There are two posts in the comments section to the last blog which are excellent. I want to emphasize that I was exhausted when I posted the Mayor's rant and neglected to mention that I still believed, in spite of his passionate outbursts, that his incompetence was a huge cause of all of these problems. I was about to list all of the ways, and then beloml posted this in the comments. I've linked to the blog beloml references, but if there is a more direct link and someone knows it, please e-mail me and I'll correct it. I think it's worth moving up to the top (as is the other comment, which I will do later):
Actually, this comment in Donald Sensing's blog makes a lot of sense to me:
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. That’s because they have the experience and personnel to manage disasters of this scale.
Disclosure: I’m a volunteer coordinator for MEMA (The Missouri Emergency Management Agency), I’ve 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 I’ve 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 FEMA’s lap. That’s 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 Nagin’s performance has been pathetic. This is the worst case of poor planning and criminal incompetence I’ve 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 weren’t 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 weren’t they stocked with water, food, bedding, generators, and fuel? Why weren’t 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 we’ve seen) and no one I know could believe that decision it’s emergency management 101, preserving order preserves life.
There’s plenty of blame to go around Blanco deserves her share too but the real culprit in the aftermath here is Nagin.
Posted by toni at September 2, 2005 04:58 PMI can't go along with all the blaming that is taking place.
I agree there is plenty of blame to go around, and that will be sorted out from those who stayed to "ride out the storm" to officials from the local levels on up to the highest levels.
I'm just heartbroken at the devastation and suffering.
I pray that help will be organized quickly for those who remain in New Orleans and are in need.
The blaming is a natural result of the sharp political divide in the United States. I don't think it will hinder the disaster effort.
Having participated in relief efforts at major and minor disasters, and drills for more, I can only say that the Mayor should be tarred and feathered. Likewise the governor. The situations in the "evacuation centers" was inexcusable. Police should have been sent in with enough force and the authorization to use it. Likewise the National Guard when they arrived. I had a friend in the SuperDome (the idiot was a tourist who wouldn't leave in spite of everyone's strong suggestions). He just made it to Dallas and is too sleepy and too traumatized to talk about it. Earlier we got text messages from him. He personally saw murders. He was next to a guardsman who was shot. He was scared to death because of the lawlessness - the Guard only had enough force there to protect themselves.
That the city had communications problems indicates poor planning. That the hospitals and the SuperDome had generators below predicted flood levels is criminal. That the mayor refused to enforce law and order is idiotic and a gross dereliction of duty. That the head of FEMA found out about the problems in the Convention Center by TV news indicates that local authorities did not properly plan for a major disaster response and didn't have adequate backup systems and procedures.
I have seen good disaster planning and responses - with good interagency communications. The local authoritiles simply blew it!
Posted by: John Moore at September 3, 2005 02:46 PMI completely agree with the posting. The feds cannot be momma to all the children states. The responsibility rests with the Mayor.. no matter what else has transpired. Feds too slow? What did the mayor do to accelerate the response? Did he coordinate with other mayors? He needs to be a leader and admit that the circumstances overwhelmed all preparations.
The deaths come down to the reasons cited. No adequate evacuation plan. No adequate shelters.
A leader will emerge from this tragedy... Somewhere in the trenches someone is getting the job done and I pray that they are recognized.
Posted by: Alan Keith at September 5, 2005 02:59 PM