Interesting tidbit in today's post about the director of FEMA, he was
fired from his last job as the director of the International Arabian
Horse Federation. So how does that mediocre performance give him the
qualifications to head up FEMA? Except that is as a significant
contributor to the Bush election campaigns.

larry

http://www.antiwrap.com/?703  

washingtonpost.com
FEMA Director Singled Out by Response Critics

By Spencer S. Hsu and Susan B. Glasser
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, September 6, 2005; A01

Michael D. Brown has been called the accidental director of the
Federal Emergency Management Agency, caricatured as the failed head of
an Arabian horse sporting group who was plucked from obscurity to
become President Bush's point man for the worst natural disaster in
U.S. history.

Amid the swirl of human misery along the Gulf Coast, Brown admitted
initially underestimating the impact of Hurricane Katrina, whose winds
and water swamped the agency's preparations. As the nation reeled at
images of the calamity, he appeared to blame storm victims by noting
that the crisis was worsened by New Orleans residents who did not
comply with a mandatory evacuation order.

By last weekend, facing mounting calls for his resignation, he told
reporters: "People want to lash out at me, lash out at FEMA. I think
that's fine. Just lash out, because my job is to continue to save
lives." More broadly, the 50-year-old Oklahoma lawyer and the agency
he leads have become the focus of a broad reappraisal of U.S. homeland
security efforts four years after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

In recent days, politicians and officials in both parties have derided
Brown's qualifications to head the nation's chief disaster-response
agency -- as well as the performance of the agency and its federal,
state and local partners.

At a time when homeland security experts called for greater domestic
focus on preparing for calamity, Brown faced years of funding cuts,
personnel departures and FEMA's downgrading from an independent,
Cabinet-level agency.

As recently as three weeks ago, state emergency managers urged
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff and his deputy, Michael
P. Jackson, to ease the department's focus on terrorism, warning that
the shift away from traditional disaster management left FEMA a
bureaucratic backwater less able to respond to natural events such as
hurricanes and earthquakes.

The Times-Picayune, Louisiana's largest newspaper, published an open
letter on Sunday to President Bush, calling for every FEMA official to
be fired, "Director Michael Brown especially," joining critics in the
state and Congress.

"We're angry, Mr. President, and we'll be angry long after our beloved
city and surrounding parishes have been pumped dry," the editorial
said. "Our people deserved rescuing. Many who could have been were
not. That's to the government's shame. . . . No expense should have
been spared. No excuses should have been voiced."

Brown's defenders say he is the scapegoat of a cataclysmic storm and
failure of New Orleans's levee system that, in the words of President
Bush and Chertoff, could not be foreseen.

"Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job," Bush said Friday during a
tour of the state, a day before Chertoff voiced his confidence.

"It's easy to play the blame game, find a scapegoat, but no one person
could be responsible for the challenges we face and the lives lost,"
said W. Craig Fugate, emergency management director for Florida, where
Bush's brother is governor, who worked with FEMA through four
hurricanes in 2004. He said state and local authorities share
responsibility for the death toll likely to emerge in coming days.

Joe M. Allbaugh -- a college friend, former Bush campaign manager and
past FEMA director who hired Brown as FEMA general counsel in 2001 --
offered a qualified defense.

Allbaugh called the government's overall performance "unacceptable"
but added: "Blaming one agency, you cannot do that." Still, he
acknowledged that FEMA had lost independence and clout with the White
House. "I had a unique relationship with the president, having been
his chief of staff," Allbaugh said. "If you don't have that kind of
relationship, it just makes things tougher."

If anything, Brown's political background has become a liability,
leading to charges that he was given his job as patronage. He got his
start in politics as an Oklahoma native with Allbaugh but ran
unsuccessfully for Congress in 1988, winning 27 percent of the vote.
He has chaired the Oklahoma Municipal Power Authority and served as a
City Council member, examiner for the Oklahoma and Colorado supreme
courts, and assistant city manager.

Allbaugh hired Brown after an acrimonious end to a nine-year stint as
commissioner of the International Arabian Horse Association. Former
officials say he was forced out; a friend and lawyer of Brown's said
he negotiated a settlement after withstanding numerous lawsuits
against his enforcement of rules for judges and stewards.

Defending his qualifications, Brown said he has overseen responses to
164 presidential declared emergencies and disasters as FEMA counsel
and general counsel, including the 2003 Columbia shuttle disaster and
the California wildfires in 2003. "I have been through a few
disasters," he said at a news conference yesterday.

Reviews of the government's response to Katrina are beginning.
Already, members of Congress such as Rep. John D. Dingell (D-Mich.)
and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) are pushing to move FEMA out
of its department and back to Cabinet-level status. Senate Homeland
Security Committee Chairman Susan Collins (R-Maine) and ranking
Democrat Joseph I. Lieberman (Conn.) have launched an investigation,
and committee members will meet with department officials tomorrow.

While Chertoff said the levee breach that flooded New Orleans
"exceeded the foresight of planners," Max Mayfield, director of the
National Hurricane Center, said Brown and other top federal officials
were briefed as much as 32 hours in advance of landfall that Hurricane
Katrina's storm surge was likely to overtop levees and cause
catastrophic flooding.

"They knew that this one was different," Mayfield said yesterday. "I
don't think Mike Brown or anyone else in FEMA could have any reason to
have any problem with our calls. . . . They were told. . . . We said
the levees could be topped."

Louisiana officials have blamed FEMA and Brown for bureaucratic
bottlenecks, accusing FEMA of ignoring pre-storm offers of aid from
Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley (D), New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson
(D) and the American Ambulance Association.

In his last extended TV interview on CNN,Brown admitted Thursday that
the federal government did not know that thousands of survivors
without food or water had taken shelter at the city's convention
center, despite a day of news reports.

Since then, Brown has been eclipsed by his boss, Chertoff -- who flew
overnight Sunday to take charge of integrating military with civilian
efforts -- and by a new deputy, U.S. Coast Guard Vice Admiral Thad
Allen, whom Chertoff named yesterday to take charge of federal
recovery efforts in New Orleans.

Bruce P. Baughman, Alabama emergency management director, head of the
National Emergency Management Association and the official in charge
of FEMA's response to the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks in
2001, said Katrina will leave its mark on federal disaster management.
"It's time to realize, whoever is in charge of FEMA does need an
emergency management background. . . . It's something you learn by
experience, and a lot of that experience is gone," he said.
(c) 2005 The Washington Post Company

On 9/6/05, Gruss Gott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Nick wrote:
> > US Military personnel are NOT allowed to arrest, search or seize.
> 
> That's true and maybe an important distinction.  However they can
> detain and disarm.  It's interesting when you read the response
> timeline - the Gov and Mayor requested fed troops and Pres Bush
> granted them.
> 
> The problem came in when it started to hit the fan and no leader
> stepped in to command and coordinate.  So you had 4,000 Nat'l Guard
> here and 1,000 Coast Guard there and 500 State Patrol up over the
> hill, etc. but nobody was commanding them.
> 
> The problem simply was that:
> 
> 1.) The leadership of FEMA utterly failed to lead and just sat while
> people drowned.
> 2.) The leadership of DHS failed to step up when the FEMA failed.
> 3.) The President failed to step up when DHS and FEMA failed.
> 
> The sad truth is, our country is utterly without leadership that can
> adequetly protect us.
> 
> 

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