Title 6 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - HOMELAND SECURITY ORGANIZATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XIII— - EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS › § 573
Within 1 year after October 4, 2006, and at least every 5 years after that, the Secretary of Homeland Security, through the Assistant Director for Emergency Communications, must do a nationwide assessment of federal, state, local, and tribal governments. The assessment must say what communication skills and tools emergency responders and officials need, what interoperable capabilities are needed for specific events, what capabilities now exist, and where gaps remain. It must also include a national inventory — prepared with the Secretary of Commerce and the Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission — that lists for each federal department the channels and frequencies used, the names for those channels, and the kinds of systems and equipment, and that lists interoperable systems used by public safety agencies. The baseline assessment may have a classified annex and may use earlier or ongoing studies from on or before October 4, 2006. Not later than 1 year after October 4, 2006, and every two years after that, the Secretary must report to Congress on progress. The report must summarize the latest assessment, say how much interoperability has been reached and what gaps remain, evaluate the ability to communicate during natural disasters, acts of terrorism (including Incidents of National Significance under the National Response Plan), or a catastrophic loss of local/regional communications, list best practices, and evaluate whether the Department (alone or with the Department of Defense) should develop a deployable mobile communications capability modeled on the Army Signal Corps.
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Domestic Security — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
6 U.S.C. § 573
Title 6 — Domestic Security
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73