Article published Thursday, January 27, 2005
FEMA's Miami vice
FROM the "tax dollars at work" file: The Federal Emergency Management Agency shelled out $30 million in disaster aid to 12,500 residents of Miami-Dade County in Florida last year after Hurricane Frances. The money was used to pay for cars, clothing, furniture, televisions, and even $4,500 for a funeral.
Only problem was, the hurricane's edge barely stirred the palm trees in Miami, causing little damage and no deaths. The eye of the storm came ashore 100 miles up Florida's east coast, near Sewall's Point.
Nonetheless, as the South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported, applying for FEMA aid became something of a cottage industry, particularly in the poorer areas of Miami-Dade. It was, residents exulted, "free money," too good to pass up.
FEMA officials now admit that at least some of the money it lavished on Miami-Dade residents was misspent, including some duplicate payments and at least six claims listed in agency records as being due to "ice/snow." FEMA says those were due to data entry errors, but it's impossible to believe that the entire $30 million fiasco could have been simply a mistake.
What is more likely is that the top brass at FEMA, headed by Michael D. Brown, President Bush's appointee as undersecretary of Homeland Security for Emergency Preparedness and Response, saw a chance to gain political good will by dropping a treasure chest full of federal dollars into South Florida. Did we mention that the checks came out just before the presidential election?
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