WASHINGTON – The bill creating a Department of Homeland Security has not even passed yet, but local officials are already squabbling over where to put the headquarters of an agency that could have up to 170,000 workers nationwide.
While D.C. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton is pushing for the grounds of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in Southeast Washington, Maryland lawmakers have advanced at least four sites in three counties: Montgomery, Prince George’s and Anne Arundel.
“It would bring a tremendous economic benefit,” said Jonathan Dean, a spokesman for Rep. Connie Morella, R-Bethesda, who has joined Montgomery County officials to push White Oak as a potential site.
But officials with the Office of Homeland Security said it is way too early to start talking about headquarters sites.
“When the president has a bill to sign we can start then,” said Ashley Snee, spokeswoman for the Homeland Security Office.
A spokesman for Sen. Paul Sarbanes, D-Md., noted that there is not even agreement yet on how many agencies will be funneled into the new department or how many employees it will include.
“There is no idea of its size or scope. That’s a discussion for a later time,” said the spokesman, Jesse Jacobs, of the search for a site.
But that hasn’t stopped county and state officials from positioning themselves for what one official called “a trophy department.”
Montgomery County officials are pushing White Oak, a 700-acre federally owned plot where the Food and Drug Administration plans to eventually house 5,000 to 6,000 employees. County Executive Doug Duncan said the former Naval Service Warfare Center site has plenty of room left for a homeland security department.
“It skips a bunch of steps being federally owned,” Duncan said. “They’ve got room to put it there. They’re looking for sites outside D.C. You don’t want to concentrate possible attack sites.”
The former military installation comes equipped with security personnel, storage facilities, a hypersonic wind tunnel and a perimeter fence, Duncan said.
Dean said the White Oak site would put the new Cabinet agency near its likely business partners, such as the National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Science and Technology, Lockheed Martin and Bethesda Naval Hospital.
But Anne Arundel County officials are also touting the fact that their county is home to Fort Meade, the Naval Academy, the National Security Agency and defense contractors Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics.
“With all those suburban rings and the government looking for somewhere outside D.C. but still near it, we think we’re the best choice,” said Bill Badger, president of the Anne Arundel Economic Development Corp. “It’s the least expensive alternative scenario.”
Badger called Fort Meade “the logical choice” because the federal government owns thousand of acres there. But he said the county could also offer a 46-acre David Taylor Naval Research Center site that sits across from the Naval Academy. The Defense Department has disposed of the base and the county is scheduled to acquire the property by November.
Maryland officials are also pitching the 226-acre Suitland Federal Center in Prince George’s County, said Amy Hagovsky, a spokeswoman for Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md. The site is on Metro’s Green Line and already houses the Census Bureau, the National Maritime Intelligence Center, the Washington National Records Center and parts of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association.
“I’m sure it would be a good thing for it to be here,” said James Rogers, a spokesman for Prince George’s County Executive Wayne Curry. “It’d be a positive thing.”
But Norton, who said a longstanding executive order states “all Cabinet agencies are to be located in the nation’s capital,” has proposed the 180-acre federally owned St. Elizabeth’s Hospital campus for the new agency. She said the site was endorsed in July by the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.
“She feels it is the best spot for the facility,” said Doxie McCoy, an aide to Norton, who noted the site’s proximity to the Green Line. “She believes federal agencies should stay in D.C.”
But Maryland officials are not about to give up.
“This is a trophy department,” Badger said. “Everybody wants to say they were a part of it. There will be a lot of competition.”