Today the White
House released its after-action report on the federal response to
Hurricane Katrina. The report, over 200 pages long and with 125
recommendations, takes the right approach, focusing on the
appropriate role of the federal government: building a national
response system that supports state and local governments and
increases federal capacity to respond to catastrophic disasters.
Congress should work with the Administration to see that the
report's recommendations are carried out.
The Report
The report
contains four main elements: perspectives on how the federal
government has responded to previous disasters, a chronology of
events from August 29 to September 5, an extensive analysis of the
federal response to Hurricane Katrina, and a comprehensive set of
recommendations.
The report's
analysis and recommendations respect the constitutional principle
of federalism. Its focus, then, is on preparing the federal
government to respond to catastrophic disasters when state and
local governments are overwhelmed, but not by usurping their roles
or authority. Four specific recommendations illustrate what needs
to be done:
-
Create a
Regional Structure. The report calls on the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) to "develop and implement Homeland Security
Regions that are fully staffed, trained, and equipped to manage and
coordinate all preparedness activities and any emergency that may
require a substantial Federal response." Structured according to
the risks and needs of their regions, these offices should also
coordinate preparedness efforts.
-
Transform the
National Guard. The report calls on the state National Guards
to "modify their organization and training to include a priority
mission to prepare and deploy in support of homeland security
missions." Federal agencies, meanwhile, need to incorporate the
Guard into planning and preparation for the federal response to
catastrophic disasters.
-
Strengthen
the Public Health Response. The report urges the Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) to "lead a unified and strengthened
public health and medical command for Federal disaster
response."HHS should develop a robust and realistic federal medical
response plan for catastrophic disaster, including tracking and
deploying federal public health and medical assets. As well, the
report recommends moving the National Disaster Medical System back
into HHS from DHS.
-
Create a
Culture of Preparedness. The report challenges DHS to "make
citizen and community preparedness a National priority. To
facilitate this initiative, Cabinet Secretaries and other prominent
National public figures (e.g. the Surgeon General) should serve as
spokespersons to promote citizen and community preparedness."During
Katrina, individuals, communities, churches, and other groups
proved their capabilities. It is the individual's responsibility to
have a plan, know the community plan, and step up to the plate
during a catastrophic disaster.
A Call to Action
Congress should
work with the Administration to ensure that the policy
recommendations in the White House report are swiftly
implemented.
James
Jay Carafano, Ph.D., is Senior Research Fellow for Defense and
Homeland Security, and Laura Keith is a Research Assistant, in the
Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies
at The Heritage Foundation.