Title: FEMA IN THE WAKE OF A CRISIS
1FEMA IN THE WAKE OF A CRISIS
- Toward Effective Checks and Balances
- Spring 2006
2Question to Discuss
- Was the reorganization of FEMA within
- DHS effective to achieve the stated
- mission and should FEMA be part of the
- executive branch of government?
3FEMA PRE-KATRINA RESPONSE
- Northridge Quake-Response w/in 2 hours with
troops and rations. Rebuilt w/in a week. - Hurricane Camille-2nd worse- Red Cross set up
shelters for 85K before it hit. Cleared 11M tons
of debris in months. - Hurricane Andrew 5K troops deployed w/in 3 days.
4FEMA Strategic Plan (03-08)Challenges
- Emphasize pre-disaster mitigation and insurance.
- Recruiting, training hot notch workforce.
- Centralize IT management efforts.
- Annual Performance Plan w/ goals
- Management Plan of activities.
5 OHS Becomes DHS
- Cabinet-level Executive department created by
Executive Order to address government response to
9/11 terrorism. - Converted to an Executive Department per
Legislative Action, reporting to President. - Clearinghouse and coordination function among
federal, state, and local agencies.
6FEMAs Reorganization in 2002
- FEMA converted from an Independent Agency to a
department under a Directorate within Department
of Homeland Security, an Executive Department.
(1st Reorg.) - --Under Directorate of Emergency Preparedness
and Response. - --Subject to oversight from DHS Deputy Secretary
and Executive Branch, not Congress. - --After Katrina, FEMAs focus would be
exclusively on coordinating response. (2nd Reorg)
7Office of State and Local Government Coordination
and Preparedness
- Coordinate state and local gov. response to
terrorist acts. (Office under Secretary) - Provides assistance to America's first responders
through - Funding
- Coordinated Training
- Exercises
- Equipment Acquisition
- Technical Assistance
8FEMAS PRIMARY GOALSCoordinating Agency
- Reduce loss of life and property
- Minimize suffering and disruption caused by
disasters and - Serve as the Nations portal for emergency
management information and expertise.i - i A Nation Prepared, Federal Emergency
Management Agency ,Strategic Plan, Fiscal Years
2003 2008 lt http//www.fema.gov/library/strategi
cplanfy03.shtmgt
9 Government Response to Hurricane Katrina 8/28
- 2001-2005 Congress underfunds Corp projects to
shore up levees in La.. - 8/28 Hurricane hits.
- 8/28 La. Mayor orders evacuation from hurricane
region. - 8/29 Bush declares state of emergency.
- 8/29P Levees break, flooding lower levels.
- 9/2 40,000 Federal troops deployed with food
and water. - 9/2 Federal funds allocated on 9/2 63 billion.
10Government Responseto Katrina (8/28/05)
- 9/2 State and Local officials go off on Bush.
- 9/16 Bush acknowledges mistakes and pledges
- 100 reimbursement to states for health care
costs for evacuees. - 1.9 billion to states for costs of educating
displaced students - Worker recovery for job training of up to
5,000. - Cost of Gulf Opportunity Zone is 1.6 B over 5
years.
11Criticism of Reorganization Plan
- Impetus was a 9/11 Terrorist Attack
- Shift in focus to terrorism vs. natural disaster
created personnel/expertise issues. - Created Additional Levels of Bureaucracy
- Lack of Leadership
- Lack of a Clear Plan Priority within DHS
- Delays in Navigating Chain of Commands
- Lack of Coordination and Communication between
federal-state-local authorities.
12DHS National Response Plan
- Establish Protocols for the following
- 1) Save lives and protect public health and
safety - 2) Protect and restore infrastructure and key
resources - 3) Protect property and mitigate damages and
- 4) Facilitate recovery.
13Stages of Disaster RecoveryPhase 1 Local
Response
- Stabilize the city in flooded and hurricane-
damaged areas. (Months) - Contamination from chemicals, fecal matter,
garbage, oil and human remainsBad - Army Corp pumps 30 billion gallons of Bad
floodwater. - 174 pumps (most inoperable) owned by the city are
used for task.
14Stages of Disaster RecoveryPhase 1 Local
Response
- Minimize hazards by neutralizing safety threats,
e.g., wild animals, downed wires, gas leaks,
fires and toxic spills. SEC/ENV STATUS - Search and Rescue/Recover Bodies SEC/ENV
STATUS - -Bodies submerged, trapped under debris.
- -Identify corpses, notify and dispose of
remains. - -Find missing persons, confirm dead/alive,
reunite with families. - -Track whereabouts of residents to disseminate
information vs. rely upon them to contact
15Stages of Disaster RecoveryPhase 1 Local
Response
- Demolition and Removal of damaged structures.
(Experts say it will take years)ENV STATUS - -planning, zoning and permitting for self-help
or government action. (Time waivers) - -prioritizing how resources will be allocated.
(Identifying stakeholders and needs) - Request state and federal assistance (Accurate
inventory of needs) LEGAL STATUS
16 Stages of Disaster Recovery Phase 1 Executive
Response
- Executive let contracts to Halliburton and other
existing contractors without competitive bid. - 10/11/05 Terms would be renegotiated on
competitive bid. K STATUS - Suspended Davis-Bacon for prevailing wage
- Reinstated Act after pressure from Congress
- K WHO IS BEING HIRED
- Labor Dept. waived affirmative Action program and
reporting. - -No action taken-KSTATUS
17 Stages of Disaster Recovery Phase 1 Executive
Response
- Bush appointed OIG to provide FEMA Oversight.
- OIG created the Office of Katrina to conduct
investigation and audits on how 63 billion in
disaster relief is being spent. - OIG had 15 million to oversee management
- Mission assignments to other agencies over 7
billion, of which 6 billion to the Army Corp of
Engineers. - OIG to hire 130 auditors, investigators and
inspectors for DoD grants and contracts. -
18OIGs Mission
- Focus on Prevention, i.e. reviewing controls,
monitoring and advising. - Ongoing audit and investigation to identify and
address waste and fraud ASAP.
19OIG Issues
- Nexus between Audit, Investigation, and Reporting
functions, and Prevention. - Protection for whistleblowers.
- Prosecution of violators with adequate penalties.
- Effective remedies and resources for
complainants.
20Stages of Disaster RecoveryPhase 2
Repair/Rebuild
- No power, water, sewage, and roads in worse
areas. ENV./K CHECK STATUS - Repair/replace phone lines, communication SEC
CHECK STATUS - Most residents have left and have not been able
to or decided to return. EVAC. CHECK STATUS - Assessment, Demolition, Clean-up, Repair,
Rebuild.Letting of contracts. K CHECK STATUS
21Stages of Disaster RecoveryPhase 2
Repair/Rebuild
- Remove sewage, 500 plants worth of waste ENV
Army Corp, EPA, La.-CHECK STATUS - Hire contractors to repair clogged and destroyed
pipes to help restore service. K CHECK STATUS - Insurance Claims/FEMA aid for property and
relief for uninsured from flood, hurricane, fire,
mold damage. LEGAL CHECK STATUS - Small Business Loss Relief EVAC/K STATUS
22Stages of Disaster RecoveryPhase 2 Relief to
Evacuees
- 2,000 Direct relief EVAC/LEGAL CHECK
FRAUD-900K /2.5 M BAD PAYMENTS - 2,500 housing assistance EVAC/LEGAL CHECK
STATUS - SBA loan assistance for repairs, (credit-worthy
limitation) - Relief checks limited to 26,200.
- Balance is out-of-pocket.
- Unemployment benefits EVAC CHECK STATUS
23 FEMAs New Reforms (THIS IS WHERE WE START!!)
- Create teams of trained personnel with full
communication to coordinate and oversee disaster
recovery and relief (Phase 1) - Full integration with first responders, I.e.,
local and state government coordination - Partner with D0D to provide federal response
- FEMAS position within DHS allowed DHS to
intervene. If FEMA had been outside DHS, it
would have been worse.
24Question Answer?
- 1) Was the reorganization of FEMA within DHS
effective to achieve the stated mission? - No, because the mission of FEMA was diverted to
domestic terrorism to the exclusion of natural
disasters step-child in funding, access and
expertise. - 2) Should FEMA be part of the executive branch
of government to ensure proper coordination? - Yes, so long as have the talent, plans, and
controls to ensure effective coordination,
implementation and accountability.
25Questions to Ask
- 1)What is the role and mission per statutory
authority? - 2) What is the expectation in crisis?
- 3) How has the agency measured compliance and
performance? - 4) Has the agency met the standard?
- 5) If not, why not and what can be done via
informal rulemaking or interpretative rulemaking? - 6) If nothing, then is there another agency who
can?
26Next Steps
- 2/24 Status Report on outstanding issues.
- 2/28 Each group should identify up to 3 issues to
address via CPS worksheets. - 3/3 Groups will vote on the one issue they will
address via rulemaking based upon CPS. - 3/14 Draft proposed rule with justification shall
be done by the group for presentation to the
Inspector General. (Final Due 3/17)