This Time, Federal Response Is Praised
By T. Christian Miller and Edwin Chen, Times Staff Writers
WASHINGTON -- Katrina's deadly rampage had at least one beneficial effect, disaster experts said Sunday: It ensured that government agencies took the next big storm, Hurricane Rita, very seriously.
This time, the federal government dispatched troops sooner, sent supplies earlier and coordinated better with local authorities. The consensus is that the response helped minimize the loss of life from a storm that was damaging, though less powerful, than Katrina.
While complaints continued Sunday about the need for better evacuation planning -- traffic was snarled for hours and 24 seniors were killed on a bus during the frantic exodus from Houston -- even officials who criticized the federal government after Katrina were praising the reaction to Rita.
With lessons learned from both hurricanes, state and local officials stressed the need for better evacuation plans. Military commanders cited the need for tighter coordination. And President Bush raised the possibility of placing the Pentagon in charge of responding to the most serious natural disasters.
In a briefing for the president Sunday in San Antonio, Maj. Gen. John White, overseeing the storm area, called for the development of a national disaster rescue plan to further clarify the roles of the various agencies. Under the current system, it is possible for five helicopters to arrive to rescue one storm victim....
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