Red Tape - New Allegations Surface around Katrina
Response
By Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball
Newsweek
Wednesday 14 September 2005
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9344582/site/newsweek/
New allegations highlight the bureaucratic fumbles that
delayed vital help for hurricane-hit New Orleans
The Bush administration is continuing to face heavy
criticism over the sluggish response of federal
agencies, principally the departments of Homeland
Security and Defense, to the devastation caused by
Hurricane Katrina.
New allegations continue to surface that offers of
personnel and material assistance to New Orleans and
other areas affected by the storm were held up by
bureaucratic red tape. There are also indications that a
proposed congressional investigation into government
responses to the disaster could itself become bogged
down in jurisdictional wrangles and partisan infighting.
One example of the criticisms that are still continuing
to surface regarding the Bush administration's slow
response to the damage wrought by Katrina comes from
Bill Richardson, governor of New Mexico and former
secretary of Energy under Bill Clinton. Richardson told
NEWSWEEK that on Monday, the day Katrina hit New
Orleans, he immediately authorized his state National
Guard commander to dispatch 400 New Mexico guardsmen to
the disaster area to help out Louisiana state forces.
But according to a state official, a hold-up at the
Pentagon meant that the New Mexico guardsmen did not
actually fly to Louisiana until Friday morning, four
days after Richardson authorized them to go.
Richardson said that when he asked his guard commander
to explain the delay, he was told the New Mexico troops
were not being allowed to travel to the region because
of "federal paperwork," which the National Guard bureau
at the Pentagon insisted had to be completed. According
to Richardson, this paperwork included various
authorizations and certifications as well as
"transportation waivers." "I remember saying to [the New
Mexico guard commander] it's going to be too late" by
the time state guardsmen reached the disaster scene,
Richardson recalled.
An aide to the governor said that military officials
later explained that the troops were not allowed to move
until they had been assigned a specific mission to
pursue once they got to the disaster region, and the
mission assignment did not come through from the
Pentagon until late Thursday. A spokesman for the
National Guard Bureau at the Pentagon said the bureau
worked "as quickly as possible" to move troops to the
disaster area as part of "an orderly process."
National Guard troops from other states were not the
only would-be rescue and recovery officials whose
movement to the disaster scene appears to have been
impeded by bureaucratic fumbling. According to a
knowledgeable federal source, dozens of officers from
one of the Homeland Security Department's own bureaus
were also inexplicably delayed in being transported to
the region. According to the source, investigators
working for the Bureau of Immigration and Customs
Enforcement, the plainclothes detective division of
Homeland Security also known as ICE, were also put on
standby to fly to the Gulf Coast within hours of the
hurricane making landfall. However, the orders for the
ICE agents to move to the region did not come from
Homeland Security headquarters until a couple of days
passed, leaving investigators puzzled about the reason
for the delay.
Late last week, Federal Emergency Management Agency
Director Michael Brown was removed from his temporary
appointment as top federal official on the scene of the
disaster. On Monday, amid questions about his
qualifications for the post-he had previously been a
"commissioner" of the International Arabian Horse
Association and had no background in emergency
management-Brown resigned as FEMA chief and from his
position as Homeland Security undersecretary. In a
public appearance Tuesday, President Bush acknowledged
the faltering response by authorities to Katrina and
said: "To the extent that the federal government didn't
fully do its job right, I take responsibility."
Additional questions are being raised, however, as to
whether Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff,
who is supposed to be the president's chief adviser on
responses to both natural disasters and man-made
catastrophes like terror attacks, was also slow in
responding to the multiple crises caused by Katrina.
According to a report today by the Knight Ridder
newspaper chain, under an order issued by President Bush
in 2003, Chertoff, as Homeland Security chief, was in
charge of managing the national response to a natural
catastrophe. But Knight Ridder cited an internal
government memo that indicated that Chertoff did not
designate Brown as the Principal Federal Official on the
disaster scene until Tuesday, Aug. 30, about 36 hours
after the hurricane hit Mississippi and Louisiana.
Knight Ridder also suggested that the memo implied
Chertoff might have been "confused about his lead role
in disaster response."
Senior Homeland Security officials insisted to NEWSWEEK
that Knight Ridder's reporters had misread Chertoff's
Aug. 30 memo and that the newspaper story contained
"significant inaccuracies." According to the
department's version, on Saturday, Aug. 27, before the
hurricane reached the Gulf Coast, President Bush had
signed an order declaring the storm an "incident of
national significance," thereby formally triggering the
"national response plan," a governmentwide scheme for
dealing with any kind of national catastrophe that the
Bush administration prepared in response to the 9/11
attacks. According to officials, Chertoff's Aug. 30 memo
was only a reminder to other agencies that the president
had triggered the plan several days earlier. Officials
also said that Knight Ridder had misinterpreted the memo
when they suggested that Chertoff might have been
confused about his role as the leader of government
responses to the disaster. The officials said that when
Chertoff's memo talked about his department's role in
"assisting" in responding to Katrina-rather than leading
the response to the storm-the memo was only referring to
the department's role in "assisting" a White House Task
Force that had been set up to consider long-term plans
for helping areas affected by Katrina to recover and
rebuild after the storm.
Aides to Chertoff said that the Homeland Security
secretary has been concerned for some time that the
department's assorted and far-flung components did not
always work well together to respond urgently to crises,
and that Chertoff declared a few weeks before Katrina
that one of his priorities was trying to get various
agencies in his own department to work together more
efficiently.
Even before it gets under way, a congressional
investigation that is supposed to examine how and where
government responses to Katrina failed also seems to be
beset by jurisdictional and political squabbles. Rep.
Peter King, a New York Republican from Long Island who
is in line to become next chairman of the House Homeland
Security Committee and, hence, a major player in any
legislative-branch inquiry, said that several potential
obstacles face congressional leaders as they try to set
up their investigation.
For a start, King said, Democrats have vowed to boycott
the investigation entirely. In a statement last week,
House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi demanded an
independent 9/11-style commission be set up to
investigate the response to Katrina and said that she
would not appoint any Democrats to serve on the
Senate-House Katrina inquiry that the GOP leadership
says it is going to set up. "The partisan proposal that
Republican leaders outlined yesterday is completely
unacceptable. House Democrats will not participate in a
sham that is just the latest example of congressional
Republicans being the foxes guarding the president's hen
house," Pelosi complained.
Republican infighting could also hamper any inquiry.
King noted that while the House Homeland Security
Committee has jurisdiction over the Department of
Homeland Security, its agencies, and any actions or
preparations it might make relating to man-made
catastrophes like terror attacks, the House
Transportation Committee, headed by Rep. Don Young, has
jurisdiction over natural disasters. Hence, there is a
possibility of jockeying between the two committees over
control of the Katrina investigation, if it ever gets
going. King said that as he understands it, what GOP
leaders want to do is to set up a joint inquiry
committee, like the panels that examined the Iran-contra
affair and 9/11 background. But in this case, the Senate
end of the committee would hold hearings under Senate
chairmanship with some House members present, and the
House members of the committee would do likewise. King
said House GOP leaders have indicated they would like
any congressional investigation to be completed-and to
produce its final report-by Feb. 15 of next year, which
doesn't leave much time for the infighting that is
currently bogging the down the whole process.
=============

Genocide by neglect in America by all in-charge who did
not respond.
Who is to blame for the slow response to Hurricane
Katrina? Watch Clip below:
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/KATRINA.HTM
Each day since Katrina brings more evidence of the
lethal ineptitude of
federal officials. I'm not letting state and local
officials off the
hook, but federal officials had access to resources that
could have made
all the difference, but were never mobilized.
Here's one of many examples: The Chicago Tribune reports
that the U.S.S.
Bataan, equipped with six operating rooms, hundreds of
hospital beds and
the ability to produce 100,000 gallons of fresh water a
day, has been
sitting off the Gulf Coast since last Monday - without
patients.
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/KATRINA.HTM