bgirldeb said:
I guess my frustration is that it didn't seem like NO had much of a "Plan" at all. I know from living in FL that throughout hurricane season you can pick up hurricane preparation material for free from many local stores that tells you what to keep on hand throughout the season and what to do if there is a hurricane. They also have specific zones and routes and evacuate people in an organized manner. I would think a large city like NO with so many below the poverty level would at least have a plan to get the ones living in the most dangerous zones first, and then the next dangerous zone, etc.
oops- I added the NG article to my post, but deleted the other one... fixing it now
That's what I'm saying as well - where were the plans to take care of these people? It's all well and good to say "Well, they didn't have time". Well, guess what, they got as much time as any other hurricane target gets. And KNOWING that the water doesn't just come in and then go back out, as it does in most hurricane scenarios, they had a responsibility to have a plan in place to take care of the people that couldn't get out.
I pulled out the Oct 2004 NG last night to read the article, and reading the first page was like reading a newspaper report on NOLA in the last 5 days.
And I'm not laying this just on mayor Nagin - this is something that should have been in place for decades. There's a very good editorial in the Washington Post this morning about how they had begun to make plans for mass evacuations, most notably, the plan to use cruise ships get people out that had no other way to escape. Unfortunately, these plans were only in the early stages of development. Time ran out. That they had only begun to make plans is a travesty.
momof2inPA said:
The day after the hurricane, the governor and a senator from Louisiana were on tv for a press conference, and every answer to a question, was that FEMA was on the scene and FEMA would solve their problems. They were not only NOT in the way of the federal effort, they were solely dependent on their organization and leadership. You can blame the lack of local plans and organization before the hurricane, but after if hit, FEMA should have established command and control and handled the entire evacuation and rescue effort. They did not-- or they did a horrible job of it. The Coast Guard did a lovely job of rescuing people from roof tops, but FEMA whose job, day in and day out, is to plan for and execute in emergency situations was AWFUL. Really, heads should roll and the entire agency should be re-examined, but our federal government owes the people of this country a better system.
ITA that FEMA has not performed - had it been up to me, Brown would have been fired on Tuesday and the next in command put in control. I don't see how he (or she) could have done any worse than was already being done.
But the bottom line is that under the current system, FEMA is there to coordinate efforts that are requested by state emergenecy management officials. The command and control you speak of is for the distribution and coordination of services and relief. But the local officials are in the best position to know what is needed and where, and it is up to them to forward those needs to FEMA. That wasn't being done.
For example, much has been made of Brown not knowing about the people at the convention center, even though it had been on TV. Putting aside the fact that I doubt the FEMA director was spending his time flipping through the news channels, why hadn't FEMA been alerted by local officials about the convention center?
And this statement in your post says volumes, though I doubt you meant it that way:
They were not only NOT in the way of the federal effort, they were solely dependent on their organization and leadership .
You're right, there was little to no leadership at the local and state level in NOLA.