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Top US Official Seeks Emergency Agency's Overhaul In Wake Of Katrina Debacle

As Chertoff spoke, authorities in Mexico ordered the evacuation of resorts on the Yucatan peninsula threatened by Hurricane Wilma, the strongest hurricane recorded in the Atlantic.
Washington (AFP) Oct 19, 2005
US Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said on Wednesday that the much-criticized Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) had been "overwhelmed" by Hurricane Katrina and needed to be completely reorganized.

"Although FEMA pre-positioned significant numbers of personnel, assets and resources before the hurricane made landfall, we now know its capabilities were simply overwhelmed by the magnitude of this storm," Chertoff told a House of Representatives' committee looking into the Katrina disaster.

As powerful Hurricane Wilma threatened the US state of Florida on Wednesday, Chertoff proposed to overhaul the federal agency to enable it to respond to large-scale natural catastrophes.

Among his recommendations, Chertoff said the agency must improve its logistical ability to move supplies to a disaster area, recruit more experienced experts, upgrade communications that failed during the storm and ensure its contracting is efficient and honest.

FEMA's procurement decisions have been questioned for hurricane relief work and it recently reopened bidding for contracts in storm-hit areas.

Chertoff said FEMA also needed to adapt the way it requires disaster victims to register for aid at a particular location. This method "does not hold up when a vast area is affected by a catastrophic event," he said.

One solution was to deploy teams over a broad area to register recipients of aid, he said.

The Department of Homeland Security planned to establish reconnaissance teams that will move in quickly after a disaster to provide timely information for the government's relief effort.

"During the Katrina response, our efforts were significantly hampered by a lack of information from the ground," he said.

One of the worst natural disasters in US history, Hurricane Katrina struck the southern coast along the Gulf of Mexico on August 29, killing more than 1,200 people.

The federal government was widely criticized for its slow relief effort amid chaotic scenes of hurricane survivors stranded for days in New Orleans.

President George W. Bush later admitted the response had been flawed and said he took responsibility for the federal government's role.

Michael Brown quit as head of FEMA last month after a torrent of criticism over his handling of the disaster. He was replaced by David Paulison.

As Chertoff spoke, authorities in Mexico ordered the evacuation of resorts on the Yucatan peninsula threatened by Hurricane Wilma, the strongest hurricane recorded in the Atlantic.

With Honduras, Nicaragua, Jamaica and other Caribbean islands on alert, the National Hurricane Center said Wilma was headed for the US state of Florida this weekend.

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FEMA Computers Hampered During Katrina
Chicago (UPI) Oct 10, 2005
Faulty federal computer networks may have been partly to blame for the government's lackadaisical response to major storms last summer - and Hurricane Katrina this year, experts tell UPI's Networking.



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