Joe ([info]joeatlarge) wrote,
  • Mood: disgusted

Let them have mops and sensitivity training

Details continue to emerge about just how calamitously disorganized the response to Katrina was, especially from FEMA. CNN reports the following stories:

**Dr. Bong Mui and his staff, evacuated with 300 patients after three hellish days at Chalmette Medical Center, arrived at the New Orleans airport, and were amazed to see hundreds of sick people. They offered to help. But, the doctor told CNN, FEMA officials said they were worried about legal liability. "They told us that, you know, you could help us by mopping the floor." And so they mopped, while people died around them. "I started crying," he recalled. "We felt like we could help, and were not allowed to do anything."

**Steve Simpson, sheriff of Loudoun County, Virginia, sent 22 deputies equipped with food and water to last seven days. Their 14-car caravan, including four all-terrain vehicles, was on the road just three hours when they were told to turn back. The reason, Simpson told CNN: A Louisiana state police official told them not to come. " I said, "What if we just show up?' He says, 'You probably won't get in.' " Simpson said he later learned a dispute over whether state or federal authorities would command the law enforcement effort was being ironed out that night. But no one ever got back to him with the all-clear.

**FEMA halted tractor trailers hauling water to a supply staging area in Alexandria, Louisiana, The New York Times quoted William Vines, former mayor of Fort Smith, Arkansas, as saying. "FEMA would not let the trucks unload," he told the newspaper. "The drivers were stuck for several days on the side of the road" because, he said, they did not have a "tasker number." He added, "What in the world is a tasker number? I have no idea. It's just paperwork and it's ridiculous."

**Firefighters who answered a nationwide call for help were sent to Atlanta for FEMA training sessions on community relations and sexual harassment. "On the news every night you hear 'How come everybody forgot us?' " Pennsylvania firefighter Joseph Manning told The Dallas Morning News. "We didn't forget. We're stuck in Atlanta drinking beer."
Tags: hurricane katrina, new orleans

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  • 8 comments

Anonymous

September 15 2005, 15:23:23 UTC 6 years ago

The doctor problem was known early on, but it took the Louisiana governor two days to sign the order allowing out of state doctors to practice during the emergency after it was prepared and requested. No matter how much the visiting doctors wanted to help, they could lose their home state license or their malpractice coverage, or even be arresting for practicing medicine without a license, if they'd gone ahead and seen patients before the governor signed the emergency order.

Interestingly enough, Mississippi's governor signed a similar order immediately, and it was never an issue there.

[info]sevencloud

September 15 2005, 16:46:43 UTC 6 years ago

That is disgusting.

[info]b_a_n_d_i_t

September 15 2005, 18:27:40 UTC 6 years ago

completely disgusting

[info]dc_gay_man

September 16 2005, 04:23:47 UTC 6 years ago

The Big Issue is that the Red Cross Number has not worked for days and leaves people to fend for themselves. Even the local Red Cross is failing to help those in need. What a disappointment!

[info]joeatlarge

September 16 2005, 05:46:10 UTC 6 years ago

Why is the Red Cross not working?

[info]dc_gay_man

September 18 2005, 12:13:51 UTC 6 years ago

The disaster line is not working. Many people can not get through to register for the required services. I am told that all the people have to go local and those services are congested.

It should be interesting to see this one pan out.

[info]dgraysn

September 16 2005, 06:15:31 UTC 6 years ago

joe, thanks for keeping up with the latest reports. when i returned to NYC after vacation i spent a lot of time watching CNN coverage while surfing online for the latest news. i found myself getting sucked in and overwhelmed,it brought me back to my 9/11 experience so i needed to take a break from the coverage except for reading your journal.
ill be writing about my experience soon. ive been mulling it over for a while.
this entry is particularly disturbing because it shows there were no lessons learned from 9/11. FEMA, the Red Cross and Salvation Army were so restricted by bureaucratic bullshit and legal concerns that their response was simply ineffective. the best work was done by "renegade" volunteers who responded to the disaster, ignored anyone who stood in their way, saw what was needed to support the firefighters, police, EMS and construction workers working to find survivors and filled those needs as best we could with scavenged and donated supplies and materials. we did this with no support from NYC officials and under constant threat of arrest. the disaster on the Gulf coast is exponentially greater than 9/11 . thankfully there are people who responded in a similar way to it. Cindy Sheehan's group relocated to the area after leaving Texas and Micheal Moore has been promoting their efforts and asking for donations of cash and supplies. based on my experience this is the only truly effective response. many of the volunteers i met had hoped to convert our experience into a plan or organization to respond to future disasters. unfortunately after the 10 month recovery effort most of us were burnt out and we needed time to get back to our everyday lives.

[info]joeatlarge

September 16 2005, 06:33:13 UTC 6 years ago

It's too bad that plan didn't come to fruition, although I can understand the reasons why. I've become hopelessly disenchanted with government's ability to cope with largescale disasters. This is what the citizens of countries past and present must have felt like when they saw their nations broken apart by war, famine, or other disasters and their governments were powerless to prevent it. We have a lot more tools now than they did, but don't seem any better equipped to use them.
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