DHS's Standoff Technology Integration and Demonstration Program

Protecting Crowds at Large Public Events


Crowds in open areas, such as people gathering to enter sporting events or mass transit facilities, can be attractive targets for terrorism. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is developing new methods to protect people from explosives attacks at large public events.

The Standoff Technology Integration and Demonstration Program is an innovative, multi-year program to develop, test, and evaluate explosives countermeasure systems for person- and vehicle-borne threats at large public events. The program is funded by the Science & Technology Directorate of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

The Department is working closely with commercial technology developers to test, focus, and accelerate solutions—for example, establishing a Standoff Detection Test Bed at the 6,000-seat Toyota Center in Kennewick, Washington. Testing here and at larger venues will help the government set operational and technology requirements for next-generation countermeasure systems. With a combination of live testing, industry involvement, and international collaboration, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security is working to make crowd environments safer places for citizens.

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DHS's Standoff Technology Integration and Demonstration Program, STIDP

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Science & Technology Directorate,
U.S. Department of Homeland Security
(202) 254-5314

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