
The Department of Homeland Security should pay closer attention to how cities are spending federal dollars earmarked for an anti-nuclear-terrorism program, the Government Accountability Office said Monday. The DHS Securing the Cities program began in 2006 and helps municipalities develop plans to prevent and respond to acts of radiological terror, including deployment of the radiological dispersal devices sometimes called dirty bombs. Cities can use program funds to buy radiation detection equipment and train local officials to use it. Five cities…