Today, Acting Secretary of Homeland Security, Chad F. Wolf,
introduced three new members to the Homeland Security Advisory Council
(HSAC): John Clark, Dr. Sharon Cooper, and Daniel Kaniewski. Created
by President George W. Bush in 2002, the HSAC is a Department of Homeland
Security federal advisory committee that provides the secretary with
independent, informed recommendations, and advice on a variety of homeland
security issues.
“My vision for the HSAC, consistent with its charter, is to seek
its organizationally independent, strategic, timely, specific and actionable
advice on a range of homeland security issues,” said Acting Secretary Wolf.
“I’m pleased to appoint these leaders in their respective fields to the
council, and I thank all the HSAC members for their continued service to the
country, and to the Department. The unique perspectives provided by HSAC
members to address emerging threats is of the utmost importance to the Department.
I’m confident that the new members announced today will contribute to this
important mission.”
The three new HSAC members are:
- John F. Clark,
former director of the United States Marshals Service and longtime child
advocate, is the president and CEO of the National Center for Missing
& Exploited Children. After an extensive nationwide search, NCMEC’s
Board of Directors unanimously chose Mr. Clark to lead the nonprofit
organization, which was designated by Congress in 1984 to work in partnership
with the U.S. Department of Justice on issues related to missing and
exploited children. He took the helm of the Alexandria, Virginia-based
organization on Dec, 7, 2015. Mr. Clark, whose career with the USMS
spanned 28 years, was appointed in 2006 as its ninth director by
then-President George W. Bush and confirmed by the Senate. In 2011, Mr.
Clark joined Lockheed Martin Corp. as its director of security.
- Sharon Cooper
is a developmental and forensic pediatrician who evaluates and treats
children who have been victims of all forms of abuse, though her primary
area of expertise is that of sexual exploitation. Dr. Cooper holds
faculty positions at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill,
Department of Pediatrics and the Uniformed Services University of Health
Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland. She is a consultant and Board
member of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and a
member of the Expert Working Group on Children who Experience Violence
in Cyberspace, of the Baltic Seas. She is also the lead author of one of
the most comprehensive texts on child sexual exploitation. Dr. Cooper
provides training to numerous national and international investigative
agencies in the area of Internet and Communication Technology crimes
against children.
- Daniel Kaniewski is
the Managing Director, Public Sector at Marsh & McLennan Companies.
Prior to joining the firm, Dr. Kaniewski was Deputy Administrator for
Resilience at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) where he
was FEMA’s second ranking official and led the agency’s pre disaster
programs. He was also Chair of the Organization for Economic Cooperation
& Development (OECD) High Level Risk Forum, comprised of risk
managers from 36 OECD member nations. Dr. Kaniewski is a senior fellow
at the McCrary Institute for Cyber and Critical Infrastructure Security
and previously co-founded a homeland security think tank at George
Washington University. He was Special Assistant to the President for
Homeland Security and Senior Director for Response Policy in the George
W. Bush Administration.
On Tuesday, the HSAC gathered to welcome the new members,
discuss multiple homeland security issues, and receive briefings from the
council's Economic Security, Information and Communications Technology Risk
Reduction, Youth Engagement, and Biometrics subcommittees. Acting Secretary Wolf
also announced the formation of HSAC’s new Academic Subcommittee, which will
address matters at the intersection of homeland security and the academic
community. The Subcommittee will address:
- The threat of malign foreign influence in our
academic institutions.
- The openness of research and exchange of ideas
between academia and DHS, to include DHS research programs.
- Promoting campus resilience resources to address
threats affecting K-12 and higher education institutions.
- International student engagement as it relates to
immigration.
- Monitoring student visa recipients who violate their
status.
Additionally, Acting Secretary Wolf awarded outgoing HSAC Chair
Judge William Webster, with the Department’s highest honor, the DHS
Distinguished Service Medal, for his exceptional leadership and service as
Chair of the HSAC for the past 14 years. Under Judge Webster's guidance and
leadership, the Council has provided Acting Secretary Wolf and his
predecessors with strategic recommendations and advice on a variety of issues
critical to America’s national security in an ever-changing threat
environment. Acting Secretary Wolf was also pleased to announce the
appointment of William Bratton, former Chief of the Los Angeles Police
Department and the Police Commissioner of the City of New York, as the new
HSAC Chair, and Karen Tandy, Former Administrator of the Drug Enforcement
Administration, as the new Vice Chair.
For more information about the HSAC, visit www.dhs.gov/hsac.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment