Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Howard County finds a customer for its wastewater: The NSA
http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2013-12-31/news/bs-md-nsa-howard-county-water-20131230_1_wastewater-computer-center-nsa-director
Howard County finds a customer for its wastewater: The NSA
Anti-surveillance activists object to cooperation with security agency
December 31, 2013|By Matthew Hay Brown, The Baltimore Sun
By Matthew Hay Brown, The Baltimore Sun
5:00 a.m. EST, December 31, 2013
Howard County has agreed to supply treated wastewater to cool a massive computer center being built at Fort Meade by the National Security Agency — a money-saving, environment-conserving deal that officials say could serve as a model for others.
The NSA is footing the cost of building a pump station, estimated at $40 million, and will pay the county up to $2 million a year for treated water that would otherwise be dumped into the Little Patuxent River. The station is to supply up to 5 million gallons of reclaimed wastewater per day when the NSA computer center opens in 2016.
"There are so many benefits to this project," said Howard County Executive Ken Ulman.
But NSA critics see an opportunity to disrupt the agency's controversial surveillance activities. A coalition of rights groups has targeted similar deals elsewhere — notably in Utah, where the NSA recently completed a $1.5 billion data center — lobbying state lawmakers to make it illegal for local governments to supply water, energy or other utilities to the agency.
"Maryland is one of the most crucial states in this national campaign," said Shahid Buttar, executive director of the Bill of Rights Defense Committee in Washington. "Because Congress has been so abysmally dysfunctional and inactive in the oversight arena for the last 10 years, the municipal checks and balances are really all that we the people have had an opportunity to exercise."
Buttar and other agency critics plan to study the Howard County-NSA deal. Ulman and NSA officials say they have heard no criticism of their agreement, which has been in the works for a couple of years but has received little publicity.
Since the NSA broke ground on its High Performance Computing Center-2 in May, revelations about the collection of telephone and Internet data have brought unprecedented scrutiny to the agency.
A federal judge ruled this month that the telephone program is "almost Orwellian" and probably unconstitutional. A second federal judge later ruled that it was legal and a valuable part of the nation's anti-terrorism efforts.
Separately, a presidential task force urged President Barack Obama to end the operation, to reform a secret surveillance court and to impose limits on the surveillance of close allies.
Ulman said neither the revelations by former contractor Edward Snowden nor the efforts of anti-surveillance activists has affected Howard County's work with NSA.
"This is a great democracy," he said. "People have the right to let their thoughts be heard, to protest. … But at the end of the day, we have major defense installations throughout this country that are woven into our economies, our communities, and they need the infrastructure to perform their mission. The discussions around what the mission should be, that's an appropriate venue for our national leaders."
Fort Meade, though based in Anne Arundel County, is the largest employer of Howard County residents.
The new computing center will assist in "front-line defense against immediate threats" in cyberspace, Gen. Keith B. Alexander, the NSA director, said at the groundbreaking in May.
Officials said it will help analysts identify and combat cyber attacks —incursions into U.S. computer networks aimed at stealing identities, intellectual property or state secrets.
The 600,000 square-foot center is what NSA calls a "darkened site" — a facility that is operated remotely through software, with a minimal staff of engineers and maintenance workers to fix hardware, plumbing, electrical and other problems that might arise.
Workers at the pump station site on Route 198 were subjected to background checks and made to sign nondisclosure forms before they were allowed to participate in the project.
Stephen C. Gerwin, chief of Howard County's utilities bureau, called it "a peculiar project."
"I went on the base," he said. "You watch a film and you sign a document that says if you say anything, you go to jail for a million years. They're real tight about their security, as they should be."
Harvey Davis, director of installation and logistics at the NSA, said the arrangement is "dramatically beneficial for the taxpayers and also really good for the ecosystem."
NSA could have drawn tap water or dug wells to cool its computers, but Davis said those options were far more expensive and would have added stress to a local aquifer already burdened by rapid development in the area.
By using the outflow from Howard County's Little Patuxent Water Reclamation Plant, the NSA leaves the ground water alone and reduces the amount of treated water the county sends to the Chesapeake Bay.
"The people who work here at NSA are the same people who live next door to you and me," Davis said. "We've got boats. We want the bay to be clean. We want our drinking water to be good. So we all look at it, both from an organizational perspective and a personal perspective, that we're part of the community, to make sure we do things that are right for the ecosystem."
Gerwin called it a "a big green project."
"Across the industry, the effluent out of wastewater plants is of such high quality nowadays that it's actually a marketable commodity," he said. "Not so much on the East Coast, where we have a lot of water. But out West, it's a big deal. And we're beginning to do that now.
"It's a resource that we used to dump into rivers and let it go. But it gets cleaner and cleaner and cleaner."
Ulman said the NSA is the first of several potential customers for county wastewater. He said the county also is in talks with Dreyer's Ice Cream, which operates a plant in Laurel.
"Data centers are big users," he said. "Places that have a lot of air conditioning needs. Dreyer's Ice Cream happens to have a freezer the size of a football field. You look around the port of Baltimore, cold storage facilities, power plants. … This is a really underutilized resource in the state."
Ulman is seeking the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor in 2014. "Frankly, this is something that I'm really looking forward to driving statewide," he said.
NSA critics would prefer Howard County peddle its water elsewhere. The OffNow coalition, which includes Buttar's group, has developed model state legislation that would prohibit local governments from providing "material support" to the agency.
A state senator in Arizona has said she will introduce a bill there. Michael Maharrey, a spokesman for the Florida-based Tenth Amendment Center, said the coalition also has commitments from lawmakers in Utah, California and Washington state.
He says Maryland, where the NSA is based and Fort Meade is the state's largest workplace, "will probably be a tougher sell."
"But clearly our goal is to get this type of legislation introduced across the country," Maharrey said.
Davis has read about the coalition's efforts.
"You know, everybody's entitled to their opinion," he said. "But that's the political process."
matthew.brown@baltsun.com
twitter.com/matthewhaybrown
Copyright © 2013, The Baltimore Sun
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