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From Governings POTOMAC CHRONICLE Its Broke Fix It The problem in New Orleans isnt FEMA but federalism. As I stood a few weeks ago amid the flattened ruin of what used to be New Orleans Lower Ninth Ward, I learned two inescapable lessons. One was that, no matter what youve heard or read about Katrina, you wont understand the devastation until you see it up close. The scene in New Orleans left even the most jaded government officials on our tour utterly speechless. The other lesson is Katrinas searing judgment on American federalism. Even though everyone knew that such a storm would some day come, the system was profoundly unprepared. American governments at all levels had spent the four years after 9/11 vowing to be better prepared for catastrophe, and exercises in 2004 actually predicted what a Gulf hurricane could do. Yet Katrina paralyzed public services on an epic scale. Much of New Orleans remains little changed from the day the water was finally pumped away. In the Lower Ninth, bulldozers came down the streets to push the debris aside, so security and emergency vehicles could negotiate the roads. But there are almost no FEMA trailers. FEMA wont bring in trailers in the absence of electricity and water. There is no electricity because there are no power poles. Repairing the water lines, some experts estimate, will take 18 months once the job starts and it has not yet started. Contractors are clearing mountains of debris, sometimes piled five stories high for blocks on end. Federal aid is trickling down to local residents eager to get back to work, but local officials complain that out-of-state contractors are siphoning off much of the cash before it reaches them. Across the halting process of recovery, the entire idea of intergovernmental cooperation has become a joke. Startlingly blunt reports from Congress and the White House continue to shift responsibility across the system. But at the bottom of the brawl lies a simple question: Is American federalism, a remarkable invention by our founders to keep a new nation from splintering, up to the challenges of the 21st century? A system with deputy sheriffs guarding parish boundaries with shotguns, and federal officials unresponsive because the right clearances dont arrive on the right forms, surely isnt the kind of federalism we need. Many of the same forces with boundaries guarded by sharp words instead of shotguns often plague day-to-day issues as well. It might be argued that homeland security planning has focused on terrorism since 9/11, so the storm hit our blind spot. But, given the post-Katrina performance, could we expect that the response to a major terrorist event would be any better? The really worrisome issue isnt the failure of immediate response to Katrina its the inability of the intergovernmental system to bounce back. Yet we know (whether its the Big Earthquake in California, another major hurricane on the East Coast, an avian flu pandemic, or a terrorist attack) that were going to have to rise to similar post-disaster challenges again. Perhaps soon. Its surely not hopeless. Katrinas aftermath produced real heroes, including senior Coast Guard and National Guard officials, many community leaders, and a host of government managers at all levels who simply pushed the rules aside and did what had to be done. We know from 9/11 that governments response to the attack on the Pentagon worked remarkably well because of finely honed coordination that officials had wisely practiced in anticipation of a traumatic event. If we build the relationships in advance, we get off to a better, quicker start when disasters occur, and we can sustain the recovery efforts much more effectively. Thus, the good news is that strong leadership can conquer the inescapable pathologies of our intergovernmental system. The bad news is that, like a cranky old furnace in a wonderful, rambling house, the system cant be left to run on its own. We cant do without the furnace, and the house has so much charm that we dont want to tear it down. But if we dont tend to the system, well find ourselves freezing yet again when we need the heat most. © 2006, Congressional Quarterly, Inc. Reproduction in any form without the written permission of the publisher is prohibited. Governing, City & State and Governing.com are registered trademarks of Congressional Quarterly, Inc. |