DeLay points to local officials
House cancels hearings; joint panel to look at Katrina response
WASHINGTON
(CNN) -- The House majority leader late Tuesday tried to deflect
criticism of the federal response to Hurricane Katrina by saying "the
emergency response system was set up to work from the bottom up," then
announced a short time later that House hearings examining that
response had been canceled.
Rep. Tom DeLay, R-Texas, said
House Republican leaders instead want a joint House-Senate panel set up
to conduct a "congressional review" of the issue.
Tempers flared
Tuesday during a contentious closed-door meeting between House members
and Cabinet secretaries in charge of directing Katrina relief efforts.
A Republican representative stood up and said, "All of you deserve
failing grades. The response was a disaster," CNN was told by lawmakers
emerging from the meeting.
But DeLay countered that assessment
later in a news conference by saying that the onus for responding to
emergencies fell to local officials.
"It's the local officials
trying to handle the problem. When they can't handle the problem, they
go to the state, and the state does what they can to, and if they need
assistance from FEMA and the federal government they ask for it and
it's delivered," DeLay said.
He added that Alabama and
Mississippi did a much better job of responding quickly than Louisiana.
Alabama and Mississippi have Republican governors.
The Senate
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee said Tuesday it
has begun an investigation into the government's response to the
tragedy. Chairwoman Susan Collins, R-Maine, said she expects public
hearings to start next week.
Critics argue that the government
took far too long to mobilize aid, causing thousands of storm victims
to languish for days in the New Orleans Superdome without food, water
and other necessities.
Michael Chertoff, secretary of the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS), has come under intense criticism
for the federal response to Katrina. The hurricane and subsequent
flooding have devastated the city of New Orleans.
Chertoff, who
is heading the federal response to the storm, argued for days after the
disaster that no one foresaw such a combination of events -- even
though, in fact, lawmakers, scientists, and reporters had long warned
that if a major hurricane hit the city it would be a disaster.
Earlier Tuesday, House leaders met with President Bush.
House
Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California told media afterward that
she was upset with the Katrina rescue effort and felt that Michael
Brown, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA),
should shoulder much of the blame, and lacked the credentials to do his
good job.
"Michael Brown, the head of FEMA, brings nothing to the
table for the level of competence and accountability," Pelosi said. "He
should not continue in that job unless we want a continuation of the
shortcomings that we have had in the response."
In a memo dated
August 29 -- the day Katrina made landfall -- Brown asked Chertoff for
1,000 DHS volunteers willing to deploy as soon as possible "for a
two-week minimum field assignment" in hurricane-struck states.
The memo was obtained by the media Tuesday.
In it, Brown writes, "We anticipate needing at least 1,000 additional DHS employees within 48 hours and 2,000 within 7 days."
According
to Natalie Rule, a spokeswoman for FEMA, the employees were needed to
answer phones, do community relations and help set up field hospitals,
what she called "non-emergency tasks." They are not first-responders,
she said.
"We already had all of our first-responder teams
pre-deployed -- 32 teams in all -- who went in and staged in and around
the hurricane zone and were ready to go by Sunday. This is deployment
that requires that the governor make a request to the federal
government," Rule said.
In closing, Brown says in the memo,
"Thank you for your consideration in helping us meet our
responsibilities in this near catastrophic event." Attached to the memo
is a list of requirements for employees heading to the hurricane area,
including personal supplies, contact points and physical requirements.
One
part of the attachment advises employees to "convey a positive image of
disaster operations to government officials, community organizations
and the general public."
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