September 10, 2005
Michael
Brown, the embattled head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
approved payments in excess of $31 million in taxpayer money to thousands
of Florida residents who were unaffected by Hurricane Frances and three
other hurricanes last year in an effort to help President Bush win a
majority of votes in that state during his reelection campaign, according
to published reports.
"Some Homeland
Security sources said FEMA's efforts to distribute funds quickly after
Frances and three other hurricanes that hit the key political battleground
state of Florida in a six-week period last fall were undertaken with a
keen awareness of the looming presidential elections," according to a May
19 Washington Post story.
Homeland Security
sources told the Post that after the hurricanes, Brown "and his
allies [recommended] him to succeed Tom Ridge as Homeland Security
secretary because of their claim that he helped deliver Florida to
President Bush by efficiently responding to the Florida hurricanes."
The South Florida
Sun-Sentinel uncovered e-mails from Florida Governor Jeb Bush that
confirmed those allegations and directly implicated Brown as playing
politics at the expense of hurricane victims.
"As the second
hurricane in less than a month bore down on Florida last fall, a federal [FEMA]
consultant predicted a "huge mess" that could reflect poorly on President
Bush and suggested that his re-election staff be brought in to minimize
any political liability, records show," the Sun-Sentinel reported
in a March 23 story.
"Two weeks later, a Florida official
summarizing the hurricane response wrote that the Federal Emergency
Management Agency was handing out housing assistance "to everyone who
needs it without asking for much information of any kind."
The records the
Sun-Sentinel obtained were contained in hundreds of pages of Governor
Jeb Bush's storm-related e-mails the paper received from the governor’s
office under the threat of a lawsuit.
The explosive
charges of mismanagement of disaster relief funds made against Brown and
FEMA were confirmed earlier this year following a four-month investigation
by Richard Skinner, the Department of Homeland Security’s Inspector
General. Skinner looked into media reports alleging that residents of
Miami-Dade were receiving windfall payments from FEMA to cover losses from
Hurricane Frances they never incurred.
Hurricane Frances
hit Hutchinson Island, Florida about 100 miles north of Dade County on
September 5, 2004. Miami-Dade officials described damage there from heavy
rain and winds of up to 45 mph as "minimal", according to the Post.
Indeed. A May 14,
2005 story in the Sun-Sentinel said: "Miami-Dade County residents
collected Hurricane Frances aid for belongings they didn't own, temporary
housing they never requested and cars worth far less than the government
paid, according to a federal audit that questions millions in storm
payouts."
Responding to those
allegations, Brown held a news conference on January 11 blaming the
overpayments on a "computer glitch" and said the disbursements were far
less than the $31 million that was cited in news reports and involved
3,500 people. Moreover, to silence his critics who said that Hurricane
Frances barely touched down in Miami-Dade, Brown cited a report by the
National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to prove that there
were legitimate hurricane conditions there and as a result that a bulk of
the payments was legitimate.
But according to the
Sun-Sentinel, NOAA had refuted the weather maps Brown claimed to
have obtained from them. That report prompted Congressman Robert Wexler to
send off a scathing letter to President Bush calling for Brown’s
resignation.
Bush rebuffed
Wexler. However, the DHS’ Inspector General launched a probe to determine
how widespread the problems were involving overpayments to Miami-Dade
residents. In May, the IG released his report. What he found was damning.
"The review found
waste and poor controls in every level of the Federal Emergency Management
Agency's assistance program and challenges the designation of Miami-Dade
as a disaster area when the county "did not incur any hurricane force
winds, tornados or other adverse weather conditions that would cause
widespread damage."
In identifying one
of the overpayments, the IG’s report said FEMA paid $10 million to replace
hundreds of household items even though only a bed was reported to be
damaged, the inspector general’s report said.
"Millions of
individuals and households became eligible to apply for [money], straining
FEMA's limited inspection resources to verify damages and making the
program more susceptible to potential fraud, waste and abuse," the report
states.
Senator Susan
Collins, R-Maine, chairwoman of the Homeland Security and Governmental
Affairs Committee, said during a committee hearing in May that Brown
"approved massive payouts to replace thousands of televisions, air
conditioners, beds and other furniture, as well as a number of cars,
without receipts, or proof of ownership or damage, and based solely on
verbal statements by the residents, sometimes made in fleeting encounters
at fast-food restaurants."
"It was a pay first,
ask questions later approach," Collins said. "The inspector general's
report identifies a number of significant control weaknesses that create a
potential for widespread fraud, erroneous payments and wasteful
practices."
But the most
interesting charge against Brown is that he helped speed up payments in
Florida and purposely bypassed FEMA’s lengthy reviews process for
distributing funds in order to help Bush secure votes in the state during
last year’s presidential election.
Bob Hunter, Director
of Insurance for the Consumer Federation of America, who was a top federal
flood insurance official in the 1970s and 1980s and a Texas insurance
commissioner in the 1990s, told the Post, "that in the vast
majority of hurricanes, other than those in Florida in 2004, complaints
are rife that FEMA has vastly underpaid hurricane victims. The Frances
overpayments are questionable given the timing of the election and
Florida's importance as a battleground state."
FEMA consultant
Glenn Garcelon’s actions certainly lend credibility to questions raised by
Hunter.
On September 2,
2004, Garcelon, wrote a three-page memo titled "Hurricane Frances --
Thoughts and Suggestions."
"The Republican
National Convention was winding down, and President Bush had only a slight
lead in the polls against Democrat John Kerry," the Sun-Sentinel
reported in its March 23 story. "Winning Florida was key to the
president's re-election. FEMA should pay careful attention to how it is
portrayed by the public," Garcelon wrote in the memo, conveying "the team
effort theme at every opportunity" alongside state and local officials,
the insurance and construction industries, and relief agencies such as the
Red Cross.
Governor Bush
received the memo on September 30, 2004, shortly before a swell of
payments made its way to residents in Miami-Dade who did not sustain
damage as a result of Hurricane Frances.
A couple of weeks
before Governor Bush received the memo from Garcelon, Orlando J. Cabrera,
Executive Director of the Florida Housing Finance Corp. and a member of
the governor's Hurricane Housing Work Group, said in a different memo to
Governor Bush that FEMA was allocating short-term rental assistance to
"everyone who needs it, without asking for much information of any kind,"
the Sun-Sentinel reported.
In addition, "standard housing assistance,"
of up to $25,600, Cabrera wrote, is "liberally provided without
significant scrutiny of the request made during the initial months;
scrutiny increases remarkably and the package is far more stringent after
an unspecified time."
The DHS audit report
found that, under Brown, FEMA erroneously distributed to Miami-Dade
residents:
$8.2 million in
rental assistance to 4,308 applicants in the county who "did not indicate
a need for shelter" when they registered for help. In 60 cases reviewed by
auditors, inspectors deemed homes unsafe without explanation, and
applicants never moved out.
$720,403 to 228
people for belongings based on their word alone.
$192,592 for
generators, air purifiers, wet/dry vacuum cleaners, chainsaws and other
items without proof that they were needed to deal with the hurricane.
Three applicants got generators for their homes, plus rental assistance
from FEMA to live somewhere else.
$15,743 for three
funerals without sufficient documentation that the deaths were due to the
hurricane.
$46,464 to 64
residents for temporary housing even though they had homeowners insurance.
FEMA funds cannot be used when costs are covered by insurance.
$17,424 in rental
assistance to 24 people who reported that their homes were not damaged.
$97,500 for 15
automobiles with a "blue book" value of $56,140. In general, the report
states that FEMA approved claims for damaged vehicles without properly
verifying that the losses were caused by the storm.
Jason Leopold
is the author of the explosive memoir, News Junkie, to be released
in early 2006 by Process/Feral House Books. Visit Leopold's website at
www.jasonleopold.com
for updates. ©
2005 Jason Leopold