"Smoking gun" documents nail FEMA, Chertoff, and Bush
by Sharon Jumper
Fri Sep 9th, 2005 at 11:03:04 PDT
Rep. Waxman does it again!
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2005/9/9/1435/82827
He's just posted a letter to Secretary Chertoff from Ranking
Member Waxman and Chairman Davis which describes documents from
the Department of Homeland Security that show that FEMA was
aware in 2004 that a "catastrophic hurricane" could hit New
Orleans and "trap hundreds of thousands of people in flooded
areas and leave up to one million people homeless." FEMA
officials wrote: "the gravity of the situation calls for an
extraordinary level of advance planning."
More after the fold...
* Sharon Jumper's diary :: ::
*
Here's the letter that was sent to Chertoff today
The House Committee on Government Reform has obtained from the
Department of Homeland Security a document describing the "Scope
of Work" of a contract issued by the Federal Emergency
Management Agency for the development of a "Southeastern
Louisiana Catastrophic Hurricane Plan." We are writing to
request any plans and other documents that were developed under
this contract.
FEMA's Scope of Work contemplated that a private contractor,
Innovative Emergency Management, Inc. (IEM), would complete the
work under the contract in three stages. "Stage One" called for
a simulation exercise involving FEMA and the state of Louisiana
that would "feature a catastrophic hurricane striking
southeastern Louisiana." "Stage Two" called for "development of
the full catastrophic hurricane disaster plan." And "Stage
Three" involved unrelated earthquake planning.
A task order issued under the contract called for IEM to execute
"Stage One" between May 19 and September 30, 2004, at a cost of
$518,284. On June 3, 2004, IEM issued a press release announcing
that it would "lead the development of a catastrophic hurricane
disaster plan for Southeast Louisiana and the City of New
Orleans under a more than half a million dollar contract with
the U.S. Department of Homeland Security/Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA)." A second task order issued on
September 23, 2004, required IEM to "complete the development of
the SE Louisiana Catastrophic Hurricane plan." The cost of this
task order was $199,969.
The "Background" section of the Scope of Work stated that "the
emergency management community has long feared the occurrence of
a catastrophic disaster," which the document describes as "an
event having unprecedented levels of damage, casualties,
dislocation, and disruption that would have nationwide
consequences and jeopardize national security..."
...According to the Scope of Work, the contact "will assist FEMA,
State, and local government to enhance response planning
activities and operations by focusing on specific catastrophic
disasters: those disasters that by definition will immediately
overwhelm the existing disaster response capabilities of local,
State, and Federal Governments." With respect to southeastern
Louisiana, the specific "catastrophic disaster" to be addressed
was "a slow-moving Category 3, 4, or 5 hurricane that ...
crosses New Orleans and Lake Pontchartrain." The Scope of Work
explained:
Various hurricane studies suggest that a slow-moving Category 3
or almost any Category 4 or 5 hurricane approaching Southeast
Louisiana from the south could severely damage the heavily
populated Southeast portion of the state creating a catastrophe
with which the State would not be able to cope without massive
help from neighboring states and the Federal Government.
The Scope of Work further stated: "The Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) and the Louisiana Office of Emergency
Preparedness (LOEP) believe that the gravity of the situation
calls for an extraordinary level of advance planning to improve
government readiness to respond effectively to such an event."
The specific disaster scenario contemplated under the contract
is strikingly similar to the actual disaster caused by Hurricane
Katrina. The contract envisioned that "a catastrophic hurricane
could result in significant numbers of deaths and injuries, trap
hundreds of thousands of people in flooded areas, and leave up
to one million people homeless."
The Scope of Work expressly directed the contractor to plan for
the following specific conditions:
* "Over one million people would evacuate from New Orleans.
Evacuees would crowd shelters throughout Louisiana and adjacent
states."
* "Hurricane surge would block highways and trap 300,000 to
350,000 persons in flooded areas. Storm surge of over 18 feet
would overflow flood-protection levees on the Lake Pontchartrain
side of New Orleans. Storm surge combined with heavy rain could
leave much of New Orleans under 14 to 17 feet of water. More
than 200 square miles of urban areas would be flooded."
* "It could take weeks to `de-water' (drain) New Orleans:
Inundated pumping stations and damaged pump motors would be
inoperable. Flood-protection levees would prevent drainage of
floodwater. Breaching the levees would be a complicated and
politically sensitive problem: The Corps of Engineers may have
to use barges or helicopters to haul earthmoving equipment to
open several hundred feet of levee."
* "Rescue operations would be difficult because much of the area
would be reachable only by helicopters and boats."
* "Hospitals would be overcrowded with special-needs patients.
Backup generators would run out of fuel or fail before patients
could be moved elsewhere."
* "The New Orleans area would be without electric power, food,
potable water, medicine, or transportation for an extended time
period."
* "Damaged chemical plants and industries could spill hazardous
materials."
* "Standing water and disease could threaten public health."
* "There would be severe economic repercussions for the state
and region."
* "Outside responders and resources, including the Federal
response personnel and materials, would have difficulty entering
and working in the affected area."
It appears that IEM completed the task order for "Stage One,"
the hurricane simulation. An exercise know as "Hurricane Pam,"
was conducted by FEMA and IEM in July 2004, bringing together
emergency officials from 50 parish, state, federal, and
volunteer organizations to simulate the conditions described
above and plan an emergency response. As a result of the
exercise, officials reportedly developed proposals for handling
debris removal, sheltering, search and rescue, medical care, and
schools.
It is not clear, however, what plans or draft plans, if any, IEM
prepared to complete "Stage Two," the development of the final
catastrophic hurricane disaster plan. The task order for "Stage
Two" provided that the "period of performance" was September 23,
2004, to September 30, 2005.
The basis for the award of the planning work to IEM is also not
indicated in the documents we received. The task orders were
issued to IEM by FEMA under an "Indefinite Delivery Vehicle"
(IDV) contract between IEM and the General Services
Administration. According to the Federal Procurement Data
System, FEMA received only one bid (from IEM) for the task
orders.
The documents from the Department raise multiple questions about
the contract with IEM and the planning for a catastrophic
hurricane in southeastern Louisiana. To help us understand these
issues, we request that the Department provide the following
documents and information:
(1) Any documents relating to the "Stage One" simulation
exercise, including documents prepared for exercise planners and
participants, transcripts or minutes of exercise proceedings,
participant evaluations, and after action reports;
(2) Any final or draft plans for a catastrophic hurricane in
southeastern Louisiana prepared under "Stage Two" of the
contract, including any final or draft Catastrophic Hurricane
Disaster Plan, Basic Plan Framework, Emergency Support Function
Annex, or Support Annex; and
(3) An explanation of the procurement procedures used in
selecting IEM for the contract and task orders, as well as a
description of IEM's qualifications and the justification for
selecting IEM.
We recognize that Department officials are engaged in ongoing
relief efforts, and we do not want to impair those efforts in
any way. For this reason, we have tailored our request to the
discrete set of documents and information set forth above. To
expedite your response to this request, we have enclosed copies
of the Scope of Work, task orders, and other documents cited in
this letter.
Sincerely,
Rep. Tom Davis
Chairman
Rep. Henry Waxman
Ranking Minority Member
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2005/9/9/1435/82827