The twin ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach will get $12 million this year, half of what they got in 2005.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Federal funding to protect California's biggest ports from terrorist attacks is decreasing dramatically this year, the Department of Homeland Security said Monday.
The twin-port complex of Los Angeles and Long Beach will get about $12 million in 2006, compared to about $24 million in 2005, though it's not clear yet how that will be divided between them.
Meanwhile, the port of Oakland is getting no grant money. The nation's fourth largest harbor and California's second largest, Oakland got about $2.9 million in 2005 and requested about $6 million for 2006.
Some state and federal officials were dismayed by the allocations, noting that California ports handle 47 percent of the country's imported goods but only received 8 percent of port security grant funding,
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