control 
relationships resulting from the changes to DOD's consequence 
management strategy prior to the operationalization of the HRFs and 
the new CERFPs. 

DoD Response: Concur with comment. NORTHCOM and NGB are resourced for 
and provide approximately 8 full —scale exercise opportunities per 
year which allow National Guard CBRN units to train with the full 
spectrum of military and inter-agency partners. (4 VIGILANT GUARD 
REGIONAL exercises, NORTHCOM's ARDENT SENTRY, VIGILANT SHIELD and 
VIBRANT RESPONSE, and NGB's PATRIOT exercise). 

Additional resources in the form of National Guard Man-days, 
transportation and funding for exercise support (Trainers, facility 
use, simulation and consumables) are required to exercise the 17 CERF-
P's and 10 HRF's each year or each time a new force assumes the 
mission. 

With these additional resources, the 8 existing exercises can 
accommodate additional CBRN units participation, training and 
evaluation. In order to provide such an opportunity for every unit, at 
the above frequency, additional exercises would have to be established. 

Given the large amount of individual, collective, unit (C2 and 
sustainment) and interagency training required for this complex 
mission, stabilization of the assigned CBRN forces for a period 3 
years or more is needed and most cost effective. 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Janet A. St. Laurent, (202) 512-4300 or stlaurentj@gao.gov. 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, Davi M. D'Agostino, Joseph 
Kirschbaum (Assistant Director), Rodell Anderson, Yecenia Camarillo, 
Jennifer Cheung, Grace Coleman, Ryan D'Amore, Pamela Davidson, Joanne 
Landesman, Katherine Lenane, Katie Mauldin, K. Nicole Harms, and Amie 
Steele made key contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

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Mar 30, 2010: 

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Support Civil Authorities during Disasters. [hyperlink, 
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2010. 

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DOD's Response to Domestic Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear 
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2009. 

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2009. 

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[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] White House, National Security Strategy (Washington, D.C.: May 
2010). 

[2] The adjutant general is the highest-ranking guardsman in each 
state. 

[3] National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2006, Pub. L. 
No. 109-163, § 412 (2006); H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 109-360, pg. 687 (2005). 

[4] The NGB is a joint activity of DOD, and the Chief of the NGB 
serves as the principal advisor to the Secretary of Defense through 
the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on matters involving non-
federalized National Guard forces. As directed by the Secretary of 
Defense, the Secretary of the Army or the Secretary of the Air Force, 
the Chief of the NGB also assists states in the organization, 
maintenance, and operation of National Guard units to provide well-
trained and well-equipped units capable of augmenting the active 
forces. DOD Directive 5105.77, National Guard Bureau (May 21, 2008). 

[5] In some states, the adjutant general also serves as the lead state 
emergency management official. 

[6] GAO, Homeland Defense: National Guard Bureau Needs to Clarify 
Civil Support Teams' Mission and Address Management Challenges, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-498] (Washington, D.C.: 
May 31, 2006). 

[7] GAO, Homeland Defense: Planning, Resourcing, and Training Issues 
Challenge DOD's Response to Domestic Chemical, Biological, 
Radiological, Nuclear and High-Yield Explosive Incidents, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-123], (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 7, 
2009). 

[8] Department of Defense, Quadrennial Defense Review Report, 
(Washington D.C.: Feb. 1, 2010). 

[9] In two of the seventeen states that host CERFPs and one of the ten 
states that do not host CERFPs we surveyed, the Adjutant General also 
serves as the lead emergency management official. 

[10] Department of Homeland Security, National Response Framework 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 2008). The National Response Framework--
previously known as the National Response Plan--is the plan that 
guides how federal, state, local, and tribal governments, along with 
nongovernmental and private sector entities, will collectively respond 
to and recover from all hazards, including catastrophic disasters, 
such as Hurricane Katrina. 

[11] The Emergency Management Assistance Compact--a mutual aid 
agreement among member states--provides form and structure to 
interstate mutual aid by addressing a number of key issues. Congress 
provided consent to this agreement in Pub. L. No. 104-321 (1996). 

[12] Title 10 and Title 32 refer to titles of the United States Code. 

[13] Army National Guard Regulation 500-4/Air National Guard 
Instruction 10-2504, National Guard Chemical Biological, Radiological 
Nuclear and High Yield Explosive, Enhanced Response Force Package 
Management (Oct. 16, 2009). 

[14] Secretary of Defense Memorandum, Policy Implementation to 
Establish Commander, USJFCOM (CDRUSJFCOM), as the Primary Joint Force 
Provider (JFP) (June 25, 2004). The U.S. military organizes its global 
presence into a series of geographic and functional combatant 
commands. The geographic combatant commands--U.S. Central Command, 
U.S. European Command, U.S. Northern Command, U.S. Pacific Command, 
U.S. Southern Command, and U.S. Africa Command--have authority over 
all U.S. military forces operating within a specified area of 
operation and are directly responsible for the performance of missions 
assigned to the command. The functional combatant commands--U.S. 
Special Operations Command, U.S. Strategic Command, and U.S. 
Transportation Command--possess worldwide functional responsibilities, 
such as joint training, force provision, and global command and 
control. 

[15] Prior to the 2010 Quadrennial Defense Review, DOD planned to 
establish three CCMRFs. Subsequently, DOD increased the capability of 
one of the CCMRFs and restructured the other two CCMRFs as smaller 
command and control CBRNE response organizations. 

[16] On May 4, 2009, NGB issued a memorandum to the Operations 
Directorate of the Joint Force Headquarters of the 17 States that host 
CERFPs. The memo set out authorized levels of personnel and equipment 
for CERFPs for the purpose of readiness reporting. According to the 
memo, the authorized size of a CERFP--for purposes of personnel 
reporting--is 186 personnel, not including the Fatality Search and 
Recovery Team, the security element or other Joint Task Force 
personnel that may be required during an event. 

[17] Each state, the District of Columbia, and three territories have 
at least one Civil Support Team (57 total) to support civil 
authorities in the event of a domestic WMD event by identifying CBRNE 
agents and substances used as WMD, assessing current and projected 
consequences, and advising on response measures. 

[18] The CBRNE response mission has immediacy, but officials from one 
CERFP told us that part-time CERFP personnel cannot always respond 
within the 6-hour timeframe because they may be unavailable for 
reasons including being away from home on business or other reasons. 

[19] External evaluations are field training exercises in which CERFPs 
are assessed by external evaluators against collective tasks outlined 
in CERFP training guidance. 

[20] NGB issued the CERFP Joint Training Plan in January 2008. This 
guidance was in place during the majority of our review. Collective 
training is focused on preparing teams and units, whereas individual 
training is focused on the proficiency of the single soldier. 

[21] NGB sponsors special focus events--which are designed to address 
specific training gaps. Vigilant Guard is an exercise program 
sponsored by U.S. Northern Command in conjunction with the NGB. The 
program provides states' National Guard an opportunity to improve 
cooperation and relationships with civilian, federal, and military 
partners in preparation for emergencies and catastrophic events. 

[22] Army National Guard Regulation 500-4/Air National Guard 
Instruction 10-2504, National Guard Chemical Biological, Radiological 
Nuclear and High Yield Explosive, Enhanced Response Force Package 
Management (Oct. 16, 2009). 

[23] National Guard Bureau, CBRNE Enhanced Response Force Package, 
Training Year 2011, Yearly Training Guidance (Mar. 3, 2011). 

[24] Personal protective equipment shields a person from the chemical, 
physical, and thermal hazards that can be encountered at a hazardous 
materials incident. Personal protective equipment includes both 
personal protective clothing and respiratory protection. Adequate 
personal protective equipment should protect the respiratory system, 
skin, eyes, face, hands, feet, head, body, and hearing. 

[25] Army National Guard Regulation 500-4/Air National Guard 
Instruction 10-2504 (Oct. 16, 2009). 

[26] GAO, Reserve Forces: Actions Needed to Identify National Guard 
Domestic Equipment Requirements and Readiness, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-60] (Washington, D.C.: Jan 26, 
2007). 

[27] In 1999, Congress directed the establishment of the Defense 
Readiness Reporting System, and required that the system measure in an 
objective, accurate and timely manner, capability of the armed forces 
to carry out (1) the National Security Strategy prescribed by the 
President, (2) the defense planning guidance provided by the Secretary 
of Defense, and (3) the National Military Strategy prescribed by the 
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. DRRS provides Combatant 
Commanders, Joint Task Force Commanders, Service Component Commanders, 
Combat Support Agency Directors, and the National Guard Bureau with 
relevant readiness data, in the form of capability assessments 
supported by resource status, based upon whether they can perform 
their assigned missions and associated mission essential tasks in a 
joint, interagency, and multinational operational environment with the 
forces provided. 

[28] Army National Guard Regulation 500-4/Air National Guard 
Instruction 10-2504 (Oct. 16, 2009). 

[29] CERFPs draw personnel to comprise the CBRNE elements from various 
"parent" National Guard units that provide different response 
capabilities. The parent unit is the usual reporting entity in the 
Defense Readiness Reporting System. 

[30] NGB officials stated that there are three total DRRS Centers of 
Excellence, and that these centers were established to provide 
guidance to all 54 states and territories as they transition to a DRRS 
reporting standard. 

[31] Department of Defense, Directive 5105.83, National Guard Joint 
Force Headquarters-State (NG JFHQs-State) (Jan. 5, 2011). 

[32] 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). 

[33] 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). 

[34] When fully implemented, the Standardization, Evaluation, and 
Assistance Team program will conduct periodic field evaluations of the 
17 CERFPs in order to assure Congress and DOD of program oversight; 
assess the degree of compliance with law, policy and doctrine and 
audit the disposition of allocated resources; assist states with the 
CERFP mission to develop programs to establish and maintain 
capabilities and compliance; and provide NGB with detailed information 
for use in CERFP management decisions. 

[35] According to NGB officials, the CERFP area of responsibility for 
pre-incident coordination includes organizations within the CERFP's 
FEMA region, as well as national-level organizations. 

[36] GAO, Emergency Management Assistance Compact: Enhancing EMAC's 
Collaborative and Administrative Capacity Should Improve National 
Disaster Response, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-854] 
(Washington, D.C.: June 29, 2007). 

[37] Army National Guard Regulation 500-4/Air National Guard 
Instruction 10-2504 (Oct. 16, 2009). 

[38] Vigilant Guard is an exercise program sponsored by the U. S. 
Northern Command in conjunction with NGB. The program provides state 
National Guards an opportunity to improve cooperation and 
relationships with civilian, federal, and military partners in 
preparation for emergencies and catastrophic events. 

[39] DOD defines command and control as the exercise of authority and 
direction by a properly designated commander over assigned and 
attached forces in the accomplishment of the mission. Command and 
control functions are performed through an arrangement of personnel, 
equipment, communications, facilities, and procedures employed by a 
commander in planning, directing, coordinating, and controlling forces 
and operations in the accomplishment of the mission. See Joint Chiefs 
of Staff, Joint Pub. 1-02, Department of Defense Dictionary of 
Military and Associated Terms (Nov. 8, 2010; as amended through Aug. 
15, 2011), p. 61. 

[40] Army National Guard Regulation 500-4/Air National Guard 
Instruction 10-2504 (Oct. 16, 2009). 

[41] The National Response Framework and National Incident Management 
System comprise the national framework for domestic incident response, 
providing the structure and mechanisms for national level policy of 
incident response and a template for the management of incidents. See 
also Joint Chiefs of Staff, Joint Pub. 3-28, Civil Support (Sept. 14, 
2007) and Joint Pub. 3-41, Chemical, Biological, Radiological, 
Nuclear, and High-Yield Explosives Consequence Management (Oct. 2, 
2006). 

[42] Local fire and rescue, law enforcement, and emergency medical 
personnel constitute the first tier. If the extent of an event exceeds 
the ability of the first tier to manage the consequences of the 
situation, the state-level civil and military forces may be activated 
and deployed as the second tier. If the governor determines that the 
forces and resources available in the state require additional 
support, then the governor may request assistance from the President 
of the United States, constituting the third tier. 

[43] "Technical reach-back" is the capability to contact a technical 
subject matter expert when an issue exceeds the expertise of on-site 
personnel. Army Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures No. 3-11.47/Air 
Force Tactics, Techniques and Procedures No. 3-2.79, Chemical, 
Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and High-Yield Explosives Enhanced 
Response Force Package Operations is currently in draft form and has 
not yet been published. 

[44] The Joint Incident Site Communications Capability provides 
interoperable communications and emergency satellite links to command 
and control centers to share information and tools needed to support 
collaboration with other federal, state, and local responders 
including the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Department of 
Homeland Security, and state emergency management agencies. 

[45] The Unified Command Suite is a mobile communications system 
employed in support of the Weapons of Mass Destruction Civil Support 
Teams. The Unified Command Suite provides real-time voice, data, and 
video connectivity among Civil Support Team members, local and state 
emergency response agencies, lead federal agencies, and supporting 
military activities. 

[46] NGB officials stated that they have subsequently realigned the 
Fatality, Search, and Recovery Teams geographically, reducing the 
number of CERFPs aligned with out-of-state teams from 9 CERFPs to 2 
CERFPs. 

[47] National Guard Bureau. National Guard Chemical Biological, 
Radiological Nuclear and High Yield Explosive, Enhanced Response Force 
Package, Concept of Operations (July 7, 2009). 

[48] National Guard Bureau, Army National Guard Regulation 500-4/Air 
National Guard Instruction 10-2504, National Guard Chemical, 
Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and High-Yield Explosive Enhanced 
Response Force Package Management (Oct. 16, 2009). 

[49] National Guard Bureau, Joint Training Plan (Jan. 16, 2008) and 
National Guard Bureau, CBRNE Enhanced Response Force Package and 
Training Year 2011, Yearly Training Guidance (Mar. 3, 2011). 

[50] Department of Army. Army Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures 3-
11.47/Air Force Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures 3-2.79, Final 
Coordination Draft, National Guard Chemical Biological, Radiological 
Nuclear and High Yield Explosive, Emergency Response Force Package 
Operations (Washington, D.C.: January 2011). 

[51] CERFPs' areas of responsibility include the 50 states, the 
District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. 
For purposes of our surveys, we treated all of these entities as 
states. 

[52] In total, three states we surveyed do not have separate state-
level emergency managers. In Hawaii and Nebraska, which host CERFPs, 
and Kansas, which does not host a CERFP, the State Adjutant General 
also serves as the lead emergency management official. 

[53] GAO, Military Readiness: Army and Marine Corps Reporting Provides 
Additional Data, but Actions Needed to Improve Consistency [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-526] (Washington, D.C.: June 3, 
2011); Military Readiness: DOD Needs to Strengthen Management and 
Oversight of the Defense Readiness Reporting System [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-518] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 25, 
2009); and Reserve Forces: Actions Needed to Identify National Guard 
Domestic Equipment Requirements and Readiness [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-60] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 26, 
2007). 

[54] This guidance did not articulate specific interagency training 
goals for fiscal year 2010. 

[End of section] 

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