Eintime Conversion for education and research 05-14-2006 @
17:22:06 Copyrighted by originating associated source: Original |
Leaders Lacking Disaster Experience
[Politicians think (and focus on) that good campaign operatives are good policy-makers in general. No, they continue to focus on how to win political campaigns not solve social and ecnomomic problems.]
[So much for appointing the best of the best of the best]
Leaders Lacking Disaster Experience
'Brain Drain' At Agency Cited
By Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, September 9, 2005; A01
Five of eight top Federal Emergency Management Agency officials came
to their posts with virtually no experience in handling disasters
and now lead an agency whose ranks of seasoned crisis managers have thinned
dramatically since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
FEMA's top three leaders -- Director Michael D. Brown, Chief of Staff
Patrick J. Rhode and Deputy Chief of Staff Brooks D. Altshuler -- arrived
with ties to President Bush's 2000 campaign or to the White House advance
operation, according to the agency. Two other senior operational
jobs are filled by a former Republican lieutenant governor of Nebraska anda
U.S. Chamber of Commerce official who was once a political operative.
Meanwhile, veterans such as U.S. hurricane specialist Eric Tolbert and World
Trade Center disaster managers Laurence W. Zensinger and Bruce P. Baughman
-- who led FEMA's offices of response, recovery and preparedness, respectively
-- have left since 2003, taking jobs as consultants or state emergency managers,
according to current and former officials.
Because of the turnover, three of the five FEMA chiefs for
natural-disaster-related operations and nine of 10 regional directors are
working in an acting capacity, agency officials said.
Patronage appointments to the crisis-response agency are nothing new to
Washington administrations. But inexperience in FEMA's top ranks is emerging
as a key concern of local, state and federal leaders as investigators begin
to sift through what the government has admitted was a bungled response to
Hurricane Katrina.
"FEMA requires strong leadership and experience because state and local
governments rely on them," said Trina Sheets, executive director of the National
Emergency Management Association. "When you don't have trained, qualified
people in those positions, the program suffers as a whole."
Last week's greatest foe was, of course, a storm of such magnitude that it
"overwhelmed" all levels of government, according to Sen. Susan Collins
(R-Maine). And several top FEMA officials are well-regarded by state and
private counterparts in disaster preparedness and response.
They include Edward G. Buikema, acting director of response since February,
and Kenneth O. Burris, acting chief of operations, a career firefighter and
former Marietta, Ga., fire chief.
But scorching criticism has been aimed at FEMA, and it starts at the top
with Brown, who has admitted to errors in responding to Hurricane Katrina
and the flooding in New Orleans. The Oklahoma native, 50, was hired to the
agency after a rocky tenure as commissioner of a horse sporting group by
former FEMA director Joe M. Allbaugh, the 2000 Bush campaign manager and
a college friend of Brown's.
Rhode, Brown's chief of staff, is a former television reporter who came to
Washington as advance deputy director for Bush's Austin-based 2000 campaign
and then the White House. He joined FEMA in April 2003 after stints at the
Commerce Department and the U.S. Small Business Administration.
Altshuler is a former presidential advance man. His predecessor, Scott Morris,
was a media strategist for Bush with the Austin firm Maverick Media.
David I. Maurstad, who stepped down as Nebraska lieutenant governor in 2001
to join FEMA, has served asacting director for risk reduction and federal
insurance administrator since June 2004. Daniel A. Craig, a onetime political
fundraiser and campaign adviser, came to FEMA in 2001 from the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce, where he directed the eastern regional office, after working
as a lobbyist for the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association.
Department of Homeland Security spokesman Russ Knocke said Brown has managed
more than 160 natural disasters as FEMA general counsel and deputy director
since 2001, "hands-on experience [that] cannot be understated. Other leadership
at FEMA brings particular skill sets -- policy management leadership, for
example."
The agency has a deep bench of career professionals, said FEMA spokeswoman
Nicol Andrews, including two dozen senior field coordinators and Gil Jamieson,
director of the National Incident Management System. "Simply because folks
who have left the agency have a disagreement with how it's being run doesn't
necessarily indicate that there is a lack of experience leading it," she
said.
Andrews said the "acting" designation for regional officials is a designation
that signifies that they are FEMA civil servants -- not political appointees.
Touring the wrecked Gulf Coast with Secretary of Homeland Security Michael
Chertoff yesterday, Vice President Cheney also defended FEMA leaders, saying,
"We're always trying to strike the right balance" between political appointees
and "career professionals that fill the jobs underneath them."
But experts inside and out of government said a "brain drain" of experienced
disaster hands throughout the agency, hastened in part by the appointment
of leaders without backgrounds in emergency management, has weakened the
agency's ability to respond to natural disasters. Some security experts and
congressional critics say the exodus was fueled by a bureaucratic reshuffling
in Washington in 2003, when FEMA was stripped of its independent Cabinet-level
status and folded into the Department of Homeland Security.
Emergency preparedness has atrophied as a result, some analysts said, extending
from Washington to localities.
FEMA "has gone downhill within the department, drained of resources and
leadership," said I.M. "Mac" Destler, a professor at the University of Maryland
School of Public Policy. "The crippling of FEMA was one important reason
why it failed."
Richard A. Andrews, former emergency services director for the state of
California and a member of the president's Homeland Security Advisory Council,
said state and local failures were critical in the Katrina response, but
competence, funding and political will in Washington were also lacking.
"I do not think fundamentally this is an organizational issue," Andrews said.
"You need people in there who have both experience and the confidence of
the president, who are able to fight and articulate what FEMA's mission and
role is, and who understand how emergency management works."
The agency's troubles are no secret. The Partnership for Public Service,
a nonprofit group that promotes careers in federal government, ranked FEMA
last of 28 agencies studied in 2003.
In its list of best places to work in the government, a 2004 survey
by the American Federation of Government Employees found that of 84 career
FEMA professionals who responded, only 10 people ranked agency leaders excellent
or good.
An additional 28 said the leadership was fair and 33 called it
poor.
More than 50 said they would move to another agency if they could
remain at the same pay grade, and 67 ranked the agency as poorer since its
merger into the Department of Homeland Security.
(Original Len: 8617 Condensed Len: 8508)
Created by Eintime:CondenseHtmlFile on 060514 @ 17:22:06
CMD=RAGSALL
(Len=8675)