I'm not sure what you mean by a straw target, but the battle plan for a hurricane hitting New Orleans did not envision so many people being left in the city. Was that reasonable, and was the evacuation plan reasonable? I don't know for sure, but I suspect that it was. Certainly there were hundreds of school buses right there in New Orleans that were never used. In any case, there was never any discussion of whether the battle plan itself was flawed before the entire media complex started dumping on FEMA. Whether or not FEMA did a worse than expected job really had nothing to do with the perception that it had done a worse than expected job. The severity of the catastrophe and the much greater number of people who did not evacuate were the main drivers of the perception.
I call it straw because it tries to shift all the fault onto the city. Wolrob specifically said 'those people shouldn'a been there'
Any reasonable disaster plan would take into account that an evacuation can't be perfect, and we actually know that FEMA prepositioned enough supplies to care for 15,000 people for 3 days. So that is something of a red herring to imply that FEMA's plan was unrealistic because no evacuation is 100% effective.
And yet when that was seen to be inadequate the repsonse was to make a hash of continued supply.
As for the article you linked to, I would take it more seriously if the author hadn't misspelled the word "breaching."
You gotta find a reason to dismiss, I guess. A typo is as good as a real argument in your book.
This takes time. First, you have to recognize that the state and local authorities are dropping the ball, and then you have to prompt them to do the right thing or grant the federal government authority to take over.
In the wake of most hurricanes the dafult assumption should be state agencies will be overwhelmed and be prepared. Witt seemed to have no trouble realizing this. What was Brownie's problem?
Even after it was painfully obvious to everyone that the situation was falling apart Brown showed he was completely clueless. I beleive the media even called him on it "How can we know these things are happening but you don't?"
People seem to forget that all of this supposed incompetence and chaos happened in just the handful of days after a huge catastrophe occurred. The levees were breached mid-day on Monday, and by Saturday, the situation was under control.
Oh yeah, that's a real notch in Brownie's belt.
In the interim, the US Coast Guard rescued over 30,000 people.
Mostly by working independently of Brownie's mismanagement.
I think people just had unrealistic expectations about how responsive the federal government could be. In fact, it's not clear that anybody was permanently harmed by the alleged delay - inconvenienced maybe, but there have been far worse consequences of bureaucratic bungling that have been given a pass by the media.
Nobody expected Brownie to walk in to Louisiana and lift New Orleans out of the water with his Force powers, but his mismanagment screwd the pooch on multiple levels.
Do you remember how long it took to solve the problem of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf? Before I give you the answer, just try to think back and come up with an estimate yourself.*
Solving the problem involved a very tricky underwater capping procedure, its relevance to Katrina is pretty sketchy. Did FEMA interfere with cleanup supplies being sent to the coastlines? Did they grab boats to help with the cleanup and send them elsewhere?
How do you know this? I've read the so-called criticisms on the wiki page, and they look pretty thin if you ask me. You're always going to be able to point to a few fubars in any government undertaking. I was actually surprised at how few there were and how immaterial they were.
I expect some screwups. I don't expect
that level of screwup. I didn't expect that someone so ccritical on the chain of command would be so clueless about what was going on in NO and elsewhere on the coast.
He actually was not that inexperienced. He had been at FEMA since 2001 and had been in the top position for two years by the time Katrina hit.
And all the while he treated the FEMA as nothing more than a place to put his fellow patronage job people.
Before that he had been a top level manager. People made fun of the fact that he ran some Arabian horse show association, but a managerial job is a managerial job.
Except that he failed there as well. He was
forced to resign.
There's a common thread that runs through all jobs like that. You have to delegate tasks and monitor who's doing a good job of completing them.
So maybe hiring politcal cronies and displacing the veteran emergency management people wasn't a very good idea, eh?
For the most part, people think that Bush 41 was a competent President.
I'd like to know what people you talk to then. Because even my most conservative of friends think he was an unmitigated disaster.
So perhaps you should consider the proposition that major disasters like Hurricane Andrew or Hurricane Katrina make everybody look bad.
* 87 days
They make your incompetent patronage job 'managers' look even worse. And then people suffer and die.
FEMA was competent with
proper management under Witt. But GWB just felt it was a place to tos incompetent cronies.