Is U.S. Ready for Hurricane Season?
Chertoff Expresses Confidence, but Katrina's Impact Lingers
The Army Corps of Engineers recently said that the large floodgates designed to protect central New Orleans will not be ready until July.
(By Mario Tama -- Getty Images)
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Wednesday, May 24, 2006
U.S. disaster-preparedness officials declared themselves ready yesterday for the June 1 onset of hurricane season, amid mounting anxiety in Gulf Coast states hit by last year's devastating storms that recovery efforts and repairs to the nation's emergency response system remain incomplete.
Federal authorities have stockpiled four times as much food and ice as they had before hurricanes Katrina and Rita struck last year, supplies capable of sustaining 1 million people for at least seven days, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff and top U.S. military commanders said at a news conference. The government has also spent $800 million improving National Guard communications and has forged the closest civilian and military disaster response command structure ever, they said.
"We are . . . much more prepared as a nation than we have ever been to confront a major hurricane," Chertoff said. He called on the nation's 60 million coastal residents to prepare their families for disasters and to heed any warnings that authorities issue.
But the claims came with hundreds of thousands of displaced victims from last year's hurricanes still living in more than 100,000 trailers in Louisiana and Mississippi, creating the potential for a new evacuation and housing crisis if another storm strikes. States and the Federal Emergency Management Agency are rushing to overhaul the tracking and movement of disaster supplies, but efforts are uncoordinated, state leaders warn.
FEMA's hurricane operations plan is unfinished, state officials said, and the agency remains 15 percent understaffed. Repairs to New Orleans's levee system by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are incomplete, and a state commission recently warned that 40,000 Floridians could face a catastrophic flood if a storm hits weakened flood-control systems near Lake Okeechobee.
"Many of the concerns we had are being [addressed], but it's being done as we speak," said W. Craig Fugate, director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management. Four hurricanes hit that state in 2004.
"It's kind of a race: Can we get all the things people needed before the 2005 hurricane season done before this hurricane season?" Fugate said.
Mindful of Katrina's toll of more than 1,800 lives, $100 billion in U.S. taxpayer-funded losses and the political standing of President Bush, federal officials have embarked on a campaign to educate residents in hurricane country about preparedness in the days leading up to June 1. They are also trying to mend the image of homeland security agencies and implement hundreds of recommendations from blistering congressional and White House inquiries.
"Last year we didn't have a clue," said the acting FEMA director, R. David Paulison. The agency will put satellite tracking devices on trucks leaving its two largest logistics centers -- in Denton, Tex., and Atlanta -- to avoid a repeat of post-Katrina efforts, when critical supplies such as ice and generators arrived days or weeks late, sometimes after circling the country.
FEMA will test streamlined command procedures with states over the next two weeks, after evacuation drills yesterday in Louisiana and recently in Texas, Mississippi and elsewhere, Chertoff said.
"We're ready for this upcoming hurricane season -- assuming that the American public does their part and they get ready as well," said George W. Foresman, DHS undersecretary for preparedness.
Officials also said that DHS has made major disaster-management changes in response to blunt criticism of how Chertoff, top aides and the White House oversaw the response to Katrina.


