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Senator: Federal government
hasn't done enough for Gulf Coast
1/16/2006, 1:25 p.m. CT
By LARA JAKES JORDAN
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — The government has not done enough to
help large swaths of the Gulf Coast recover and rebuild
after Hurricane Katrina, a key Republican senator said
in a push for Congress to retain its focus on delivering
aid in the new year.
Though lawmakers have approved $67 billion for Gulf
Coast emergency relief and long-term recovery programs,
and President Bush has called for an additional $1.5
billion to strengthen New Orleans levees, hard-hit areas
in Mississippi and Louisiana need more federal resources
and attention, said Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine.
"I don't think the government has done enough," said
Collins, who is leading a delegation of senators on
Tuesday to Gulfport, Miss., and St. Bernard Parish in
Louisiana — two areas that she said have been overlooked
compared to New Orleans. Both areas were nearly
obliterated by high wind during the Aug. 29 storm.
The lawmakers also will tour parts of New Orleans,
including inspecting progress on rebuilding levees that
are crucial to encouraging residents and businesses back
to the previously flooded city.
"This is a long-term commitment," Collins said in an
interview Saturday. "The devastation is so widespread
that a sustained federal commitment is going to be
necessary. I think Congress realizes that, but there's
also a growing concern about whether the money is well
spent."
Democrats, too, are watching how Congress will pay for
what they called continued necessary assistance to the
Gulf Coast amid a rising deficit and other high-cost
expenses, including the war in Iraq.
"This is really a catastrophe of enormous proportions,
and I don't think we appropriated nearly enough to
help," said Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., after reviewing
damage Friday in the New Orleans area. She is calling
for Congress to repeal Bush's tax cuts to help pay for
Katrina-related rebuilding.
Last month, Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, the former
chairman of the Republican National Committee, chastised
Congress for failing to approve emergency funding, thus
stalling state transportation, school and housing
projects.
The state last week released a report calling for bold
moves to improve its transportation and housing systems
to a better level than before Katrina hit.
In prepared testimony for a Senate hearing in Gulfport
on Tuesday, the Bush administration's Gulf Coast
rebuilding czar outlined two top priorities for
Mississippi: debris removal and temporary housing for
evacuees.
So far, Mississippi has cleaned up 27 million cubic
yards of debris — about two-thirds of the total, said
Donald Powell, the federal Gulf Coast coordinator. He
estimated that Hancock, Harrison and Jackson counties in
Mississippi were left with more debris after Katrina
than totals after Hurricane Andrew in 1992 and the World
Trade Center from the 2001 terror attacks combined.
Powell also estimated that fewer than 2,000 evacuated
families remain in Mississippi hotels, and that 280,000
state residents have received transitional housing
assistance.
"Every time some type of natural disaster has hit, the
people of this region have come back, and come back
stronger than before," Powell said in his prepared
remarks, obtained by The Associated Press. "Failure is
not an option. ... It's too important a task not to do
it right."
Collins, chair of the Senate Homeland Security and
Government Affairs Committee, which is holding the
hearing, said she planned to examine whether Powell has
enough authority in his post to order changes for
progress.
Powell, the former chair of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp. and a wealthy Bush campaign contributor,
serves as a liaison between state and local authorities
in the region who are developing rebuilding plans, and
Congress and Bush administration officials who will help
fund them.
"He cannot direct what needs to be done," Collins said,
adding that Powell has been working with a bare-bones
staff. "He's very much a straight-shooter, and is hard
working, but I wonder if he has the troops that he
needs."
Collins also said senators would examine rebuilding
progress on New Orleans levees — and the ongoing
controversy over whether Congress should approve funds
to make them strong enough to withstand a Category 5
hurricane, as local residents and business leaders have
demanded.
Some weather experts believe Katrina, a Category 4
hurricane when it hit the coast, had weakened to a
Category 3 or 2 storm by the time it reached New
Orleans. Bush and Powell have called for rebuilding the
floodwalls to withstand a Category 3 storm.
"I clearly want the levees to be stronger, taller and
tougher than they were before, but there's not a common
definition what it means to build to a Category 5,"
Collins said.
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On the Net:
Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs
Committee:
http://hsgac.senate.gov/
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