From Deseret News archives:

Since 9/11: Is Utah safer?

State has taken steps to protect

Published: Saturday, Sept. 9, 2006 7:37 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
It was a sign of the times, post-9/11. A man was innocently geocaching, playing a hide-and-seek game to conceal a container of goodies for others to find using Global Positioning System units. He stashed his cache on a road near the Salt Lake City sewage treatment plant.

Little did he know that since 9/11, that plant has extra security cameras and officers constantly watching for terrorists who might be poking around for places to plant bombs. A security guard spotted him driving away and called in reinforcements.

"There were a lot of cops," says John Adams, director of the sewage plant. "The bomb squad was even called in" to examine carefully the ammo box the man left. All they found eventually were some photos inside.

Today, even walking too near a sewage plant is seen as a potential act of terrorism. LeRoy W. Hooton Jr., director of Salt Lake City Public Utilities, notes that officials must consider even sewage plants as terrorist targets because destroying them could devastate daily life and business.

Five years after 9/11 and the new age of threats that it created, officials say Utahns are probably more protected than ever against such attacks because of extensive planning and often-hidden security (even at sewage plants). They also add quickly that nothing is foolproof, and risk of terrorism always remains.

Story continues below
Some changes are obvious, such as much tighter searches and restrictions of items taken on airplanes or beefing up security at local military bases. Others are not seen easily, from constantly monitoring water for signs of germ weapons to extra surveillance of mass transit, power plants, dams, oil lines and other facilities.

Officials also say Utah may be further along in plans and action to protect against terrorism than most states because hosting the 2002 Winter Games — the first big "national security event" after 9/11 — forced it to focus on terrorist threats quickly, and the state has built upon that.

"I think we are definitely safer today. Prior to the Olympics, what did we have in place? I don't know that there was much checking going on as far as our vulnerabilities," says Mike Kuehn, the state's director of homeland security.

Of course, that changed during the Olympics when Utah had more U.S. military stationed here than in Afghanistan (and it was before the war in Iraq). The Air Force patrolled the skies over venues. Terrorism became, and has remained, a top concern for all local law enforcement and many other public and private groups.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

Chad Herrera, left, and Kerry Morgan use a bank of monitors to survey the complex for possible problems at North Salt Lake water facility.

previousnext

Latest comments

ill never visit this restaurant for the way they acted by firing this...

Noooo! the away goals tiebreaker is the only thing I about game that's not in...

Their actions, had this case not been treated as it has, could have made the...

"Marriage is a civil contract--no religion needed." If it is just a...

This man broke the law and should go to jail for what he did, it's as simple...

he isn't one of the best! he is the best!!!!!!

Couldn't have said it better myself. There is no I or me in team. The...

Don't blame Fox for 'Dollhouse'

Scott, I respect your opinion on a lot of things but on this one I think you...

+1 to the statements above from Common Sense and Jason. Mr. DeChristopher...

As someone who grew up just a short drive away from Denmark I can tell you...

Advertisements
Advertisement