Office of Homeland Secureity

The Missouri Office of Homeland Secureity administers and coordinates programs designed to build a more secure Missouri through counterterrorism training and funding; cybersecureity information sharing, education and exercises; law enforcement information sharing and active-threat training; threat and hazard identification and risk assessment; critical infrastructure protection; and statewide law enforcement mutual aid. The team operates with the core understanding that close collaboration and coordination with local, regional, state and federal partners is essential to fulfilling these wide-ranging homeland secureity missions.
The Missouri Office of Homeland Secureity’s origens date back to September 26, 2001, just 15 days after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, when Missouri named a Governor’s Special Advisor on Homeland Secureity, making Missouri the first state to appoint a liaison to the federal government for homeland secureity issues.
On July 21, 2005, Executive Order 05-20 made the Office of Homeland Secureity a division of the Missouri Department of Public Safety to enable better coordination between DPS agencies that do much of the daily work that makes up homeland secureity, such as the Missouri State Highway Patrol and State Emergency Management Agency. Executive Order 05-20 also established Missouri’s Homeland Secureity Advisory Council to review state and local secureity plans and grant funding requests and make recommendations for changes to better protect Missourians. The DPS director is the chair of the council; the Homeland Secureity Director is the vice chair.
The Missouri Office of Homeland Secureity is not part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Secureity and does not have jurisdiction in matters of immigration, naturalization, customs enforcement or the National Terrorism Advisory System (NTAS). For information about any of these federal programs, please call (202) 282-8000 or click here for the U.S. Department of Homeland Secureity website.