[lit-ideas] Re: Emergency equipment

  • From: JimKandJulieB@xxxxxxx
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sat, 3 Sep 2005 15:22:04 EDT

 
<<You  don't wait to be "requested." You take proactive action and  go>> 
That's one of the two things which  absolutely stuns me about this.  Why in 
the HELL didn't the DHS just SEND  the stuff, w/out having to be "asked"?  
Bureaucracy?   The right  forms weren't filled out and notarized??  And what 
the 
HELL was wrong with  the governors that, even after being reminded of the 
existence of these  supplies, didn't they ASK for them?! 
Just one more unconscionable thing in  this whole mess.  I keep thinking 
humans are too stupid to live.   Sorry -- my level of disgust just keeps 
growing. 
Julie Krueger 



========Original  Message========     Subj: [lit-ideas] Re: Emergency 
equipment  Date: 9/3/05 2:00:16 P.M. Central Daylight Time  From: 
_andreas@xxxxxxxxxxxx (mailto:andreas@xxxxxxxxxxx)   To: 
_lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx 
(mailto:lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)   Sent on:    
You don't wait to be "requested." You take  proactive action and go.  

yrs,
andreas
www.andreas.com


----- Original Message  ----- 
From: <JimKandJulieB@xxxxxxx>
To:  <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, September 03, 2005 3:05  AM
Subject: [lit-ideas] Emergency equipment


> 
> This is  the most mind-boggling piece since the  incident of shots fired at 
>  helicopters evacuating a hospital.  What the  hell were the governors  
thinking?! 
> Anyone have a semi-rational notion why  in the bloody  blue blazes this 
> equipment was not requested, even after the  gov's  were reminded it was an 
> option?!?!  I'm ..... there  are not enough  scatological words......  
Generators.  
>  Breathing apparatus.   Cots.   COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS.   All available and 
entirely 
> ignored and unused.  So much for  "Domestic Preparedness" (see last line of 
 
> article). 
>  _http://www.cnn.com/2005/WEATHER/09/03/katrina.unusedgear/index.html_ 
>  (http://www.cnn.com/2005/WEATHER/09/03/katrina.unusedgear/index.html)   
> <<WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Nine stockpiles of  fire-and-rescue  equipment 
> strategically placed around the country to be used in   the event of a 
catastrophe still 
> have not been pressed into service in  New  Orleans, five days after 
Hurricane 
> Katrina, CNN has learned.  
> Responding to a CNN inquiry, Department of Homeland Security spokesman  
Marc  
> Short said Friday the gear has not been moved because none  of the 
governors in 
> the hurricane-ravaged area has requested it.  
> A federal official said the department's Office for Domestic  Preparedness  
> reminded the Louisiana and Mississippi governors'  offices about the 
stockpiles  
> on Wednesday and Thursday, but  neither governor had requested it. 
> The gear -- including generators,  radios, breathing apparatus, cots and 
other 
> items -- is stockpiled by  DHS in nine locations. The three closest to New  
> Orleans are  College Station, Texas; Columbia, S.C.; and Clearwater, Fla. 
The  
>  gear is intended to replenish or sustain up to 150 first responders. 
>  Contractors who maintain the gear are required to transport it to a  
disaster  
> site no later than 12 hours after the initial request is  made by local  
> authorities and approved by DHS. 
> Short  said that while the stashes contain some items like generators, much 
of 
>  the gear would not be useful in the circumstances faced by the Gulf Coast  
 
> region. 
> But Steve Beaumont, a retired contract manager for  Homeland Security's  
> Prepositioned Equipment Program, said the  gear would be helpful for fire  
> departments wiped out by the  hurricane. Each pod has 200 radios, including 
 
> sophisticated  equipment to make radios inter-operable, tying different  
communications  
> systems together. 
> "The concept was basically, if you had a  major incident, this equipment 
could 
> be brought into the city and  reconstitute the local first responders. So 
> they  get fresh  bunking gear, breathing apparatus," Beaumont said. 
> Each stockpile  consists of a tractor-trailer filled with $2.2 million in  
> gear,  he said. Contractors are on call 24 hours a day to move the gear. 
>  "There has been no movement of this equipment to this emergency. As of now 
  
> there's been no movement at all," Beaumont said. 
> "I think it's  sad because you've got almost ... $20 million worth of gear  
>  that's ready to be distributed. You've firefighters (in New Orleans)  
fighting  
> fires in shorts. That tells me they're running out of  stuff." 
> The project is run by DHS' Office for Domestic   Preparedness.>>
>
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