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New Bush Administration Failures During Hurricane Katrina Revealed
June 28, 2007 |
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This post, written by Satyam Khanna, originally appeared on Think Progress
Three new investigations shed further light on how the Bush administration betrayed Gulf Coast residents during Hurricane Katrina, and how New Orleans and other affected areas are still suffering from federal waste and incompetence.
Some key highlights of the reports:
EPA allowed toxic chemicals to harm poor Katrina victims: A GAO report revealed that EPA publicly downplayed the risk of asbestos inhalation, which is often released during home demolition, to city residents and failed to deploy air monitors in predominantly African-American neighborhoods. Furthermore, EPA waited nearly eight months to inform residents that short-term visits could expose them to dangerous levels of asbestos and mold.
FEMA ignored its own hurricane plan: Prior to Katrina, FEMA created a "Southeast Louisiana Hurricane Backup Plan" which forecasted specific consequences and action-plans in the event of a hurricane. But "post-Katrina FEMA documents demonstrate that that the plan was never implemented." The day before Katrina hit, FEMA Deputy Director Patrick Rhode sent an e-mail to Michael Brown's assistant with the subject line, "copy of New Orleans cat plan," stating, "I never got one -- I think Brown got my copy -- did you get one?"
Satyam Khanna is a Research Associate for The Progress Report and ThinkProgress.org at the Center for American Progress.
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