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AP noted criticism of Nagin and Brown for failed Katrina response, but not Chertoff

September 01, 2008 2:24 pm ET

SUMMARY: Despite noting that New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin was "widely criticized in 2005 for not evacuating his city before [Hurricane] Katrina" and that former FEMA director Michael Brown "was forced to resign shortly after the storm as the extent of the agency's failings became clear," an AP article that quoted DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff describing government efforts to prepare for Hurricane Gustav did not note that two congressional reports on the federal response to Hurricane Katrina specifically faulted Chertoff.

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An August 29 Associated Press article noted that New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin was "widely criticized in 2005 for not evacuating his city before [Hurricane] Katrina" and that former Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) director Michael Brown "was forced to resign shortly after the storm as the extent of the agency's failings became clear." However, while the article quoted Michael Chertoff, head of the Department of Homeland Security, describing government efforts to prepare for Hurricane Gustav, it did not note that two congressional reports on the federal government's response to Hurricane Katrina specifically faulted Chertoff, including his decision to appoint Brown to implement the federal response plan.

As Media Matters for America has documented, the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs issued a report in May 2006 that concluded Chertoff's agency "failed to lead an effective federal response to Hurricane Katrina" and listed specific steps Chertoff failed to take both before and after the storm. The report noted that "Secretary Chertoff failed to make ready the full range of federal assets pursuant to DHS's responsibilities under the National Response Plan (NRP)" and "failed to appoint a Principal Federal Official (PFO), the official charged with overseeing the federal response under the NRP, until 36 hours after landfall." Brown, the PFO that Chertoff eventually chose, "was hostile to the federal government's agreed-upon response plan and therefore was unlikely to perform effectively in accordance with its principles." Moreover, the Senate report stated, "Even when appointed PFO, Brown remained the Director of FEMA, an apparent violation of the NRP's requirement that a PFO not be ' "dual hatted" with any other roles or responsibilities that could detract from their overall incident-management responsibilities.' "

Similarly, the House of Representatives' Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina, which released its final report on February 15, 2006, found that "critical elements of the National Response Plan," parts of which Chertoff was responsible for, "were executed late, ineffectively, or not at all." The report also asserted that "DHS and the states were not prepared for" Katrina.

The AP article quoted Chertoff saying of government preparedness for Hurricane Gustav: "What you're going to see is the product of three years of planning, training and exercising at all levels of government, starting with the local and the state level and leading up to the federal level. So we're clearly better prepared."

From the August 29 AP article:

"What you're going to see is the product of three years of planning, training and exercising at all levels of government, starting with the local and the state level and leading up to the federal level. So we're clearly better prepared," the head of the Department of Homeland Security, Michael Chertoff said Friday on "Good Morning America" on ABC television. He was interviewed from New Orleans where he was coordinating storm preparation efforts.

The administration of President George W. Bush is in regular contact with Bobby Jindal - the Republican governor of Louisiana, and Mayor Ray Nagin of New Orleans. Jindal has said he will skip the convention because of the storm. Nagin, widely criticized in 2005 for not evacuating his city before Katrina, left the Democratic National Convention early to return home.

[...]

But Witt's previous boss, former President Bill Clinton, drew Democrats' attention to the administration's Katrina failures when he spoke Wednesday at the convention.

"What about Katrina and cronyism?" Clinton said, a remark that was followed by a chorus of "boos" from the crowd. "My fellow Democrats, America can do better than that."

Clinton was referring to a Bush appointee, Michael Brown, who led the agency during Katrina. Brown was forced to resign shortly after the storm as the extent of the agency's failings became clear.

Brown -- best remembered for Bush's comment, "Brownie, you're doing a heckuva job!" - is prepared for many "Brownie" jokes in the coming days as Katrina and hurricane response make their way back into the news.

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    • Author by princeofwheels (September 01, 2008 2:52 pm ET)
         

      But Brownie was on some station today and threw the blame to the state level. Remember, Brownie got a pat on the back from the Prez so how could he be responsible for anything. They were ALL culpable.

      But good job this time. So far.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by BottleBlonde (September 01, 2008 2:57 pm ET)
         

      The Feds, this time, started getting ramped up 2-3 days before the storm made landfall.

      Last time, they didn't really do too much until they knew that New Orleans was flooding. It was 2-3 days after that before relief poured into New Orleans.

      That's the difference. Chertoff and Bush provided the direction, and the theme of the response of the Feds. Only the Feds could provide the support necessary in an event of this size, and they did a horrible job getting themselves prepared in a timely fashion last time. So they did learn from Katrina, and that's a wonderful thing, but Bush and Chertoff shouldn't escape blame for what they didn't do 3 years ago.

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      • Author by DAWUSS (September 01, 2008 3:05 pm ET)
           
        And it would be far more than inexcusable or unacceptable if Gustav disaster prevention/recovery efforts wound up as big a failure of Katrina.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by Don Hussein Fabuloso (September 01, 2008 3:34 pm ET)
             

          I heard El Rushbo last week doing the pre-conditioning of his dittoheads, assuring them that this storm would be handled much more efficiently because of the new Republican leadership in NO.

          Lessons learned, and the increased effort by the Feds to prevent anything similar to the previous  disaster, of course will be ignored on Planet Wingnut.

          Report Abuse
      • Author by MissDee (September 02, 2008 6:13 am ET)
           

        and of course, most of you fail to know or note that the laws used to read (pre-katrina) that the federal government couldn't get involved in this sort of thing until the escalation process to ask for federal aid was placed by the governor (a democrat at that time if you all recall).  So if timing is your criteria (which is the major point of effectiveness, as was show with Gustav) then I think you know where you can let the blame sit. Few of you recall that Mississippi got whacked worse than New Orleans by Katrina- NOLA is always the salient memory of that event- but then, the redneck population doesn't quite fit with the perpetuation of the victim mentality that the left loves so much.  Just for the record, we took in a family from Biloxi after Katrina for a month, so dont' give me the "non-compassionate conservative" crap unless you ponied up yourselves....

         

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        • Author by HughG (September 02, 2008 6:35 am ET)
             
          And of course you fail to note that the Democratic governor, Kathleen Blanco, did request federal assistance in a timely manner. The lack of response was on the part of the federal government.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by MissDee (September 02, 2008 10:19 am ET)
               

            okay.. requesting it AFTER it happens isn't averting the disaster now is it? In the Gustav instance, all the requests and cooperative measures were in place and fucntional days before the storm hit. It's sad that in the pursuit of "Blame Bush/Blame conservatives" people on here will always go back to a past flawed by the mechanism that was in place for decades, ignored or promoted by both parties, the reliance on a "nanny state" mentality so you can hide your heads in the sand that things  HAVE changed, and were changed by the very people you want to lay blame upon.

             And even still, you all focus on NOLA as if it was the central portion of the overall tragedy of katrina.

             

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    • Author by donaldmaddog5642 (September 02, 2008 12:12 am ET)
         
      O.K., folks, I LIVE in New Orleans so I might have little insight. Bush was a complete prick during Katrina. I could site so many inhumane examples, but we don't have the space. Everything about that "event" provided PROOF of, not only his capabilities as the President of the United States, but his failure as a man. His complete lack of simple empathy was there for ALL to see. His behavior in New Orleans after the fact was so staged and insincere that we, the residents, STILL evacuated to other parts of the land, could witness the shameful posturing and preening of a President who had absolutely NO understanding of suffering. Everyone around him shared in the dismal performance. Blaming the then Governor, Kathleen Blanco, was NO excuse. As the President of the United States, Bush could have taken the responsibility to act, certainly to advise, in no uncertain terms, what the Governor could and should do. I can't imagine Bill Clinton acting this way. It is a known fact that he had appointed total idiots, his buddies, as FEMA heads. The simple example was that George W. Bush DID NOT KNOW HOW TO TAKE CHARGE OF A SERIOUS SITUATION.
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      • Author by Don Hussein Fabuloso (September 02, 2008 1:46 am ET)
           

        And his hopeful heirs have given us no reason to believe they'll do otherwise, Maddog.

        I don't know if you caught my family tree on the thread where I offended everybody, but I hope you noticed that I gave a shout-out to the former Speaker of the house and the Big Easy with the naming of my kids Newt and Newtria.

        Just curious, on one of my trips to NO, the local government was dealing with a boom in the Nutria

        Report Abuse
        • Author by Don Hussein Fabuloso (September 02, 2008 1:47 am ET)
             
          (oops) population by promoting them as "good eatin'". Have they given up that campaign?
          Report Abuse
      • Author by HughG (September 02, 2008 6:39 am ET)
           
        Let us not forget that one of the key events that took Bush's eye off the ball was the birthday party of a certain Senator from Arizona. Said Senator (and Prez candidate) should never be allowed to claim that he would handle emergencies of that nature differently, without being reminded of his complicity in Dubya's inattention.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by chuck prentiss (September 02, 2008 11:13 am ET)
         
      The AP is becoming a Kissin' Cousin of Fox News. Blaming Democrats and shielding Republicans with regard to Katrina is par for the course for the AP. Everyone knows that Bush and Homeland Security were the main culprits in this disaster. Not mentioning the criticism of Michael Chertoff at the time of Katrina is just one more example of how the AP operates these days. It's a not-so-subtle slanting of the news against Democrats and for the GOP. I'm glad Media Matters is not letting the AP get away with it.
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