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GSN March 2016 Digital Edition

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Border Security/Immigration<br />

New TSA canine training<br />

center opens in San Antonio<br />

SAN ANTONIO – The Transportation<br />

Security Administration today<br />

announced the dedication of a new<br />

<br />

San Antonio-Lackland.<br />

The new facility is designed to<br />

support the mission to provide,<br />

train and certify highly effective<br />

explosives detection canine teams.<br />

The 25,000 square-foot facility has<br />

seven new classrooms and a 100-<br />

seat auditorium and administrative<br />

space, along with a parking lot<br />

and courtyard. The new building is<br />

<br />

<br />

of Engineers, which built the facility<br />

in a little more than a year.<br />

The new $12 million training facility<br />

is “an ideal complement to<br />

the existing training center campus,<br />

where our canines and their handlers<br />

come to learn the skills necessary<br />

to demonstrate proficiency in<br />

four key elements: the canine’s ability<br />

to recognize explosives odors, the<br />

handler’s ability to interpret the canine’s<br />

change of behavior, the handler’s<br />

ability to conduct logical and<br />

systematic searches and the team’s<br />

ability to locate the explosives odor<br />

ter<br />

Neffenger during a ribbon-cutting<br />

ceremony held earlier today to<br />

mark the completion of the facility.<br />

The program outgrew the original<br />

facility, which was located on<br />

base but not adjacent to where the<br />

dogs and handlers train at venues<br />

that replicate real-life scenarios. The<br />

new facility is now across the street<br />

from the field training center and<br />

kennels. The structure will be certified<br />

at the LEED Silver standard<br />

for sustainability set by the Leadership<br />

in Energy and Environmental<br />

<br />

ter-conserving<br />

building was erected<br />

using green resources and materials<br />

as part of federal leadership in sustainable<br />

construction.<br />

TSA trains and deploys both TSAled<br />

and state and local law enforcement-led<br />

canine teams in support of<br />

day-to-day activities that protect the<br />

transportation domain and provide<br />

a visible deterrent to terrorism. Annually,<br />

TSA trains about 250 canine<br />

<br />

in the aviation, multimodal, mass<br />

transit, and cargo environments.<br />

Federal, state and local law en-<br />

<br />

46<br />

country travel to San Antonio to<br />

take the 10 - 12 week courses. They<br />

are paired with a canine teammate<br />

and undergo strenuous training.<br />

These very effective, mobile teams<br />

can quickly locate and identify dangerous<br />

materials that may present a<br />

threat to transportation systems.<br />

The classrooms will be used to<br />

conduct sessions on canine health<br />

and wellness care, obedience, search<br />

patterns and techniques, explosives<br />

handling and safety, and myriad<br />

other mission critical topics. Thirteen<br />

indoor venues are located on<br />

the premises that mimic a variety of<br />

transportation sites, such as a cargo<br />

facility, an airport gate, a checkpoint,<br />

a baggage claim area, the interior<br />

of an aircraft, a vehicle parking<br />

lot, a light rail station, a light rail<br />

car, and an air cargo facility.

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