USA TODAY International Edition

FEMA response to Maria won’t receive initial review

Watchdog pivoting to ‘real-time feedback’

- Ledyard King

WASHINGTON – With FEMA facing its deepest scrutiny in more than a decade, the government watchdog in charge of measuring the agency’s performanc­e is no longer assessing its initial response to disasters.

The decision by the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General to no longer issue preliminar­y reports comes as the watchdog took the extraordin­ary step last week of pulling a dozen largely positive assessment­s of the Obama administra­tion’s initial response to several disasters.

Acting DHS Inspector General John V. Kelly said the reports, pulled last week from the IG’s website, didn’t meet proper standards for a government audit.

“We were not confident that the evidence collected (in those reports) was necessary to support the conclusion,” Kelly said in an interview Thursday. “It doesn’t mean the conclusion was wrong, (but) our standard is that it has to be adequately supported. You can’t say something without having the evidence even if it’s true.”

The Federal Emergency Management Administra­tion is a division of the Department of Homeland Security.

Instead of initial reports, the agency will adopt a model that provides “realtime feedback” to FEMA about its response to disasters based on observatio­ns on the ground rather than reviews that come out months after a recovery begins, Arlen Morales, a spokeswoma­n for the IG’s office, wrote in an email.

“This work does not lend itself well to a traditiona­l audit following Government Auditing Standards. Neverthele­ss, the work is critically important,” she wrote. “By following standards that better suit the work, we can better accomplish the objective of the work — namely, to provide timely feedback to FEMA on issues before they become (multimilli­on-dollar) problems.”

The change means the watchdog won’t be issuing a public assessment of FEMA’s preliminar­y efforts to help Puerto Rico recover from Hurricane Maria, a devastatin­g, Category 4 storm that left much of the island without power and other basic necessitie­s for months.

Nearly 200,000 families and businesses in Puerto Rico — 16% of the U.S. territory — remain without power. The island faces a growing mental health crisis as people wrestle with their losses from the storm. And FEMA is answering tough questions about bungled contracts in its recovery effort.

U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississipp­i, the top Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee, said the federal response to last year’s hurricanes that hit Texas (Harvey) and Florida (Irma) was robust and immediate.

The Trump administra­tion’s response to Maria “was far slower and smaller,” he said during a committee hearing Thursday examining federal efforts to help communitie­s recover from last year’s disasters.

“Even weeks after the storm, there were only a fraction of the federal personnel on the ground (compared to Texas and Florida),” Thompson said.

Not since 2005, when Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and killed nearly 2,000 people along the Gulf Coast, has FEMA been under such a public microscope.

Morales said the new approach will work better than traditiona­l audits.

“Our disaster deployment work was always meant to provide FEMA with real-time response,” she said. “We believe our new approach will improve our ability to do that.”

Craig Fugate, who ran FEMA under President Obama from 2009 to 2017, said the new approach could be more beneficial than the after-the-fact “punitive reports” the IG often issues in the wake of a disaster.

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John V. Kelly

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