Government Prepares For Next Big Disaster

By LARRY MARGASAK, Associated Press Writer

Before the next big hurricane's winds howl ashore, or a tsumani washes ashore, Homeland Security officials want an emergency communications network operating, emergency medical facilities treating patients, and teams dispatched to search for victims at the likely ground zero.

In the wake of congressional hearings that exposed the breathtaking failures of the federal response to Hurricane Katrina, the Bush administration is retooling its disaster plan to react more quickly to the next catastrophe.

Michael Brown, now the ex-chief of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, became the public face of Katrina's failure. But the administration is reviewing how other leaders also failed last August to execute a playbook approved just eight months earlier to handle such a disaster.

For example, Brown's boss -- Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff - did not invoke special powers in the National Response Plan that would have rushed federal aid to New Orleans when state and local officials said they were swamped.

The department rejected the authority, concluding that it should be invoked only for sudden catastrophic events that offer no time for preparation and not for slow-approaching hurricanes.

That will not happen next time, according to officials who described to The Associated Press some of the changes in the administration's evolving disaster response plan.

"There has to be a way to apply federal resources when state and local resources are overwhelmed," said Joel Bagnal, a special assistant to the president for homeland security who is involved in the administra- tion's lessons-learned review.

Chief among the changes to the original 426-page plan are several ideas for rushing federal resources to a stricken area. They include:

_Dropping small military or civilian vehicles, packed with communications gear, into a disaster zone by helicopter or driving them from nearby staging areas.

_Setting up portable hospitals with federal emergency medical teams to augment local facilities.

_Helping local and state police catch looters and snipers by providing federal law enforcement officers if requested.

White House spokesman Trent Duffy said Friday that the revamped National Response Plan is expected to be finalized in the coming weeks after meetings with hundreds of federal, state and government officials and individuals outside the government.

The union representative for FEMA headquarters workers worries about how well the agency will respond next time. FEMA reacted quickly to big disasters when it operated independently, he said, but fell short in its first big test as a member of the massive Homeland Security Department.

"You broke your toy and now it doesn't work," said Leo Bosner, himself a veteran FEMA disaster specialist.

Those on the front lines hope to have a unified philosophy that values flexibility and quick thinking to adapt solutions to a rapidly unfolding human disaster.

"When you have a disaster, nothing goes by any kind of plan," said Dr. Arthur Wallace, leader of the Oklahoma 1 FEMA medical team that was dispatched from its staging area too late to beat Katrina to New Orleans.

The administration officials and responders interviewed by the AP offered a few of their own horror stories that they do not want repeated. They also help illustrate changes in the evolving plan.

MEDICAL TEAMS: 36 HOURS LATE

Dr. Wallace's 34-member medical team from Oklahoma left its Houston staging area Aug. 28 after receiving a request from Louisiana officials to head for the Superdome.

Katrina made landfall in Louisiana just after 6 a.m. on Aug. 29, but the team did not arrive until that night. It did not receive its first patients until dawn on Aug. 30.

That was 36 hours after FEMA began reporting grave medical problems in the stadium, such as 400 people with special needs, 45 to 50 patients in need of hospitalization, and a dwindling supply of oxygen.

Wallace's team made it only as far as Baton Rouge the night before the storm came ashore because wind gusts had already made it impossible to reach the Superdome. The sick evacuees had to wait.

"The winds were buffeting the trucks pretty bad" when the team halted in the state capital, Wallace recalled.

In the future, the administration wants medical teams in position before the storm strikes. If for example, California has a major earth- quake and a lot of water, the administration wants people there on the spot. Likewise any coastal area, where a hurricane could strike on short notice.

EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS, COMMAND AND CONTROL

U.S. military communications with Louisiana and Mississippi officials were so poor that commanders were forced to use couriers to transmit messages, said Paul McHale, the assistant defense secretary for homeland defense.

FEMA's "Red October" mobile command center rode out the storm at Barksdale Air Force Base near Shreveport, La., six hours from New Orleans. The oversize trailer can establish communications in a stricken area and serve as the nerve center for directing emergency relief. But it did not arrive in the city until several days after Katrina had struck.

Bagnal said the administration wants to replace the "clunky" FEMA vehicles with smaller ones that could be kept nearby and either driven or flown to where they are needed. Bagnal noted that "ideally, there should be vehicles to travel easily across a desert area or through mud or even several feet of water."

The lack of equipment was not the only problem. White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said it took 10 to 12 days before a fully staffed, multi-agency field office for coordinating the response was operating at Katrina's ground zero. Even then, she said, the staff was thrown together with responders who hadn't worked with each other.

"Going forward, we definitely need a more capable, rapidly deployed and experienced staff that works together on a routine basis -- in noncrisis situations as well as catastrophic incidents," Perino said.

QUICKER DEPLOYMENT OF ACTIVE DUTY MILITARY FORCES

For several days, thousands of people at the New Orleans convention center had no food, water or medical help. National Guard forces were preoccupied with rooftop rescues and lacked the manpower to feed or assist hungry refugees.

"Every single resource we had from Tuesday (Aug. 30) through Thursday (Sept. 1) was committed to picking people off of rooftops and saving people," recalled Louisiana National Guard Lt. Col. Jacques Thibodeaux, a deputy U.S. marshal in civilian life.

It wasn't until Friday, Sept. 2, that Thibodeaux was told to lead a rescue mission to the convention center. He cobbled together a force of 1,000 from diverse units representing five states.

"We took 30 minutes to secure the area. In three hours we began feeding people. In 30 hours, we had evacuated 19,000," Thibodeaux said.

The first active duty soldiers did not reach New Orleans until he evening of Sept. 3.

The U.S. Northern Command, in Colorado Springs, Colo., had been tracking Katrina before the storm made landfall and could have tapped active duty assets. But the lone request the command received from federal officials during Katrina's first day was for six helicopters, spokesman Michael Kucharek said.

The White House is pressing Congress to establish the exact circumstances and legal authority that would determine when the active military should take over a disaster.

HELP FOR STATE AND LOCAL POLICE

The 18-member, Dallas-based Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms special response team had the very skills needed to cope with looters and snipers, but its members did not arrive in New Orleans until Sept. 2.

"By the time we got here, it wasn't as bad as the first nights after the storm," team leader Charles Smith said.

The team was trained in serving arrest warrants and executing search warrants, hostage situations, rescues, and riot and crowd control. And Smith brought an additional asset -- he was raised and once stationed in New Orleans.

The team showed its capabilities two nights after arriving when gunshots were reported in a neighborhood. Smith dispatched agents with night-vision goggles and, as a helicopter appeared overhead, the team observed a shooter in a four-unit housing project. Smith personally talked two men out of the building and arrested one without firing a shot.

In the future, the administration wants such teams ready to move as soon as local law enforcement needs assistance.

COMMUNICATING WITH THE PUBLIC

Before Katrina struck, FEMA had dispatched a sizable public affairs contingent to Louisiana. Their mission, according to the National Response Plan, was "to coordinate a message," said Jeff Karonis, a Homeland Security public affairs specialist.

"Several were experienced communicators in hurricanes of the past. They know what the issues are," he said.

But the messages to the public often were confusing, leaving vital questions unanswered. When would buses rescue people from the Superdome? When would rescuers arrive at the convention center? Was crime rampant?

Russ Knocke, the chief spokesman for the Homeland Security Department, said the specialists were hampered by "a significant amount of inaccurate reporting" that "added confusion and added fuel to the fire."

Louisiana officials said the federal experts didn't coordinate with them. "I don't think there was ever a meeting about message. It wasn't a partnership," said Denise Bottcher, Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco's spokeswoman.

In the future, Knocke said, Homeland Security is "deeply committed to working and communicating with state and local officials. Now that we have internet and 'thousands' of radio and television stations, there is no reason everyone involved cannot get the same message."

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press.

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