Red Tape
New allegations highlight the bureaucratic fumbles that delayed vital help for hurricane-hit New Orleans
WEB EXCLUSIVE
By Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball
Updated: 6:34 p.m. ET Sept. 14, 2005
Sept. 14, 2005 - The Bush administration is continuing to face heavy criticism over the sluggish response of federal agencies, principally the departments of Homeland Security and Defense, to the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina.
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New allegations continue to surface that offers of personnel and material assistance to New Orleans and other areas affected by the storm were held up by bureaucratic red tape. There are also indications that a proposed congressional investigation into government responses to the disaster could itself become bogged down in jurisdictional wrangles and partisan infighting.
One example of the criticisms that are still continuing to surface regarding the Bush administration’s slow response to the damage wrought by Katrina comes from Bill Richardson, governor of New Mexico and former secretary of Energy under Bill Clinton. Richardson told NEWSWEEK that on Monday, the day Katrina hit New Orleans, he immediately authorized his state National Guard commander to dispatch 400 New Mexico guardsmen to the disaster area to help out Louisiana state forces. But according to a state official, a hold-up at the Pentagon meant that the New Mexico guardsmen did not actually fly to Louisiana until Friday morning, four days after Richardson authorized them to go.
Richardson said that when he asked his guard commander to explain the delay, he was told the New Mexico troops were not being allowed to travel to the region because of “federal paperwork,” which the National Guard bureau at the Pentagon insisted had to be completed. According to Richardson, this paperwork included various authorizations and certifications as well as “transportation waivers.” “I remember saying to
it’s going to be too late” by the time state guardsmen reached the disaster scene, Richardson recalled.
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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9344582/site/newsweek/