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1. Tuesday, January 24, 2006 11:24 AM
wowBOBwow Pre-Katrina Warnings Not Heeded by Bush Administration


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Pre-Katrina Warnings Not Heeded

By LARA JAKES JORDAN, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Senators lambasted the Bush administration on Tuesday for failing to heed devastating predictions from a hurricane preparedness test that began a year before Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast.

The top Democrat on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee also accused the White House of trying to block or delay the panel's inquiry into the government's sluggish response to Katrina.

The preparedness exercise that began in July 2004, dubbed Hurricane Pam, warned that a Category 3 storm would overwhelm the New Orleans area with flood waters, killing up to 60,000 people and destroying buildings and roads. State and federal officials were concluding Pam's findings when Katrina, an actual Category 4 storm, roared ashore on Aug. 29.

"As a dry run for the real thing, Pam should have been a wake-up call that could not be ignored," said Sen. Susan Collins (news, bio, voting record), R-Maine, chair of the Senate committee's examination of Pam's findings at a Tuesday hearing. "Instead, it is apparent that a more appropriate name for Pam should have been 'Cassandra' — the mythical prophet who warned of disasters but whom no one believed."

Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., said Pam gave the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Homeland Security Department "explicit notice" that a catastrophic storm in New Orleans would require urgent aid from Washington to state and local response officials.

"But despite these warnings from Pam, preparations for Hurricane Katrina were shockingly poor," said Lieberman.

White House spokesman Scott McClellan said the administration is conducting a lessons learned review and "I'm not going to do a play-by-play analysis."

"And we've also been taking steps to make sure we prevent some of those problems that occurred from recurring in future response efforts," McClellan said. "And that's what we'll continue to do."

A month before Katrina hit, state and federal officials working on the Pam exercise estimated that government plans to evacuate people from New Orleans were only 10 percent complete.

"If you think soup lines in the Depression were long, wait till you see lines" at collection points in New Orleans, Transportation Department regional emergency officer Don Day said at a July 29 briefing with federal and state authorities. Notes of the briefing, as recorded by Baton Rouge-based contractors Innovative Emergency Management Inc., were examined at the hearing.

"We're at less than 10 percent done with this ... planning when you consider the buses and the people," Day said at the briefing.

Lieberman also accused the White House of trying to stall a Senate investigation into the government's response to Katrina by failing to produce requested documents and prohibiting federal officials from answering questions. The inquiry is scheduled to be completed in March.

"This assertion of a kind of virtual immunity of the White House from this inquiry has obviously frustrated our committee's ability to learn and tell the full story of Katrina," Lieberman said. "In my opinion, it is unacceptable."

However, Lieberman noted, the committee did receive an e-mail sent to the White House Situation Room hours before Katrina hit, warning that the storm's surge could breach levees and leave New Orleans flooded for weeks or months.

The e-mail included an Aug. 28 report by the Homeland Security Department's National Infrastructure Simulation and Analysis Center, which concluded that a Category 4 or 5 hurricane would cause severe damage in the city, including power outages and a direct economic hit of up to $10 billion for the first week.

"Overall, the impacts described herein are conservative," stated the report, which was sent to Homeland Security's office for infrastructure protection.

"Any storm rated Category 4 or greater ... will likely lead to severe flooding and/or levee breaching, leaving the New Orleans metro area submerged for weeks or months," said the report.

The documents are the latest indication that the federal government knew beforehand of the catastrophic damage that a storm of Katrina's magnitude could cause. The Bush administration has been lambasted for its lackluster response to Katrina and its aftermath, including criticism that the government should have known a hurricane of that strength posed a danger to the area's levees and was unprepared to cope with it.

Homeland Security spokesman Russ Knocke said he was not familiar with the documents but that the levees situation was one likely reason the government urged an evacuation of New Orleans before the storm hit.

"We're in the process of participating in a large after-action report," Knocke said. "We're deeply committed to finding out what worked and didn't work, and apply those lessons learned going forward."

 
2. Tuesday, January 24, 2006 11:32 AM
wowBOBwow RE: Pre-Katrina Warnings Not Heeded by Bush Administration


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Sorry to double post, but it's eerie how fitting this song is. The proud people of New Orleans have been here before, but it has apparently taught us nothing:

LOUISIANA 1927

Randy Newman Sung by Randy Newman, Marcia Ball, Aaron Neville, and many others

What has happened down here, is the winds have changed Clouds roll in from the north and it started to rain

It rained real hard, and it rained for a real long time Six feet of water in the streets of Evangeline

Louisiana Louisiana They tried to wash us away, They tried to wash us away Oh Louisiana, Louisiana They're trying to wash us away, They're trying to wash us away

The river rose all day, the river rose all night Some people got lost in the flood some people got away alright

The river had busted through clear down to Plaquemines Six feet of water in the streets of Evangeline

Louisiana Louisiana They tried to wash us away, They tried to wash us away Oh Louisiana, Louisiana They're trying to wash us away, They're trying to wash us away

President Bush come down, in a railroad train With his little fat man with a note pad in his hand President say "Little fat man, oh isn't it a shame, What the river has done to this poor farmer's land"

Louisiana Louisiana They tried to wash us away, They tried to wash us away Oh Louisiana, Louisiana They're trying to wash us away, They're trying to wash us away

 
3. Tuesday, January 24, 2006 1:10 PM
nuart RE: Pre-Katrina Warnings Not Heeded by Bush Administration


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Oh acres of guffaws over that -ass song, Dave! Too good! Randy never was a great thinker but I "heart" LA was a heck of a song.


If these guys persist, I can only imagine what Trey and Matt will do with their next marionette flick! The material they provide on a daily basis is -- why, the best comics couldn't keep up the pace -- PRICELESS!

 

Thanks for the morning yuk. That really was great! I'll bet it's even better with sound. "They tried to wash us away." (Get it? Bush and the racist Republicans tried to "wash" them away.) And then the "little fat man" bit! Hahaha. I think it was Ann Coulter who once noted that the left loves no critique so much as to call a Republican fat or to expose him as a closet gay. Ironic.

Now don't go calling me a Red Meanie who laughs about the misfortunes of New Orleans (not to mention Alabama, Mississippi or the rest of Louisiana, lest we forget) because that would be untrue. Trust me, I've done my part and felt my share of the pain that fellow Americans have suffered as a result of the worst natural catastrophe in the history of the US. But I am laughing at the song, the concept, and the unadultrated silliness of it all.

Susan


     
“Half a truth is often a great lie.”

 

Ben Franklin

 
4. Tuesday, January 24, 2006 3:43 PM
wowBOBwow RE: Pre-Katrina Warnings Not Heeded by Bush Administration


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Hey, I'm glad you find the situation to be oh so hilarious, and seem to be completely untroubled by the fact that this has happened again, with so much history and forewarning available to the government, which basically at all levels sat on it's hands. Good job, Brownie! I don't mean to imply that Bush created the hurricane or was overjoyed about it, but is it possible that the response could have been greater and more organized had the residents in need been nearer and dearer to his heart? I find this to be entirely possible, especially if this had happened in a ritzier environment (although the rich have the means to evacuate themselves) affecting those who are, you know, his "base" (some of us call them the "elite"). Maybe FEMA just needs to watch a little more news programming, so that they actually know as much about crisis situations that they are in charge of as does say, your neighborhood garbage man. One of the funny things about such gross incompetance is that it can look quite intentional when it goes unremedied for so long. As always though, I'm glad to supply you with some unintentional humor at the expense of the poor and displaced.

 
5. Tuesday, January 24, 2006 10:48 PM
John Neff RE: Pre-Katrina Warnings Not Heeded by Bush Administration


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Snnnnnn-ek-ek-uuuhhhh-nnnnunh! *** Snore*** Huh? Oh, just woke up. HEY! For the last time! The federal gubbamint is only there for AFTER the disasters!!! The N'Awlins City/County guvmint and the State Glubbamint are the two LEAD authorities who had to act FIRST! It's NAGIN and then the STATE that let down the people of New Orleans. Hang it on them!!! ***Snore*** Musta been a bad dream...

 

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