What really happened to those brit rations...
Posted: Fri Apr 07, 2006 1:38 am
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/K/ ... SECTION=US
Apr 6, 9:51 PM EDT
Audit: Money From Abroad for Katrina Lost
By WILLIAM C. MANN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal auditors on Thursday laid out a
scenario of omissions, missteps and bureaucratic nightmares
that caused a loss of money and other donations sent from
abroad to help victims of Hurricane Katrina.
Lawmakers at a congressional hearing on the subject reacted
harshly to a Government Accountability Office report that
attributed the errors, which involved as many as eight
government agencies, to the United States' lack of experience
as a recipient of huge amounts of aid from others.
Rep. Henry Waxman, the House Government Reform Committee's top
Democrat, said, "This is bureaucracy at its worse, and the citizens
of the Gulf Coast are suffering for it."
The GAO said in remarks prepared for delivery before the committee,
"Given that the U.S. government had never before received such
substantial amounts of international disaster assistance, ad hoc
procedures were developed to manage the acceptance and distribution
of the cash and in-kind assistance."
"It is understandable that not all procedures would be in place at
the outset."
Rep. Tom Davis, the Republican chairman of the committee, said that
it "appears that policies and procedures were lacking, simply because
no one in the federal government anticipated needing or receiving this
assistance."
The GAO said that $126 million in cash came in from 36 countries after
the Aug. 29 hurricane devastated New Orleans, Louisiana and Mississippi
along the U.S. Gulf Coast.
With plans lacking for dealing with such a large-scale influx, legal
restrictions kicked in that required almost half the cash to be held
in accounts that paid no interest, resulting in a loss of almost
$1 million and diminished buying power for eventual hurricane relief.
Because $400 million more has been pledged but not yet received, the
GAO is urging that instructions be put in place quickly to handle the
money.
Davis said, "It does no good to be offered money, or water, or food, or
potentially lifesaving medical supplies if we don't get those donations
into the hands of the people who need them."
Money was not the only shortcoming of the response to one of the nation's
most costly and deadly natural disasters, which killed almost 1,100 in
Louisiana alone and hundreds more elsewhere. At least 1,900 people are
listed as missing.
Typical of the misadventures was the failure to enlist government
quality-control experts from the Agriculture Department and the Food
and Drug Administration.
This resulted in importation of medical items and military food packages
that should not have been allowed into the country; because they were,
the government had to pay for storing them. The auditors were told of
one shipment of military meals-ready-to-eat, however, that was delivered
directly to a U.S. base whose personnel distributed the unknowingly
banned MREs to hurricane victims.
The report, which will be published later, is the latest of a series of
papers that have documented widespread mistakes and incompetence at
all levels of government in the response to Katrina.
© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not
be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our
Privacy Policy.
Apr 6, 9:51 PM EDT
Audit: Money From Abroad for Katrina Lost
By WILLIAM C. MANN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal auditors on Thursday laid out a
scenario of omissions, missteps and bureaucratic nightmares
that caused a loss of money and other donations sent from
abroad to help victims of Hurricane Katrina.
Lawmakers at a congressional hearing on the subject reacted
harshly to a Government Accountability Office report that
attributed the errors, which involved as many as eight
government agencies, to the United States' lack of experience
as a recipient of huge amounts of aid from others.
Rep. Henry Waxman, the House Government Reform Committee's top
Democrat, said, "This is bureaucracy at its worse, and the citizens
of the Gulf Coast are suffering for it."
The GAO said in remarks prepared for delivery before the committee,
"Given that the U.S. government had never before received such
substantial amounts of international disaster assistance, ad hoc
procedures were developed to manage the acceptance and distribution
of the cash and in-kind assistance."
"It is understandable that not all procedures would be in place at
the outset."
Rep. Tom Davis, the Republican chairman of the committee, said that
it "appears that policies and procedures were lacking, simply because
no one in the federal government anticipated needing or receiving this
assistance."
The GAO said that $126 million in cash came in from 36 countries after
the Aug. 29 hurricane devastated New Orleans, Louisiana and Mississippi
along the U.S. Gulf Coast.
With plans lacking for dealing with such a large-scale influx, legal
restrictions kicked in that required almost half the cash to be held
in accounts that paid no interest, resulting in a loss of almost
$1 million and diminished buying power for eventual hurricane relief.
Because $400 million more has been pledged but not yet received, the
GAO is urging that instructions be put in place quickly to handle the
money.
Davis said, "It does no good to be offered money, or water, or food, or
potentially lifesaving medical supplies if we don't get those donations
into the hands of the people who need them."
Money was not the only shortcoming of the response to one of the nation's
most costly and deadly natural disasters, which killed almost 1,100 in
Louisiana alone and hundreds more elsewhere. At least 1,900 people are
listed as missing.
Typical of the misadventures was the failure to enlist government
quality-control experts from the Agriculture Department and the Food
and Drug Administration.
This resulted in importation of medical items and military food packages
that should not have been allowed into the country; because they were,
the government had to pay for storing them. The auditors were told of
one shipment of military meals-ready-to-eat, however, that was delivered
directly to a U.S. base whose personnel distributed the unknowingly
banned MREs to hurricane victims.
The report, which will be published later, is the latest of a series of
papers that have documented widespread mistakes and incompetence at
all levels of government in the response to Katrina.
© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not
be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our
Privacy Policy.