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Michael D. Brown (Fema Honcho LA)
Fema ^
| 9-3-05
| Fema Bio
Posted on 09/02/2005 11:18:53 PM PDT by Anti-Bubba182
Michael D. Brown
Under Secretary of Homeland Security for Emergency Preparedness and Response
Michael D. Brown was nominated by President George W. Bush as the first Under Secretary of Emergency Preparedness and Response in the newly created Department of Homeland Security in January 2003. As the head of Homeland Security's Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Under Secretary Brown leads federal disaster response and recovery operations and coordinates disaster activities with more than two dozen federal agencies and departments and the American Red Cross. He also oversees the National Flood Insurance Program and the U.S. Fire Administration, and initiates proactive mitigation activities.
Additionally, Under Secretary Brown helps the Secretary of Homeland Security ensure the effectiveness of emergency responders, and directs the National Incident Management System (NIMS) Integration Center, the National Disaster Medical System and the Nuclear Incident Response Team.
Under Secretary Brown has led Homeland Securityâs response to more than 164 presidentially declared disasters and emergencies, including the 2003 Columbia Shuttle disaster and the California wildfires in 2003. In 2004, Mr. Brown led FEMAâs thousands of dedicated disaster workers during the most active hurricane season in over 100 years, as FEMA delivered aid more quickly and more efficiently than ever before.
Previously, Mr. Brown served as FEMA's Deputy Director and the agency's General Counsel. Shortly after the September 11th terrorist attacks, Mr. Brown served on the President's Consequence Management Principal's Committee, which acted as the White House's policy coordination group for the federal domestic response to the attacks. Later, the President asked him to head the Consequence Management Working Group to identify and resolve key issues regarding the federal response plan. In August 2002, President Bush appointed him to the Transition Planning Office for the new Department of Homeland Security, serving as the transition leader for the EP&R Division.
Prior to joining FEMA, Mr. Brown practiced law in Colorado and Oklahoma, where he served as a bar examiner on ethics and professional responsibility for the Oklahoma Supreme Court and as a hearing examiner for the Colorado Supreme Court. He had been appointed as a special prosecutor in police disciplinary matters. While attending law school he was appointed by the Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee of the Oklahoma Legislature as the Finance Committee Staff Director, where he oversaw state fiscal issues. His background in state and local government also includes serving as an assistant city manager with emergency services oversight and as a city councilman.
Mr. Brown was also an adjunct professor of law for the Oklahoma City University.
A native of Oklahoma, Mr. Brown holds a bachelor's degree in Public Administration/Political Science from Central State University, Oklahoma. He received his J.D. from Oklahoma City Universityâs School of Law.
» Speeches by Under Secretary Michael D. Brown
TOPICS: Extended News; US: Louisiana
KEYWORDS: hurricane; katrina
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I will be surprised if this one keeps his job.
To: Anti-Bubba182
Take a look at Alabama and Mississippi if you want to see what FEMA is capable of when there is some semblance of state government. FEMA's role is to support state's recovery efforts. Not replace state governments.
2
posted on
09/02/2005 11:30:10 PM PDT
by
Rokke
Comment #3 Removed by Moderator
To: Anti-Bubba182
Maybe. But Mississippi and Alabama are doing much better than Louisiana.
The difference? Not FEMA. Not the Feds. But two Republican governors who prepared and are working correctly with FEMA vs. one incompetent Dem governor who hasn't been seen on 2 days.
The press will figure this out eventually. They didn't follow their own disaster plan. They didn't activate the guard until Wednesday. I don't think she's even asked for Federal troops yet. If the press figures out she's the common factor, Brown might keep his job.
I would like to see Colin Powell or Giuliani take over the specific relief effort of New Orleans. Shut the governor and mayor out of the equation and let the effort succeed.
4
posted on
09/02/2005 11:33:48 PM PDT
by
tbeatty
(I didn't claw my way to the top of the food chain to eat salad.)
To: Anti-Bubba182
"Robert Modean Says:
September 2nd, 2005 at 12:24 pm
Sorry Joel & ROE, but you guys are WAAAYYY off base in criticizing FEMA. Disaster preparedness is the responsibility of State and Local authorities in this case LEMA (The Louisiana Emergency Management Agency). There is a state-wide director for disaster relief in every state that person is called the Governor. There is a local director for disaster relief in every municipality that person is called the Mayor.
FEMA is a coordinating body that assists State and Local authorities in getting the resources they need. Because they are the go to people most folks are under the impression that they are in charge, and in fact if the State and Local authorities abdicate control over a disaster area they will take over. Typically after the initial response to a disaster the local guys do just that, leave FEMA in control. Thats because they have the experience and personnel to manage disasters of this scale.
Disclosure: Im a volunteer coordinator for MEMA (The Missouri Emergency Management Agency), Ive been through three major floods and a few big storms that generated enough tornado damage to get the affected counties disaster relief believe me when I tell you what we are seeing from FEMA now is lightyears ahead of what Ive seen from them in the past. Typically it took two to three days just to get the disaster declaration, then another two to three to get FEMA deployed of course by then the local guys had been on the ground working around the clock for five or six days and we were more than happy to dump everything in FEMAs lap. Thats the way the system is designed. Bush saw that and tried to skip a few steps to speed things up, he pre-declared the areas disaster areas. So what we are seeing in NO is the result of a convergence of factors:
First, the storm damage was bad, but the flooding has made relief efforts ten times harder than anything they could have imagined. Second, Mayor Nagins performance has been pathetic. This is the worst case of poor planning and criminal incompetence Ive ever seen.
Like I said, Bush declared the gulf coast area a Federal Disaster area on Saturday two days before Katrina hit. That freed up FEMA resources for local and state coordinators and allowed for the pre-positioning of supplies so they could be rapidly deployed to the affected areas. Mayor Nagin waited until the last minute to call for an evacuation of the city, but the poorest people could not evacuate why werent school busses used to get them out of town?
Mayor Nagin made the last minute decision to declare the Superdome and COnvention centers as refuge relocation points why werent they stocked with water, food, bedding, generators, and fuel? Why werent hospitals offered additional resources by the Mayors office?
Mayor Nagin made the decision to allow looting and told the police to focus on Search and Rescue but looting hinders S&R efforts (as weve seen) and no one I know could believe that decision its emergency management 101, preserving order preserves life. Theres plenty of blame to go around Blanco deserves her share too but the real culprit in the aftermath here is Nagin."
5
posted on
09/02/2005 11:35:01 PM PDT
by
Rokke
To: Rokke
Thud posted the previous on the latest Katrina thread.
6
posted on
09/02/2005 11:38:11 PM PDT
by
Rokke
To: seamole
He is taking a beating on TV interviews and seems uninformed
of situations widely reported on TV. Fema does not look good in this and neither does he.
To: Anti-Bubba182
"Fema does not look good in this and neither does he."
Only to those who don't know what the true role of FEMA is. To those who know (like the President) the failures clearly lie within the governments inside LA. You cannot blame FEMA for shortcomings of the people it is working for.
8
posted on
09/02/2005 11:42:01 PM PDT
by
Rokke
To: Anti-Bubba182
Here is the problem. People are going off that if we are not prepared for this, what about terrorism. We are prepared to respond to terrorist attacks. We have been so focused on terrorism since 9-11 that the government forgot the biggest danger to America - mother nature. The money is not being spent to prepare for natural disasters like it is for terrorism. How do I know this? Because my mother is a EMA director in Ohio, her biggest issue with FEMA (it really is Homeland Security in charge, not FEMA) is that the federal funds focus too much on terrorism alone and not on ALL possible disasters.
9
posted on
09/02/2005 11:45:52 PM PDT
by
nascaryankee
(PETM (People for the Ethical Treatment of Meat))
To: Anti-Bubba182
The federal government may not intervene until asked by the governor. She split, and left the people in NO to swim.
Thank God President Bush moved in. Finally, some one is doing something to organize that mess down there. It's a heavily democrat state, yet there's not one democrat politician down there doing anything. The Republicans are down there straightening things up, and it's not even their job!!
When Florida gets it, it's always Jebs fault when someone gets hurt. Now that a democrat governor fails, it's the presidents fault?
To: Rokke
Look I can see your point, but that is not going to excuse him not knowing about the situation in NO.
Leader of Federal Effort Feels the Heat
"..WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 - On Thursday night, Michael D. Brown, the federal government's point man for managing the response to Hurricane Katrina, made a remarkable confession on live television.
Speaking of the thousands stranded at the convention center in New Orleans without food or water, Mr. Brown said that his agency, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, had just learned of their plight.
CNN's Paula Zahn was incredulous. "Sir," she said, "you aren't just telling me you just learned that the folks at the convention center didn't have food and water until today, are you? You had no idea they were completely cut off?"
"Paula," Mr. Brown replied unequivocally, "the federal government did not even know about the convention center people until today..."
To: Anti-Bubba182
Let's have a look at two events, 9/11 and Katrina.
George W. Bush and his administration were in office during both. In New York they had the Mayor/ Governor team of Guliani/Pataki. In New Orleans the team is Nagin/Blanco.
Okay class, what is the difference?
12
posted on
09/02/2005 11:54:20 PM PDT
by
msnimje
(TAKE CNN OFF YOUR REMOTE - THEY ARE THE ENEMY OF THE US)
To: Anti-Bubba182
"but that is not going to excuse him not knowing about the situation in NO."
The man is overseeing the disaster recovery effort of the largest natural to hit this nation in its history. 90,000 square miles including 3 states and several large cities. The idiots running New Orleans didn't tell FEMA that people had broken into the Convention Center there to take refuge. And you say it is his fault for not knowing?!
13
posted on
09/03/2005 12:01:28 AM PDT
by
Rokke
To: Anti-Bubba182
"Paula," Mr. Brown replied unequivocally, "the federal government did not even know about the convention center people until today..." Meant to say...."The mayor's office told us NO ONE was at the convention center, yeah, that's the ticket".
14
posted on
09/03/2005 12:02:45 AM PDT
by
Responsibility1st
(Figure out what you would die for...then live for it. -Anne Rivers Siddons)
To: Anti-Bubba182
"Paula," Mr. Brown replied unequivocally, "the federal government did not even know about the convention center people until today..."How would they know if the state officials never told them? Where was the governor? Why was there no communication? She was in charge. Where was she? Jeb would have been right on it! He'd have been all over this!
To: msnimje
George W. Bush and his administration were in office during both. In New York they had the Mayor/ Governor team of Guliani/Pataki. In New Orleans the team is Nagin/Blanco. Okay class, what is the difference?Florida got hit hard with hurricanes, and everything was under control. Who was in charge there, too?
To: Rokke
Excuse me, if he goes on television as the Fema point man not
knowing what is being reported in the media it is absolutely his fault.
To: Anti-Bubba182
The media is also reporting cannibalism and that blacks are purposely being left to starve. Reread your own article. He says "Paula," Mr. Brown replied unequivocally, "the federal government did not even know about the convention center people until today...". He knew about them. FEMA just hadn't had time to respond. But the folks there were already receiving water and food and there is photographic proof of that happening yesterday (probably while this interview was underway). Maybe you have the ability to run a gigantic disaster effort and watch T.V. all day, but the folks who really do the job have a little more on their minds.
18
posted on
09/03/2005 12:17:23 AM PDT
by
Rokke
Comment #19 Removed by Moderator
Comment #20 Removed by Moderator
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