The Federal Emergency Management Agency should be dissolved and
rebuilt before the upcoming hurricane season, a Democratic senator said
Sunday.
“FEMA has become, to many people in America, and particularly the
Gulf Coast, a joke, a four-letter word,” said Sen. Joseph Lieberman,
D-Conn., and a member of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental
Affairs Committee.
He favored keeping the agency within the Homeland Security
Department. FEMA was independent before it was folded into Homeland
Security when the department was created after the Sept. 11 attacks.
“It’s time for FEMA to go and to build something better, stronger within DHS to take its place,” Lieberman said.
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, in appearances on
Sunday morning talk shows, warned against overhauling FEMA with
hurricane season only three months away.
“Nature doesn’t wait for us to do yet another reorganization,” Chertoff told NBC’s Meet the Press.
Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., a member of the House Homeland Security Committee, said he favored making FEMA a Cabinet department.
Davis said FEMA should not be competing for dollars within a
department concerned with prevention as well as response, said Davis,
who appeared with Lieberman on ABC’s “This Week.”
Chertoff said that is FEMA were taken out of his department, “I
predict with virtual certainty that we will be much less prepared in
this hurricane season than if we keep the department together and
finish the job on integrating.”
Chertoff as well as FEMA and the Homeland Security Department were
roundly criticized by a House report issued last week on the government
response to Hurricane Katrina last summer.