After a competitive application process, initial grant awards will be provided to the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, South Carolina Department of Public Safety, South Carolina State Transport Police, Tennessee Emergency Management Agency, Virginia Department of Emergency Management, and Georgia Emergency Management Agency. Funds provided will support the deployment of fixed, hand-held and mobile radiation detection equipment at interstate weigh stations.
"We are intensely focused on preventing high consequence threats, such as a radiological or nuclear attack," said Vayl S. Oxford, DNDO Director. "The southeast transportation corridor sees some of the largest concentrations of truck traffic in the country. The work that we are doing in the southeast will ultimately lead to a web of radiation detection systems on our nation's highways."
The SETCP program will integrate existing and new systems and develop a regional threat detection and interdiction architecture. DNDO will also provide training for state and local partners on equipment operations, alarm resolution protocols, information sharing, and the shipment of radioactive materials from nearby nuclear production and waste treatment facilities.
DNDO is a jointly staffed, national office established to improve the nation's capability to detect and report unauthorized attempts to import, possess, store, develop, or transport nuclear or radiological material for use against the homeland, and to further enhance this capability over time.