By Michaela May, 3L Boston University School of Law and DAP volunteer
FEMA announced plans to donate 1,338 pounds of Mardi Gras beads to Arc of Greater New Orleans. Arc, a non-profit group serving individuals with intellectual disabilities, employs its clientele to sort, repackage and sell the beads. The proceeds pay their wages.
FEMA’s donation to Arc comes shortly after a CBS Evening News report in which several current and former FEMA employees alleged that recovery efforts in New Orleans have been hampered by an office atmosphere that one employee described as “toxic.” In the report, an employee alleged racial discrimination, cronyism, and sexual harassment as commonplace in FEMA’s New Orleans office.
This bead donation, while supportive of a long-standing NOLA community tradition that does help many, falls far short of addressing the agency’s neglected responsibilities toward New Orleans and other post-disaster disability communities. FEMA’s missteps during Hurricane Katrina, and continued inaction after hurricanes Ike and Gustav, have been particularly hard on people with disabilities. Considering FEMA’s record on disability issues, the donation rings hollow.
Alarmingly, FEMA has made few strides since Hurricane Katrina to account for individuals with additional needs. In the Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act of 2006, Congress created a Disability Coordinator position. The coordinator has at least 10 statutory responsibilities.
Unfortunately, the lone FEMA staff member dedicated to helping this vulnerable population has no support staff whatsoever. Disability Coordinator Cindy Lou Daniel has been on the job for nearly two years and FEMA continues to fail to comply with a congressional mandate that requires the agency to assist people with disabilities during disasters. Ms. Daniel simply lacks the resources to get the job done.
In a 2008 letter, then-FEMA Administrator R. David Paulison agreed with the recommendation of FEMA’s National Advisory Council Special Needs Subcommittee that regional disability coordinator positions are necessary. Indeed, these 10 regional coordinators are necessary to ensure that each region can effectively meet the needs of the individuals residing in it. Unfortunately, Paulison indicated that the positions would not be included in FEMA’s budget until FY 2011.
To truly serve disability communities, FEMA should move Ms. Daniel’s position to the FEMA Administrator’s Office to ensure direct reporting to the FEMA Administrator and to prevent the position from getting buried in bureaucracy. Regional disability coordinators should report directly to the National Disability Coordinator, and the positions should be implemented by FY 2010—or sooner. Regional coordinators can ensure that individuals with additional needs are accommodated, taking into account each region’s vulnerabilities and how they are likely to affect those with additional needs.
See Disaster Accountability Project Testimony on this issue.
The beads are undoubtedly a nice gesture, but the Gulf Coast’s disability communities need much more than beads from the agency.
2 users commented in " FEMA’s bead donations are clouded by poor record on issues "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackI have been writing a policy paper on the Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act of 2006 and looking for what has been implemented. Your article gave excellent feedback and information I needed regarding just how effective could the FEMA Disability Coordinator’s position be- my first Google showed the June 2007 announcement of the Daniel appointment; there was no additional articles more timely on what is happening at FEMA, strides for the disabled community. BTW, the GAO report for 2008, note page 14, did not note any outcomes. However, they did not note lack of staff or funding for the 10 regional coordinators until 2011. What a shame!
Martha
Your suggestions, I hope, will heard by FEMA. I totally empathize with Daniel’s dilemma- 10 statutes and no staff.
Martha
it would help if ms. daniel herself was actually on the job working. she has been on extended medical leave since mid-2008 and FEMA did not bother to place someone in her role as “Acting” so that the requirements set forth in the post-katrina legislation could actually be achieved. the failure’s of FEMA to meet the needs of people with disabilities and special needs clearly lie within their own offices.
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