(This is an amazing article that is almost prophetic, considering what did happen less than a year later.)
From Best of New Orleans .com and Gambit Weekly 09-28-2004:
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http://www.bestofneworleans.com/dispatch/2004-09-28/cover_story.html>
A Disaster Waiting to Happen
As FEMA weathers Bush administration policy changes, some insiders fear that concerns over terrorism are trumping protection from hurricanes and other natural hazards.
By Jon Elliston (clip)
...FEMA's relatively quick response to the hurricanes has thus far won mostly high marks from Florida officials, who remember well a time when the disaster agency seemed the last party to show up after catastrophes.
In addition, President George W. Bush has paid multiple visits to assure storm victims they will get whatever help is needed, and he promptly secured more than $2 billion from Congress to fund Florida's recovery.
As storms continue to batter the Panhandle, no one would call Florida lucky. But with national elections just around the corner, the hurricanes could scarcely have hit at a better time or place for obtaining federal disaster assistance.
"They're doing a good job," one former FEMA executive says of the Bush administration's response efforts.
"And the reason why they're doing that job is because it's so close to the election, and they can't f--k it up, otherwise they lose Florida -- and if they lose Florida, they might lose the election...." (clip)
...In June, Pleasant Mann, a 16-year FEMA veteran who heads the agency's government employee union, wrote members of Congress to warn of the agency's decay.
"Over the past three-and-one-half years, FEMA has gone from being a model agency to being one where funds are being misspent, employee morale has fallen, and our nation's emergency management capability is being eroded," he wrote.
"Our professional staff are being systematically replaced by politically connected novices and contractors...."(clip)
...As the Cold War ended, FEMA turned greater attention to handling natural disasters, but the agency proved unequal to the task. In August 1992, Hurricane Andrew assaulted Florida, Louisiana and other Southern states with 170-mile-an-hour winds, killing 23 people and leaving a trail of devastation.
The severity of the storm caught FEMA off-guard, and the agency did too little, too late to help the state recover, enraging thousands of storm victims. Several days after Andrew dissipated, Dade County's emergency manager famously pleaded, "Where the hell is the cavalry?"
Two months later, President George H.W. Bush paid a price of sorts at the polls when Bill Clinton shrunk the incumbent's once-sizable lead...
<http://www.bestofneworleans.com/dispatch/2004-09-28/cover_story.html>
(much more at link above)