Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 116 Part 2.djvu/192

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116 STAT. 974 PUBLIC LAW 107-210—AUG. 6, 2002 "(3) By not later than the date on which the President submits to Congress the budget of the United States Government for a fiscal year, the Commissioner of Customs shall submit to the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Finance of the Senate the projected amount of funds for the succeeding fiscal year that will be necessary for the operations of the Customs Service as provided for in subsection (b).". SEC. 312. ANTITERRORIST AND ILLICIT NARCOTICS DETECTION EQUIP- MENT FOR THE UNITED STATES-MEXICO BORDER, UNITED STATES-CANADA BORDER, AND FLORIDA AND THE GULF COAST SEAPORTS. (a) FISCAL YEAR 2003.— Of the amounts made available for fiscal year 2003 under section 301(b)(1)(A) of the Customs Procedural Reform and Simplification Act of 1978 (19 U.S.C. 2075(b)(1)(A)), as amended by section 311(a) of this Act, $90,244,000 shall be available until expended for acquisition and other expenses associated with implementation and deployment of antiterrorist and illicit narcotics detection equipment along the United States- Mexico border, the United States-Canada border, and Florida and the Gulf Coast seaports, as follows: (1) UNITED STATES-MEXICO BORDER.—For the United States- Mexico border, the following: (A) $6,000,000 for 8 Vehicle and Container Inspection Systems (VACIS). (B) $11,200,000 for 5 mobile truck x-rays with transmission and backscatter imaging. (C) $13,000,000 for the upgrade of 8 fixed-site truck x-rays from the present energy level of 450,000 electron volts to 1,000,000 electron volts (1-MeV). (D) $7,200,000 for 8 1-MeV pallet x-rays. (E) $1,000,000 for 200 portable contraband detectors (busters) to be distributed among ports where the current allocations are inadequate. (F) $600,000 for 50 contraband detection kits to be distributed among all southwest border ports based on traffic volume. (G) $500,000 for 25 ultrasonic container inspection units to be distributed among all ports receiving liquidfilled cargo and to ports with a hazardous material inspection facility. (H) $2,450,000 for 7 automated targeting systems. (I) $360,000 for 30 rapid tire deflator systems to be distributed to those ports where port runners are a threat. (J) $480,000 for 20 portable Treasury Enforcement Communications Systems (TECS) terminals to be moved among ports as needed. (K) $1,000,000 for 20 remote watch surveillance camera systems at ports where there are suspicious activities at loading docks, vehicle queues, secondary inspection lanes, or areas where visual surveillance or observation is obscured. (L) $1,254,000 for 57 weigh-in-motion sensors to be distributed among the ports with the greatest volume of outbound traffic.