mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-27 00:09:39 -05:00
73 lines
4.2 KiB
Plaintext
73 lines
4.2 KiB
Plaintext
|
<conspiracyFile><div>
|
||
|
HELP BUNGLED AND DISORGANIZED
|
||
|
By Martin Mann and George Nicholas
|
||
|
Exclusive to The SPOTLIGHT
|
||
|
Washington, DC -- One after another, two violent, cataclysmic disasters
|
||
|
struck the United States in the fall of 1989. Hurricane Hugo roared
|
||
|
through the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and the Carolinas in September.
|
||
|
Within weeks, northern California was shaken by the Loma Prieta earthquake
|
||
|
that left hundreds of thousands of victims and billions of dollars in
|
||
|
damage in its wake.
|
||
|
Having spent "over $25000000000 on setting up FEMA," American taxpayers
|
||
|
were entitled to expect "quick and efficient help" from it in the face of
|
||
|
such shattering calamities. But the response by the Federal Emergency
|
||
|
Management Agency (FEMA) to these upheavals was "bungled" and
|
||
|
"disorganized," says Ray Groover, who reported on the hurricane for a San
|
||
|
Juan, Puerto Rico, newspaper and is now studying for a graduate degree in
|
||
|
journalism at Columbia University in New York.
|
||
|
Since the Disaster Relief Act of 1988, FEMA has been responsible for
|
||
|
coordinating the "[disaster] preparedness, response and recovery actions of
|
||
|
state and local governments." Unable to live up to these responsibilities
|
||
|
during the 1989 crisis, the agency drew sharp criticism from the press and
|
||
|
from Congress, whose leaders assigned the General Accounting Office (GAO)
|
||
|
to conduct the first-ever detailed investigation of FEMA.
|
||
|
For a year, GAO field examiners interviewed hundreds of disaster
|
||
|
victims, state and local relief workers, journalists and other witnesses.
|
||
|
The agency has assembled a 71-page report on U.S. relief operations.
|
||
|
WATCHDOG AGENCY RATES FEMA
|
||
|
Having obtained an advance copy of that survey, a team of SPOTLIGHT
|
||
|
reporters found that the congressional watchdog agency rated FEMA's ability
|
||
|
to deal with natural disasters as being "inefficient," "weak" and
|
||
|
"dilatory."
|
||
|
Noting that "emergency management includes three phases:
|
||
|
preparedness, response and recovery," GAO probers warned that FEMA failed
|
||
|
to operate "as efficiently as possible" in all these areas.
|
||
|
There was evidence of "inadequate planning ... inadequate or no
|
||
|
standard operating procedures ... [and a] lack of coordination" wherever
|
||
|
FEMA's bureaucrats intervened, the GAO report concluded. Among the results
|
||
|
of these botched relief attempts were "delays in providing disaster
|
||
|
assistance and duplicate payments for some [of FEMA's] activities," the
|
||
|
congressional overseers discovered.
|
||
|
One example of FEMA's failure cited by the GAO survey team involved
|
||
|
4000 low-income units wholly destroyed in California's devastating October
|
||
|
1989 earthquake. "Thirteen months later, only 114 units had been processed
|
||
|
and approved for [rehabilitation] funding," the report reveals. Similarly,
|
||
|
10 months after Hurricane Hugo, most of the families left homeless "had not
|
||
|
yet been provided with housing assistance from FEMA."
|
||
|
DIRECTORS SHELL GAME
|
||
|
Warned that the GAO report will expose FEMA as incompetent and
|
||
|
wasteful, President George Bush fired agency Director Julius Becton, an
|
||
|
elderly three-star general, whose principal qualifications for flag rank
|
||
|
was Henry Kissinger's wish to promote "minority" officers, Defense
|
||
|
Department sources say.
|
||
|
Becton was replace by Wallace Stickney, a former New Hampshire state
|
||
|
official whose colorless and low-profile reputation is expected to dampen
|
||
|
the fireworks the GAO report might otherwise touch off about the inadequacy
|
||
|
of federal relief operations.
|
||
|
But simply shifting directors "does not answer the real question: If
|
||
|
[FEMA officials] seem uninterested and negligent when it comes to disaster
|
||
|
response, what are FEMA's thousands of bureaucrats working on?" asked
|
||
|
Groover.
|
||
|
The answer, a SPOTLIGHT investigation has found, is that FEMA's
|
||
|
leadership is developing programs that will not merely "[ensure] the
|
||
|
continuity of the federal government in any national emergency-type
|
||
|
situation," as decreed by President Gerald Ford in Executive Order 11921,
|
||
|
but REPLACE the nation's Constitutional statecraft with a centralized
|
||
|
"command system."
|
||
|
<div>
|
||
|
Reproduced with permission from a special supplement to _The Spotlight_,
|
||
|
May 25, 1992. This text may be freely reproduced provided acknowledgement
|
||
|
to The Spotlight appears, including this address:
|
||
|
The SPOTLIGHT
|
||
|
300 Independence Avenue, SE
|
||
|
Washington, DC 20003</conspiracyFile>
|