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FEMA Defends Giving Away Hurricane Katrina Supplies

by Jarrett Martineau | June 16, 2008 at 09:02 am | 251 views | 2 comments | 2 recommendations

As NowPublic member dunkelberg reported on Friday, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
gave away about $85 million in household goods [that were] meant for Hurricane Katrina victims". Now, FEMA's director has defended the decision to give away the "surplus property" and blamed Louisiana for turning down the supplies.

The director of Federal Emergency Management Agency on Sunday defended giving away an estimated $85 million in hurricane relief supplies, blaming Louisiana officials for turning down the stockpiles.

"We still have quite a few left if Louisiana needs those," David Paulison said. "But we did find out, we did ask Louisiana, 'Do you want these?' They said, 'No, we don't need them.' So we offered them to the other states."

A CNN investigation revealed last week that FEMA gave away 121 truckloads of material the agency amassed after 2005's Hurricane Katrina. The material was declared surplus property and offered to federal and state agencies -- including Louisiana, where groups working to resettle hurricane victims say the supplies are still needed.

Paulison told CNN's "Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer" his agency distributed more than 90,000 "living kits" to people in Louisiana whose homes were destroyed or damaged by Katrina. The kits included cleaning supplies, mops, brooms, pots and pans.

After CNN reported on the giveaway, Louisiana officials asked that the supplies be redirected to the state, which originally passed on them. John Medica, director of the Louisiana's Federal Property Assistance Agency, told CNN he was unaware Katrina victims still needed the items because no agency had contacted his office.

Sen. Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, an outspoken critic of FEMA's response to the hurricane, told CNN the supply giveaway was "just a shame."

"It's just another example of the failings of the federal bureaucracy," said Landrieu, who wrote Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff last week to request an explanation. "We're still trying to fix it. It's going to take a lot more work."

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PEP
PEP
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 09:26 on June 16th, 2008

Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff.

This is another example of how people don't talk to people. Louisiana officials can try all they wan to blame it on the feds, but the bottom line is: they were offered, they said "no thanks" and so the materials got sent elsewhere to someone that could use them.

The feds took their licking from Katrina, especially that screw-up Brown. And they learned from it. The state of Louisiana also made significant mistakes, too, and I'm not sure they've yet learned.

The problem is that when you look upstream to the "big daddy feds" you've abrogated your responsibilities--and your choices. And that's my mini-rant for right now!

0
René

This is not true, Jarrett and Pep.  The wrong agency was contacted by FEMA. Just like Dunkelburg said!



"Somewhere in this big bureaucracy, links weren't made," said Adam Sharp, spokesman for Sen. Mary Landrieu, whose office is scrambling to track FEMA's discards and possibly reroute them to UNITY of Greater New Orleans, which desperately needs goods for formerly homeless people it has placed in subsidized apartments. "If the supplies just have been moved from one warehouse to another, we hope to get some of them moved back to FEMA so that they can be re-offered to Louisiana and given to UNITY," he said.

Times-Picayune


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June 16, 2008 at 09:02 am by Jarrett Martineau, 251 views, 2 comments

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