- cross-posted to:
- politics@lemmy.world
- news@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- politics@lemmy.world
- news@lemmy.world
I’m honestly not sure what to think about this, given previous attempts to target and downsize this office by Trump and Noem.
A provision, ultimately left out of the Intelligence Authorization Act, would have removed commonplace collection and analysis authorities granted to the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Intelligence and Analysis, rendering much of the office’s functions inert.
The House Intelligence Committee privately considered adding a measure to the annual intelligence community authorization bill that would have significantly curtailed the size and scope of the Department of Homeland Security’s core spy agency, according to three people familiar with the matter and a summary of the drafted measure viewed by Nextgov/FCW.
The measure also would have renamed it as the Office of Intelligence and Information Sharing and reduced its workforce from around 1,000 employees to no more than 250.
It’s not entirely clear why lawmakers backed down on the provision, though the proposal raised concerns among law enforcement groups, who relayed their misgivings to members on the House Homeland Security Committee, one of the people said. One top-of-mind concern was that I&A’s workflow would stagnate because the agency wouldn’t be able to produce original insights for its stakeholders, the person added.
All three sources requested anonymity because they were not permitted to discuss closed-door deliberations about the measure.
The statute — ultimately yanked from the final House draft of the Intelligence Authorization Act — would have prohibited the DHS Office of Intelligence and Analysis from both collecting and analyzing intelligence, according to two of the people and the draft summary. The measure also would have renamed it as the Office of Intelligence and Information Sharing and reduced its workforce from around 1,000 employees to no more than 250.
The proposed changes are notable because the measure would have effectively recast the DHS office as a clearinghouse for findings produced elsewhere in the intelligence community, stripping it of common authorities granted to other spy agencies who routinely collect and analyze information on threats concerning U.S. interests.
The development, which has not been previously reported, highlights that Congress was weighing major overhauls for the lesser-known DHS spy bureau amid recent administration efforts to shed the office’s staffing count, and it adds a chapter to a storied history of debates over how to best reform the agency.
"The goal [of I&A] was straightforward: provide governors, mayors, police chiefs, transportation officials and emergency managers with intelligence-driven guidance — rooted in the full range of classified and unclassified reporting — to help them make long-term decisions. How much should a city invest in physical security? Does a state need new legal authorities? What training or equipment should local law enforcement prioritize?” Cash said. “No other federal entity is structured to deliver this kind of strategic, locally tailored intelligence support.”
I&A’s collection practices have always been a separate and more sensitive issue, he contended.
“It has never been clear that its domestic collection authorities could be exercised meaningfully without pushing into areas that raise profound civil-liberties and constitutional concerns. That is why, across multiple administrations — starting with President George W. Bush — there was sustained attention to guardrails, oversight mechanisms and a clear understanding that DHS intelligence activities must not evolve into a national-level domestic surveillance service.”


I’m in a Southern state in a county with one traffic light. I have spotted 2 flock cameras, 3 in the county south of me. Even out here the surveillance is increasing. In the nearest county with a real town (a college town at that) there are cameras fucking everywhere.
Of course the safety nets are important. I bet a solid 3rd of my county’s population is on SNAP. That’s not a lot of people, but those people matter. I’m guessing this month has been tough.
I actually have been following the flock spread, not sure if you’ve looked into your city’s contract with flock, but that means somebody in local government made the call to put them up or flock just came in and did it without permission.
In some towns you have cases where cities have banned together to oppose the cameras and cities actually just cover them with trash bags until Flock can “get around to taking them down.”
You also have at least one case where city council exposed the local mayor, who went against the wishes of local government and city to make a unilateral decision to allow more surveillance from ICE/Feds
Presumably the explanation for that would be a green one💲and the solution for handling that should be obvious. Kick his ass out of office.
However if you’re willing to give up autonomy and the democratic process because you don’t think it matters, there is no solution other than just accepting powerlessness.
If they don’t actually have permission from the town to be there, get some trash bags and cover them. If they do, find out who gave the green light and make sure everyone in your town finds out who gave the ok for your exploitation.