Katrina Report: No Chain Of Command
Homeland Security Calls Findings 'Premature And Unprofessional'
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An unidentified resident deals with the high waters from Hurricane Katrina as he awaits rescue, Aug. 29, 2005, in the 8th Ward of New Orleans. (AP/St. Petersburg Times)
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New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin testifies before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committees on Capitol Hill, Wednesday, Feb. 1, 2006. (AP)
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New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, listens to public reaction following the release of the Bring New Orleans Back Commission master plan, Friday, Jan. 27, 2006, in New Orleans, La. (AP)
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Former FEMA director Michael Brown. (AP)
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Homeland Security spokesman Russ Knocke said the GAO's findings were riddled with errors, particularly in its criticism about whether declaring Katrina a catastrophic disaster would have speeded up relief efforts.
He said federal officials and supplies were already in the Gulf Coast before Katrina hit, and that an index in the response plan that deals with catastrophes is only used for unexpected disasters.
The report, Knocke said in a statement, "is premature and unprofessional. Apart from its obvious errors, it displays a significant misunderstanding of core aspects of the Katrina response that could have easily been corrected in the most basic conversations with DHS leaders."
The report was a stinging slap to the Homeland Security Department, which oversees the Federal Emergency Management Agency and issued the National Response Plan last year.
The report by GAO, Congress' investigative arm, was presented to a special House inquiry of the government's response to the storm. The committee, chaired by Republican Rep. Tom Davis, is expected to release its own findings by Feb. 15. Additionally, a Senate panel will conclude a separate investigation by mid-March, and the White House is completing its own review, conducted by homeland security adviser Frances Fragos Townsend.
"I'm very hopeful that our final report will answer a lot of questions the American people have," Davis said after being presented with the GAO report. "The most obvious being: How could our government fail so badly?"
Asked by reporters whether Chertoff should have been the federal point person leading the response, GAO Comptroller General David M. Walker said: "That's up to the president of the United States."
"It could have been Secretary Chertoff, it could have been somebody on his staff," Walker said. "That's up to the president."
The report also found that other federal agencies had an "incomplete understanding of roles and responsibilities" under the National Response Plan — one area that could be solved with better training for disasters. However, it praised the Coast Guard, the Pentagon, the U.S. Postal Service and the National Finance Center for taking a "lean forward" approach to preparing for and responding to Katrina.
Though Brown was named as the top federal officer in the Gulf Coast, his authority was unclear, the report found, leading to a "disjointed" response from all federal agencies.
"In the absence of timely and decisive action and clear leadership responsibility and accountability, there were multiple chains of command," the report found.
It also noted "a myriad of approaches and processes for requesting and providing assistance, and confusion about who should be advised of requests and what resources would be provided within specific time frames."
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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