FOCUS | Maxine Waters Leads Action in New Orleans
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Mayday Mississippi Delta
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Thousands Remain To Be Evacuated
By Manuel Roig-Franzia and Spencer Hsu
The Washington Post
Sunday 04 September 2005
White House shifts blame to local officials.
New Orleans - Tens of thousands of people spent a fifth day awaiting
evacuation from this ruined city, as Bush administration officials blamed
state and local authorities for what leaders at all levels have called a
failure of the country's emergency management.
President Bush authorized the dispatch of 7,200 active-duty ground troops to
the area - the first major commitment of regular ground forces in the crisis -
and the Pentagon announced that an additional 10,000 National Guard troops
will be sent to Louisiana and Mississippi, raising the total Guard contingent
to about 40,000.
Authorities reported progress in restoring order and electricity and repairing
levees, as a hospital ship arrived and cruise ships were sent to provide
temporary housing for victims. As Louisiana officials expressed confidence
that they had begun to get a handle on the crisis, a dozen National Guard
troops broke into applause late Saturday as Isaac Kelly, 81, the last person
to be evacuated from the Superdome, boarded a school bus.
But there remained an overwhelming display of human misery on the streets of
New Orleans, where the last 1,500 people were being evacuated from the
Convention Center amid an overpowering odor of human waste and rotting
garbage. The evacuees, most of them black and poor, spoke of violence, anarchy
and family members who died for lack of food, water and medical care.
About 42,000 people had been evacuated from the city by Saturday afternoon,
with roughly the same number remaining, city officials said. Search-and-rescue
efforts continued in flooded areas of the city, where an unknown number of
people wait in their homes, on rooftops or in makeshift shelters. Hundreds of
thousands of people have been displaced by the flooding - 250,000 have been
absorbed by Texas alone, and local radio reported that Baton Rouge will have
doubled in population by Monday. Federal officials said they have begun to
collect corpses but could not guess the total toll.
Behind the scenes, a power struggle emerged, as federal officials tried to
wrest authority from Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco (D). Shortly
before midnight Friday, the Bush administration sent her a proposed legal
memorandum asking her to request a federal takeover of the evacuation of New
Orleans, a source within the state's emergency operations center said
Saturday.
The administration sought unified control over all local police and state
National Guard units reporting to the governor. Louisiana officials rejected
the request after talks throughout the night, concerned that such a move would
be comparable to a federal declaration of martial law. Some officials in the
state suspected a political motive behind the request. "Quite frankly, if
they'd been able to pull off taking it away from the locals, they then could
have blamed everything on the locals," said the source, who does not have the
authority to speak publicly.
A senior administration official said that Bush has clear legal authority to
federalize National Guard units to quell civil disturbances under the
Insurrection Act and will continue to try to unify the chains of command that
are split among the president, the Louisiana governor and the New Orleans
mayor.
Louisiana did not reach out to a multi-state mutual aid compact for assistance
until Wednesday, three state and federal officials said. As of Saturday,
Blanco still had not declared a state of emergency, the senior Bush official
said.
"The federal government stands ready to work with state and local officials to
secure New Orleans and the state of Louisiana," White House spokesman Dan
Bartlett said. "The president will not let any form of bureaucracy get in the
way of protecting the citizens of Louisiana."
Blanco made two moves Saturday that protected her independence from the
federal government: She created a philanthropic fund for the state's victims
and hired James Lee Witt, Federal Emergency Management Agency director in the
Clinton administration, to advise her on the relief effort.
Bush, who has been criticized, even by supporters, for the delayed response to
the disaster, used his weekly radio address to put responsibility for the
failure on lower levels of government. The magnitude of the crisis "has
created tremendous problems that have strained state and local capabilities,"
he said. "The result is that many of our citizens simply are not getting the
help they need, especially in New Orleans. And that is unacceptable."
In a Washington briefing, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said
one reason federal assets were not used more quickly was "because our
constitutional system really places the primary authority in each state with
the governor."
Chertoff planned to fly overnight to the New Orleans area to take charge of
deploying the expanded federal and military assets for several days, he said.
He said he has "full confidence" in FEMA Director Michael D. Brown, the DHS
undersecretary and federal officer in charge of the Katrina response.
Brown, a frequent target of New Orleans Mayor C. Ray Nagin's wrath, said
Saturday that "the mayor can order an evacuation and try to evacuate the city,
but if the mayor does not have the resources to get the poor, elderly, the
disabled, those who cannot, out, or if he does not even have police capacity
to enforce the mandatory evacuation, to make people leave, then you end up
with the kind of situation we have right now in New Orleans."
New Orleans City Council President Oliver Thomas acknowledged that the city
was surprised by the number of refugees left behind, but he said FEMA should
have been prepared to assist.
"Everybody shares the blame here," said Thomas. "But when you talk about the
mightiest government in the world, that's a ludicrous and lame excuse. You're
FEMA, and you're the big dog. And you weren't prepared either."
In Baton Rouge, Blanco acknowledged Saturday: "We did not have enough
resources here to do it all. . . . The magnitude is overwhelming."
State officials had planned to turn to neighboring states for help with
troops, transportation and equipment in a major hurricane. But in Katrina's
case, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida were also overwhelmed, said Denise
Bottcher, a Blanco spokesman.
Bush canceled a visit with Chinese President Hu Jintao that had been scheduled
for Wednesday and made plans to return to the Gulf Coast on Monday. Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice scheduled
visits to the region, as troops continue to pour in.
Top Bush administration officials met at the White House with African American
leaders amid criticism that the federal response to Hurricane Katrina has
neglected impoverished victims, many of them black.
Chertoff, Housing Secretary Alphonso Jackson, White House domestic policy
adviser Claude Allen and Pentagon homeland security official Peter Verga met
for two hours with NAACP President Bruce Gordon, National Urban League
President Marc H. Morial and Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-Md.), the former
chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus. The caucus's current chairman,
Rep. Melvin Watt (D-N.C.), participated by phone.
"I think they wanted to make sure that the leaders of the Congressional Black
Caucus, the Urban League and the NAACP knew that they were very sensitive to
trying to make sure that things went right from here on out," Cummings said,
according to his spokeswoman, Devika Koppikar. "And I think they wanted to try
to dispel any kind of notions that the administration did not care about
African American people - or anyone else."
Caucus Executive Director Paul A. Brathwaite said Bush officials promised to
keep black leaders informed. He credited the administration with reaching out
to the caucus for the first time to solve a national problem.
In New Orleans on Saturday, smoke from several fires that have burned for days
swirled over the French Quarter. Outside the Ernest N. Morial Convention
Center, the stench and heat worsened the long wait of the thousands of
evacuees lining up for buses. Many of them said they had no idea where they
would go.
Columbus Lawrence, 43, a landscaper, shambled down St. Joseph Avenue searching
for the end of the line. He pushed a cart piled with packets of dry,
chicken-flavored noodles. "It's like a chip," he said hopefully, putting
another handful into his mouth.
Others have been here since the day of the storm, the early part of the week
made increasingly awful because there were no toilets, no water, no food.
Herbert J. Freeman arrived in a neighbor's boat with his mother, Ethel M.
Freeman, 91, frail and sick, but with an active mind. She kept asking him for
a doctor, for a nurse, for anyone who could help her. Police told Freeman
there was nothing they could do. She died in her wheelchair, next to her son,
on Thursday morning.
It was half a day before he could find someone to take away her body, he said.
"She wasn't senile or nothing," he said. "She knew what was going on. . . . I
kept saying, 'Mom, I can't help you.' "
Next to Freeman, Kenny Lason, 45, a dishwasher at Pat O'Brien's, a French
Quarter restaurant famous for its signature "Hurricane" cocktail, took a long
slurp out of a bottle of Korbel extra-dry champagne. He broke a store window
to get it, and he is not ashamed. "They wasn't giving us nothing," he said.
"You got to live off the land."
Outside New Orleans, frustration boiled over among the boatmen who
spontaneously left their homes in central Louisiana to rescue stranded
residents in the first hours after reports of flooding hit the airwaves. For
the past two days, many have been turned away because of security concerns in
a city that had turned violent and chaotic.
"It's a tragedy that's unfolding now," said Moose Billeaud, a former New
Orleans prosecutor who is now in private practice in Lafayette, La. "It is not
organized at all."
The boatmen who made it in came back with harrowing memories. Kenny, who did
not want to disclose his last name, said friends were shot at by stranded
people who wanted to steal their boats. "It's total chaos," he said.
Isaac Kelly, the last to depart from the Superdome, said "it feels good" as he
boarded the bus. A young guardsman put an arm around the stooped Kelly and
said, "Good luck and God bless."
The dome, which once housed more than 20,000 evacuees, became a symbol of the
chaos that gripped New Orleans, with television network cameras capturing
scenes of filth and misery.
Just before Kelly stepped aboard, Isaiah Bennett, leaning heavily on a wooden
cane, was helped onto the bus. "It was hell," said Bennett. "I don't like this
kind of mess," he said. "I never thought it would be this bad.
The US Army Corps of Engineers has said that it will take as long as 80 days
to remove the water from New Orleans and surrounding areas.
Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) and Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.)
sent a letter to Bush Saturday urging him to provide cash benefits and
transportation assistance to stranded people and to use federal facilities for
housing. They wrote that they "are concerned that rescue and recovery efforts
appear to remain chaotic and that many victims remain hungry and without
adequate shelter nearly a week after the hurricane struck. Clearly, strong
personal leadership from you is essential if we are to get this effort on
track."
The administration said that 100,000 have received some form of humanitarian
aid and that 9,500 have been rescued by the Coast Guard. The administration
said it is providing funds to employ displaced workers and has arranged for
Amtrak trains to help in the evacuation. The rail service expects to remove
1,500 people daily. In addition, the Energy Department reported that 1.3
million customers were without electricity, down from 1.5 million Friday.
The 7,200 additional troops announced by Bush on Saturday are scheduled to
arrive within three days. They will come from the 82nd Airborne Division at
Fort Bragg, N.C., the 1st Cavalry Division at Food Hood, Tex., the 1st Marine
Expeditionary Force at Camp Pendleton, Calif., and the 2nd Marine
Expeditionary Force at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
The decision to employ active-duty ground troops and Marines was particularly
significant given the administration's initial desire to limit ground forces
largely to Guard units. Regular military troops are constrained by law from
engaging in domestic law enforcement. By contrast, Guard troops, who are under
the command of state governors, have no such constraints.
At a Pentagon news conference Saturday, Lt. Gen. Joseph Inge, the deputy
commander of the Northern Command, said the active-duty ground forces would be
used mainly to protect sites and perform other functions not considered law
enforcement.
The Air Force is repatriating 300 airmen from Iraq and Afghanistan so they can
assist their families back in their home base in Biloxi, Miss.
Law enforcement officials said order is beginning to be restored in the city.
A temporary detention center has been set up in the city to house those
arrested for looting and other crimes after the hurricane, and the city's
court personnel have been relocated to neighboring jurisdictions unaffected by
Katrina, said New Orleans US Attorney Jim Letten. Trials are expected to begin
within two weeks, he said. "We're going to bring these guys to justice," he
said.
Members of federal law enforcement agencies are in the city, he said. More
than 200 Border Patrol agents have been sworn in to reinforce New Orleans
police, and state police officials said hundreds of law enforcement agents
from other states are expected in the coming days.
Editor's Note: This article appears on the Red Cross website. Read the 2nd
paragraph, as to why we did not see the Red Cross in New Orleans sooner. The
public should be made aware of this and Homeland Securities comments.
Go to Original
Hurricane Katrina: Why is the Red Cross not in New Orleans?
Acess to New Orleans is controlled by the National Guard and local authorities
and while we are in constant contact with them, we simply cannot enter New
Orleans against their orders.
The state Homeland Security Department had requested - and continues to
request - that the American Red Cross not come back into New Orleans following
the hurricane. Our presence would keep people from evacuating and encourage
others to come into the city.
The Red Cross has been meeting the needs of thousands of New Orleans residents
in some 90 shelters throughout the state of Louisiana and elsewhere since
before landfall. All told, the Red Cross is today operating 149 shelters for
almost 93,000 residents.
The Red Cross shares the nation's anguish over the worsening situation inside
the city. We will continue to work under the direction of the military, state
and local authorities and to focus all our efforts on our lifesaving mission
of feeding and sheltering.
The Red Cross does not conduct search and rescue operations. We are an
organization of civilian volunteers and cannot get relief aid into any
location until the local authorities say it is safe and provide us with
security and access.
The original plan was to evacuate all the residents of New Orle
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