Thursday, August 30, 2007

Katrina aftermath

It is possible that The Katrina disaster has had less of a changing impact on the region than first thought. The media focus on the failures of the Government in the disaster aftermath, did not focus on anything but the Federal response. The long lasting issue now points out what was clear to emergency management professionals immediately, that a disaster occured other than the hurricane - and it originated on the Local and State level. The Katrina disaster showed us many flaws in the Federal Government leadership that responded. It also showed us a total breakdown of State and Local leadership, guidance, preplanning, emergency planning, corruption, and misuse of Federal funds. After all of this, the City re -elected its Mayor. The Mayor being re-elected sends a message that he is not going to held accountable for his failures. There is no recognition on the local level that the city completely failed it's citizens. The city will not be prepared in the future, unless it sees that it must stand up for itself, and better prepare its citizens and it's communities. Fema responds and supports what a community has in place. It augments an area or regions emergency capability. It was designed as a coordinating entity and was therefore unprepared to take over and run an area with a total
collapse in preparation and leadership. With so many multiple levels of failure it is difficult for any issue to gain real traction and stay in the focus of taxpayers minds. Politicians pushing "we need to do more" do not have a specific enough goal for divergent groups to grasp, and divergent groups must work together with a common goal to effect real change.

No comments: