Thursday, September 29, 2005

Brown: The Scapegoat of Katrina?

I have been watching the C-SPAN coverage tonight of the hearings on what happened during hurricane Katrina. I have actually be shocked at the amount of showboating by congressmen/women both Republican and Democrat alike. I know… why should I be "shocked," but I am.

I have also been surprised to at the testimony of Brown. I went into this hearing thinking he was a guy that did not properly prepared FEMA for Katrina because the media has portrayed him as such a lack luster looser, however, now after seeing the guy's testimony, I realize he has just become a scapegoat by the media, the administration, congress, senate and local officials in LA. Let me be clear though, that I don't think Brown or FEMA lacks any blame here. I do think many changes need to be made and Brown admits that, but the disaster of Katrina on the "human side" was not just because of Brown's leadership…far from it.

I was amazed at some of the facts brought out during the hearing; Being in Baton Rouge soon after the hurricane, I knew first hand of the inept leadership of the Governor of Louisiana and the Mayor of New Orleans, but not to the extent of what has been testified: For example, when the Govt. of LA finally asked for Federal assistance…. She did not include the county that included New Orleans. Director Brown included them on his list because he knew what was to come, but it was not requested by the Governor but rather added later by Brown. Brown requested on national TV on Thursday that the people of New Orleans leave. The Mayor was asked by Dir. Brown on Friday to have a mandatory evacuation, but he refused and to make matters worse, the Gov. went public on local stations on Friday telling people to ignore Brown's previous evacuation requests. Brown finally asked the President to call the Mayor on Saturday because the Mayor was not responding to requests from FEMA.

Governor Blanco was the only governor out of the areas to be hit by Katrina that FEMA needed to ask for a Federalization of National Guard troops because local command was so chaotic that FEMA could not coordinate proper response teams. She refused. Additionally, LA had no local FEMA director because he was removed from office months before Katrina because of a federally indictment and had not yet been replaced by the governor.

After hearing Brown's testimony, I for one, feel deeply sorry for Brown because I feel like he was most likely a competent Director (as Senator Lieberman correctly attested) that handled five of the worst hurricanes to ever hit the coast of North America (prior to Katrina) and was praised on his and FEMA's reaction to all of them. However, Katrina was a different animal for several reasons beyond that fact that it was the worst natural disaster to ever hit the United States: (1) since 9/11 FEMA has been systematically dismantled and had its internal emphasis altered because of Homeland Security and many of the budgeting needs requested by FEMA after the test of "hurricane Pam" were denied; And (2) hurricane Katrina hit a state that was inadequately prepared and had poor leadershipn - LA. FEMA did not have competent partnerships with local officials who knew their responsibilities to organize appropriate services and people died.

I am convinced that the "original sin" (as quoted from C. Krauthammer) of Katrina was the lack of preparedness of local officials that includes an evacuation of their own citizens and I hope this congressional inquiry delves into that issue at more depth.


1 comment:

The Shepherd said...

Is it tacky to respond to your own blog posting? Yes. But since no one is reading this - here goes:

So, it seems the press now has no problem with the whole emergency response system. What I mean is this, I haven't read one article about how the Federal Gov. or FEMA botched the Florida response and the citizens seem to be in pretty good spirits about the entire matter – despite having now been hit by seven hurricanes in the last 14 months and Florida had more power outages in this last hurricane than Louisiana has ever had any of their hurricanes – combined.

I will argue that, in part, it was because Jebb Bush is a Gov. that knows how to respond to hurricanes and has a competent plan in place to deal with such disasters. However, to be fair, Louisiana was hit by a category five, yet the evacuations and planning by local officials prior to the hurricane didn’t represent that level of preparation.

Comparisons on all other levels of the disaster though are almost embarrassing. The state of Florida, not FEMA, considered themselves the first responders. The state of Florida, not FEMA, took responsibility the National Guard. The state of Florida, made preparations prior to the hurricane and evacuated in a timely manner and subsequently it was the state of Florida took responsibility for things that went wrong. This is a case of one competent Governor and many competent Mayors vs. a Governor and Mayor who saw themselves as victims from the start and expected the Federal Government to mend ALL of their woes.

Here endith the lesson. Oh.. and nice blog.