The Government Printing Office prints passports less than a mile from the Capitol, yet its police force is mostly made up of contracted security guards. The resulting gaps in security are astounding, according to GPO union chief Alvin Hardwick.
Using security guards to do the job of federally trained officers not only doesnt save money, it also weakens security considerably, Hardwick, chairman of the GPO Police Labor Committee, told the House Appropriations Subcommittee on the Legislative Branch on Tuesday. Indeed, these lapses at the GPO building represent a considerable security threat.
Security guards rather than officers stand alone at the agencys public entrance, he said. GPO officers are also absent in the garage, where the Capitol Police store their hazardous material response vehicles.
But Hardwick conceded that the GPO has made some improvements since he testified in front of the subcommittee two years ago. Members were shocked then by what they heard and slipped language into that years appropriations bill requiring the GPO to make some changes.
Since then, the GPO has steadily increased the number of officers. In 2007, the agency hit a low of 27. Now, it employs 45.
Hardwick also said that four police officers now guard the agencys passport facility during the day, while in the past contracted security guards were allowed to protect it. Two officers safeguard the place at night.
GPO spokesman Gary Somerset declined to comment on where officers are posted, citing security concerns. But he said the agency has hired 10 officers in the past year alone and plans to hire eight more this year.
GPO has the appropriate law enforcement resources to respond to any level of emergency at the agency, he said.
Security guards, however, still outnumber officers, with the GPO paying for 53 to help guard the agencys large building at North Capitol and H streets. None is able to respond to calls off-site, according to Hardwick.
The agencys police force has no formal relationship with nearby local and federal law enforcement agencies a rarity in the nations capital.
Not only is the GPOs North Capitol location close to Congressional buildings, but it also houses some Capitol Police evidence. In 2008, police used the garage to store the truck of Michael Gorbey, who was arrested near the Capitol with a loaded shotgun. Only later did they discover a handmade explosive device inside.
When asked whether the the agency has a formal Memorandum of Understanding with the Capitol Police, Somerset said the two agencies have a strong working relationship.
Subcommittee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.) said after the hearing that the committee would look into Hardwicks claims.
My impression for the last few years is that GPO management seems to think of the GPO police as a second-rate police force, she said, adding that she doesnt share that view.
Hardwick was one of eight witnesses at Tuesdays hearing, where legislative branch employees gave their input on the fiscal 2010 appropriations requests. Wasserman Schultz has held the public hearings annually since the House reinstituted the subcommittee in 2007.
Union leaders from the Library of Congress, the Government Accountability Office and the Congressional Research Service testified, along with representatives from the American Association of Law Libraries and the American Bar Association.
Rep. Bill Cassidy has his blood drawn by Alesha Barbour during a free hepatitis screening in the Rayburn House Office Building hosted by the Congressional Viral Hepatitis Caucus to recognize "National Viral Hepatitis Testing Day."
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