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The Washington Times Online Edition

FEMA cleanup from Ike criticized

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Workers watch as hurricane debris is scooped up in Smith Point, Texas, on Nov. 25. State and local officials complain that FEMA red tape has slowed the removal of filth from Hurricane Ike.ASSOCIATED PRESS Workers watch as hurricane debris is scooped up in Smith Point, Texas, on Nov. 25. State and local officials complain that FEMA red tape has slowed the removal of filth from Hurricane Ike.

SMITH POINT, Texas

A 30-mile scar of debris along the Texas coast stands as a festering testament to what state and local officials say is the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s sluggish response to the 2008 hurricane season.

Two and a half months after Hurricane Ike blasted the shoreline, alligators and snakes crawl over vast piles of shattered building materials, lawn furniture, trees, boats, tanks of butane and other hazardous substances, thousands of animal carcasses, perhaps even the corpses of people killed by the storm.

State and local officials complain that the removal of the filth has gone almost nowhere because FEMA red tape has held up both the cleanup work and the release of the millions of dollars that Chambers County says it needs to pay for the project.

Elsewhere along the coast, similar complaints are heard: FEMA has been slow to reimburse local governments for what they have already spent, putting the rural counties on the brink of financial collapse.

“I don’t know all the internal workings of FEMA. But if they’ve had a lot of experience in hurricanes and disaster, it looks like they could come up with some kind of process that would work,” said Chambers County Judge Jimmy Sylvia, the county’s chief administrator.

Gov. Rick Perry was so incensed at delays in sending cleanup crews to the rotting, city-size pile of waste that he angrily told reporters two weeks ago that he is going to have the state clean it up and then stick FEMA with the bill.

FEMA, whose very name became a bitter joke after the agency’s botched response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005, said it is working as fast as it can considering the complex regulations and the need to guard against fraud and waste in the use of taxpayer dollars.

Moreover, “you can’t work too many people because it’s just too dangerous,” said Clay Kennelly, hired by FEMA to oversee the cleanup of a section of the debris pile. “And you can’t just put Bubba or Skeeter out here on a dozer.”

The 2008 hurricane season ended this week after walloping the Texas and Louisiana Gulf coasts with three major storms, including Ike, the 600-mile-wide monster that barreled ashore at Galveston on Sept. 12.

Only a hundred yards or so of the 30 miles of debris in Chambers County has been cleaned up, because the project has been slowed by negotiations over who is responsible for what.

Along the rest of the Gulf Coast, thousands of homeless families are still living in tents, trailers and motel rooms, and hundreds of businesses are lying in near-ruin.

The federal government is responsible for public lands or hazardous waste, while private landowners must handle their own cleanup but can apply for assistance. Much of the debris has been left to rot while crews determine whose land the junk is on and what’s in it.

Galveston County Judge Jim Yarbrough said he got word Sept. 12, as Ike closed in on Galveston, that FEMA was sending him $1.8 million of his $3 million request for storm cleanup - from Hurricane Rita, three years ago.

In Louisiana, hit by two storms this year, Gov. Bobby Jindal complimented the agency on improvements made since Katrina but criticized FEMA’s focus on paperwork and an inability to make decisions quickly.

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