Shattering the Illusion of FEMA’s Progress:
10 Recommendations for Rebuilding a Broken Agency
AFGE Local 4060’s Proposal for ChangeFebruary 3, 2009
Executive Summary
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) was created in 1979 to help protectAmerican lives and property from the consequences of all emergencies and disasters.During the 1990s, under the leadership of James Lee Witt, FEMA evolved to become amodel Government agency with high employee morale and a strong sense of mission.But since 2001, FEMA has been on a downward spiral, due initially to cuts in mitigation andother effective programs, and later to the diversion of funds to the newly createdDepartment of Homeland Security (DHS) and to corresponding policy and resource shiftstoward the department’s focus on security. The heavy departmental shift toward terrorismprevention and security, and the corresponding and misplaced agency reliance on defenseand military expertise, detracts from FEMA’s critical mission to coordinate the nationalresponse to a disaster – in partnership with other Federal agencies, State and localgovernments, and the non-government sector – when security efforts fail, or when naturaldisaster strikes.In the three years since Hurricane Katrina, FEMA’s public relations efforts have pushed thestory that the agency has learned from its mistakes, telling the public that the agency hasbeen improving coordination, adding leadership, and recruiting talent to successfullysupport numerous disasters since those fateful days in the late summer of 2005. Theharsh truth is that the disasters FEMA has supported in recent years are basically mid-leveldisasters, and not large-scale catastrophes on the scale of Hurricane Katrina or the 9/11attacks. These more recent mid-scale disasters caused swaths of devastation, but did notfor the most part destroy local and State governments’ ability to coordinate and managetheir own responses to affected areas. Should a disaster on the scale of Hurricane Katrinastrike today, we do not believe FEMA is ready.This is an agency still suffering from a failure in leadership, the heavy influence of politicalappointees, a lack of strategic direction and coordination, poor and unqualifiedmanagement, over-reliance on contractors, undervaluation of employees, hostile workenvironments, wasteful spending, duplication of effort, and a systemic failure across theagency to integrate proven principles and concepts of emergency and incidentmanagement into programs and operations.
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