Posted on 02/01/2006 6:21:17 PM PST by Indy Pendance
WASHINGTON - The White House and Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff failed to provide decisive action when Hurricane Katrina struck, congressional investigators said Wednesday in a stinging assessment of slow federal relief efforts.
The White House had no clear chain of command in place, investigators with the Government Accountability Office said, laying much of the blame on President Bush for not designating a single official to coordinate federal decision-making for the Aug. 29 storm. Bush has accepted responsibility for the government's halting response, but for the most part then-FEMA Director Michael Brown, who quit days after the hurricane hit, has been the public face of the failures.
"That's up to the president of the United States," GAO Comptroller General David M. Walker told reporters after being asked whether Chertoff should have been the lead official during the emergency.
"It could have been Secretary Chertoff" or someone on the White House staff, Walker added. "That's up to the president."
The report, which the congressional agency said was preliminary, also singled out Chertoff for several shortcomings. Chertoff has largely escaped direct criticism for the government's poor preparations and slow rescue efforts.
The Homeland Security Department angrily responded to the GAO report, calling the preliminary findings a publicity stunt riddled with errors. Homeland Security oversees the Federal Emergency Management Agency and issued a national plan last year for coordinating federal disaster response with state and local agencies.
In their nine-page report, investigators noted that they had urged the Clinton White House to appoint a single disaster coordinator more than a decade ago after the destruction wrought by Hurricane Andrew. Still, they said, the Bush administration continued the failure with the lack of a clear chain of command and that led to internal confusion when Katrina struck.
"In the absence of timely and decisive action and clear leadership responsibility and accountability, there were multiple chains of command," the report found.
The assessment the first of several reports about the response to Katrina noted that Chertoff authorized additional federal assistance to overwhelmed state and local resources on Aug. 30, a day after the storm hit. But Chertoff did not specifically classify the storm as a catastrophic disaster, which would have triggered a faster response.
"As a result, the federal response generally was to wait for the affected states to request assistance," the report found.
In another stab at Chertoff, the report called for Homeland Security to provide stronger advance training and planning for future disasters including taking better advantage of the military's ability to rescue and evacuate victims, provide supplies and assess damage.
Homeland Security spokesman Russ Knocke called the report misleading because federal officials and supplies were already at the Gulf Coast before Katrina hit. He said Chertoff did not activate a government plan for dealing with catastrophes because it is used only to respond to unexpected disasters.
The report "displays a significant misunderstanding of core aspects of the Katrina response that could have easily been corrected in the most basic conversations with" Homeland Security leaders, Knocke said.
Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., who is leading a special House investigation of the Katrina response, said the GAO findings will be included in his own panel's conclusions, which are due Feb. 15.
"I'm very hopeful that our final report will answer a lot of questions the American people have," Davis said. "The most obvious being: How could our government fail so badly?"
New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, in Washington to testify before a separate Senate-led Katrina inquiry, said he was not surprised at the report's conclusions.
"One of the big challenges in this event was the chain of command issue," Nagin told The Associated Press. "And for something that was a multistate event, something that pretty much overwhelmed local government, we need to figure out how to do this better in the future."
However, a transcript of an Aug. 28 briefing as Katrina bore down on the region indicates Gulf Coast state officials were satisfied with the federal assistance they had so far received.
"I want to say thank you very much for all that you're doing," Louisiana emergency preparedness deputy director Col. Jeff Smith told Homeland Security and FEMA officials during the call, in which President Bush also participated, according to the transcript obtained by The Associated Press. "I think that at this point in time our coordination is as good as it can be."
Asked by FEMA's Brown if Louisiana had any unmet needs at that point, or if there were anything else the federal government could provide, Smith said: "Mike, no."
Until he was relieved of his onsite duties on Sept. 9, Brown was the top federal officer in the Gulf Coast. But GAO concluded that his authority was unclear, leading to an "incomplete understanding of roles and responsibilities" for other federal agencies.
The report praised the Coast Guard, the Pentagon, the U.S. Postal Service and the National Finance Center for taking a "lean forward" approach to preparing for and responding to Katrina.
this is what you call going back to the old playbook. The liberal media is trying to find something to go back against Bush since all of the rest has failed.
Wow, what's new? Looks like the same-o usual suspects (dems) are blaming the same-o usual suspects (GOPers). The MSM can't stop putting out endless releases of their version of golden biased oldies. Yawn.....
TOTAL BS. Partisan political BS!
I, for one. will NEVER contribute one damn cent to any organization that funnels it to any black group or cause. Racist, damn betcha. All they do is take. What the hell do they contribute to their own? Not a GD thing.
I am sick of blacks blaming every problem they have on me. I have NEVER deprived a black of any educational opportunity, meal or chance to succeed.
IOW, skrew 'em!
This jerk was appointed in 1998 to a fifteen year term.
See his bio, here:
http://www.gao.gov/cghome/dwbiog.html
"However, a transcript of an Aug. 28 briefing as Katrina bore down on the region indicates Gulf Coast state officials were satisfied with the federal assistance they had so far received.
"I want to say thank you very much for all that you're doing," Louisiana emergency preparedness deputy director "Col. Jeff Smith told Homeland Security and FEMA officials during the call, in which President Bush also participated, according to the transcript obtained by The Associated Press. "I think that at this point in time our coordination is as good as it can be."
Asked by FEMA's Brown if Louisiana had any unmet needs at that point, or if there were anything else the federal government could provide, Smith said: "Mike, no."
Note that this info is placed at the END of the article. President Bush participated in a conference call when the STATE AND LOCAL OFFICIALS said everything was under control. Look in the upper part of the article; Bush is lambasted, yet HERE is evidence that he was told point-blank that the coordination was good.
P.S. Note that before he took his present job, he worked for Arthur Anderson, the accounting firm that imploded in the Enron Scandal.
This is BS. Local and state authorities are to blame for the mess than and the mess now.
Wonder if Mr. Walker lists cooking as a hobby?
Congress never ceases to amaze me. I don't suppose they redacted 100 or so pages from this ridiculous report?
That said, this "reporting" is absolutely horrendous and criminal. For example, that incompetent LA Governoress had argued incessantly with the Feds about authority, this while the hurricane was swamping New Orleans, and never made a decision even after the storm had passed.
The chain of command and authority should have progressed from local to state to federal, as has been the case for hundreds of years. It would really have been helpful if Democrat "leaders" would h have at least refreshed themselves on the Constitution and the rest of the laws.
History at least will reveal that Democrat corruption and incompetence was responsible for of at least 90% of the hardship suffered by the citizens of LA / NO, whose stupidity will quickly be revealed by the next local and regional elections.
That said, this event made it more than clear that the FedGov MUST have predetermined agreements in place for authority and logistics in the face of regional emergencies. I would have hoped that the new "Homeland Security" department would already have worked this out. But after having observed the "deer in the headlights" response of Chertoff during the SOU event last night, I have little faith that this bureaucrat even knows if he has any toilet paper left on the roll in his own master bedroom.
blame everyone but Blanco and Nagin... hmmm
The Russian communists used to say: "The future is fixed, the past is always changing."
Yeah, government failed badly...but it was the corrupt LA politicans that dropped the ball. Compare with MS Governor Barbour. 'Nuff said.
Thanks for your reply.
This guy is a FedGov CYA implant. Nothing more.
Good one!!
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