In the article “9-11 Commission, Homeland Security, and Intelligence Reform” written by the U.S. Senate Committee of Homeland Security, they explain multiple different acts. The first act talked about is The Homeland Security Act, “In 2001 and 2002, the Committee led the effort to consolidate the 22 disparate agencies... into one Department of Homeland Security with the unified purpose of protecting the homeland” (“9-11 Commision, Homeland Security, and Intelligence Reform”). This act was the first big leap of public safety throughout the United States. Some believe that the DHS was the most necessary structural government change since the National Security Act in 1947 (Knight). One of the first times that the DHS was tested was when Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast. The U.S. Senate explained the act by saying,“...the Committee drafted and Congress enacted the Post Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act of 2006, which strengthened the Department’s ability to protect the nation from “all hazards” – whether natural or man-made” (“9-11 Commision, Homeland Security, and Intelligence Reform”). This is significant because this was the first test of the DHS. After the hurricane hit, the government realized that they needed to be better prepared for disasters so that is why they went through with the post reform act to fix everything that did not go…