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11.29.2007
Maritime Security: Better tracking of small craft needed

Visualization tools are now core technology

Washington Technology Magazine


By Alice Lipowicz

New visualization tools are helping the Coast Guard develop situational awareness at the Port of Miami, but more assistance is needed to track small boats and noncooperative vessels, according to congressional testimony given this week.

The Homeland Security Department’s Directorate of Science and Technology is funding the Visualization Tools for Situational Awareness and Emergency Response program, also known as Viz Tools.

The project is a proof-of-concept demonstration to correlate sensors and automated vessel-tracking information with advanced notification-of-arrival information and other port activity, Commander Karl Schultz, who heads the Coast Guard’s Miami sector, testified at a field hearing Nov. 26 of the House Homeland Security Subcommittee on Border, Maritime and Global Counterterrorism. The hearing was held in Miami.

The visualization tool program along with Project Hawkeye, which is a sensor network surveillance project for Miami and other ports is serving as a test bed for Command 21, the Coast Guard’s next large upgrade of its command centers.

Although the program is resulting in improved maritime domain awareness, there are still gaps. For example, the Coast Guard needs better information on the 170,000 registered small craft in Miami, Dade and Broward counties, Schultz said.

The small boat threat ... continues to present technology and policy challenges and remains a primary maritime security concern, Schultz said. Within [DHS], we are working closely with Customs and Border Protection to expand our efforts to secure the small maritime craft environment.

In addition, Schultz said the Coast Guard still has a long way to go to managing all the information needed for daily operations and decision-making. This includes coordination of programs for tracking large vessels, such as the National Automatic Identification System, Advanced Notice of Arrival process, and the forthcoming International Maritime Organization’s Long Range Identification and Tracking system.

Stephen Dryden, chief executive officer of the Mariner Group LLC, of Columbia, S.C., which is providing its CommandBridge software solution to address the need for situational awareness in the Viz Tools project, also testified at the hearing.

He said the objectives of Viz Tools are to develop and maintain situational awareness, identify threats rapidly, maximize assets and operational capacity to respond to the threat, and plan and manage the emergency response. Before Viz Tools, those standing watch had to achieve situation awareness by monitoring radars, harbor pilot Web sites, incoming messages, commercial media, weather and Coast Guard systems, he said.

Altough the visualization project is working successfully, Dryden agreed with Schultz that small vessels are a vulnerability. The ports need better sensor technology to track small boats and identify noncooperative vessels whose transponders for tracking through the Automatic Identification System are turned off. In some cases, however, the transponders are turned off accidentally.

With today’s technology, ports fall short in their ability to track noncooperative vessels and small boats, Dryden said. Programs in development, such as the Coast Guard’s Automated Scene Understanding project, may help mitigate those problems, he said.

Dryden also recommended additional aids to further improve situational awareness, including the integration of cargo and vessel information into Viz Tools, more coordination with local law enforcement agencies and improved long-range tracking of vessels.

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Click here to view full article.
Click here for hearing information and testimony.




 


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10.02.2007  The Mariner Group Partners with US Coast Guard at Miami 

                  Sector Command Center


Washington, DC- The Mariner Group, a Columbia, SC-based information technology company specializing in port and border security, recently made its flagship product, CommandBridge, operational in the US Coast Guard’s Sector Command Center in Miami, FL.

CommandBridge contributes to US security by helping government agencies and commercial entities communicate so they can anticipate, preempt and deter threats. CommandBridge provides actionable situation awareness by fusing information from many diverse sources, analyzing the combined information for anomalies, and providing users with real-time alerts and rapid response scenarios.

The Safe Port Act of 2006 directs the US Coast Guard to establish interagency operations centers for enhancing port security at 35 locations around the United States. Mariner continues to work with the US Coast Guard though their Visualization and Response Project for Sector Command Centers to help in this effort. As part of this project, CommandBridge provides the primary underlying technology to increase situation awareness.

The Mariner Group’s President and CEO Steve Dryden explains, The installation of CommandBridge at the Miami Sector Command Center has proven that eliminating communications gaps and identifying and rapidly responding to security risks dramatically increases overall security. We hope to provide this level of security to ports throughout the US.

The Miami Sector Command Center facilitates the execution of all U.S. Coast Guard missions in its domain and provides information and coordination capability to other government agencies and port partners. CommandBridge is proving to be an invaluable tool helping the Coast Guard ensure the safety and security of U.S. waters. The ability to build upon its core foundation, and customize its application to various operational locales is very appealing, says Dana Goward, Director, Maritime Domain Awareness Program Integration, US Coast Guard.

Captain Karl Schultz, Commander, Coast Guard Sector Miami, says, "In the few short weeks since the installation of Command Bridge in our Sector Command Center, the Advanced Situation Awareness technology has demonstrated impressive potential and is quickly becoming a mainstay of our Command Center's situational awareness capabilities. We look forward to continuing the ongoing highly collaborative efforts to optimize this system's use here in Miami and in potentially broader Coast Guard applications."

View release in PDF
 


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09.15.2007  The Mariner Group Establishes a Second Office in DC
Washington, DC- The Mariner Group, a Columbia, SC-based information technology company specializing in border security, recently established a second office in Washington, DC.

Mariner’s flagship product, CommandBridge, contributes to US security by helping government agencies and commercial entities communicate so they can anticipate, preempt and deter threats. CommandBridge provides actionable situation awareness by fusing information from many diverse sources, analyzing the combined information for anomalies, and providing users with real-time alerts and rapid response scenarios.

The Safe Port Act of 2006 directs the US Coast Guard to establish interagency operations centers for enhancing port security at 35 locations around the United States. Mariner continues to work with the US Coast Guard though their Visualization and Response Project for Sector Command Centers to help in this effort. As part of this project, CommandBridge provides the primary underlying technology to increase situation awareness.

The Mariner Group’s President and CEO Steve Dryden explains,  A DC presence will help us develop relationships with government agencies and explore additional partnership opportunities.”

  View news release in PDF
 


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