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4 <br />FY 2022 PSGP NOFO Back to the Top <br />management community. The PSGP supports the goal to Promote and Sustain a Ready <br />FEMA and Prepared Nation. We invite our stakeholders and partners to also adopt these <br />priorities and join us in building a more prepared and resilient nation. <br /> <br />For FY 2022, DHS is focused on the criticality of information sharing and collaboration to <br />building a national culture of preparedness and protecting against terrorism and other threats <br />to our national security. DHS and its homeland security mission were born from the “failures <br />among federal agencies and between the federal agencies and state and local authorities to <br />share critical information related to the threat of terrorism” prior to the September 11, 2001, <br />attacks.1 The threat profile has changed in the past two decades; we now face continuous <br />cyber threats by sophisticated actors, threats to soft targets and crowded places, threats to our <br />democratic election process and threats from new and emerging technologies. Information <br />sharing and cooperation among state, local, territorial and tribal authorities, and federal <br />agencies, including all DHS officials, is just as vital, and perhaps even more vital, today. <br />Therefore, for FY 2022, we have identified two priority areas, tied to some of the most <br />serious threats that recipients should address with their PSGP funds for enhancing maritime <br />security. Perhaps most importantly, DHS will be focused on forging partnerships to <br />strengthen information sharing and collaboration in each of these priority areas. <br /> <br />b. Objectives <br />Provide funding to port authorities, facility operators, and state, local, and territory agencies <br />for activities associated with implementing Area Maritime Security Plans (AMSP), facility <br />security plans, and other port-wide risk management efforts. <br /> <br />c. Priorities <br />Given the evolving threat landscape, it is incumbent upon DHS/FEMA to continuously <br />evaluate the national risk profile and set priorities that help ensure appropriate allocation <br />of scarce security dollars. In assessing the national risk profile for FY 2022, two areas <br />attract the most concern: <br /> <br />1) Enhancing cybersecurity; and <br />2) Enhancing the protection of soft targets/crowded places. <br /> <br />Likewise, there are several enduring security needs that crosscut the homeland security <br />enterprise. The following are second-tier priorities that help recipients implement a <br />comprehensive approach to securing critical maritime transportation infrastructure: <br /> <br />3) Effective planning; <br />4) Training and awareness campaigns; <br />5) Equipment and capital projects; and <br />6) Exercises. <br /> <br /> <br />1 Homeland Security Act of 2002: Report Together with Minority and Dissenting Views 222, Select Committee on <br />Homeland Security: 107th Congress, U.S. House of Representatives (2002) (H. Rpt. 107-609).