Miami Herald

Miami and Miami-Dade bypass feds to deploy rescue crews to the Bahamas

■ Miami and Miami-Dade County are working around the federal government to send members of their search-and-rescue teams to the Bahamas to help people stranded and injured during Hurricane Dorian.

- BY DAVID SMILEY AND JOEY FLECHAS dsmiley@miamiheral­d.com jflechas@miamiheral­d.com

Frustrated that one of the country’s most skilled search-and-rescue teams has been sidelined in the effort to help Bahamians after Hurricane Dorian, city leaders in Miami found a way to bypass federal restrictio­ns so they can deploy dozens of skilled firefighte­r-paramedics to the ravaged islands.

In a news conference Thursday morning, Miami’s mayor said that rather than waiting for federal approval to send the crew from Miami, the city is working out an agreement with the Bahamian government to send firefighte­rs who are part of the federal team. But the search-andrescue specialist­s will go strictly in their role as Miami firefighte­rs.

“In the first few days,

this is when it’s the most critical,” Miami Mayor Francis Suarez said in Thursday’s news conference outside Miami City Hall. “We just felt a moral obligation, frankly, to do everything we can do . ... Lives are at stake.”

Miami’s decision to unofficial­ly send its searchand-rescue crews comes amid growing urgency in South Florida to assist a neighborin­g country devastated by 185-mph winds and a massive storm surge. By Thursday night, the death toll in the Bahamas had reached 30 from the storm, which flooded homes up to their roofs and tossed cars and boats.

The U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t said it deployed a searchand-rescue team of 57 firefighte­rs from Fairfax, Va., Wednesday to the Bahamas with 50,000 pounds of medical equipment and placed another team from Los Angeles on standby. The U.S. Coast Guard is also assisting and said Thursday morning that its members have rescued 135 people and six pets.

But Miami’s search-andrescue team falls under the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which held the team in Orlando alongside emergency managers to be deployed in the U.S. if needed.

Suarez said Thursday that Miami’s team had only just been released from Orlando but he did not know if the team would be sent to the Bahamas.

Miami-Dade County, which has its own searchand-rescue team, plans to use a power catamaran to ship out 15 county firefighte­rs Friday for the Bahamas at its own expense after the Trump administra­tion opted not to send the crew as part of its assistance to the Bahamian government. Another county crew of 25 is slated to leave Sunday.

“This is our government’s contributi­on to our neighbors,” Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez said at the start of a budget hearing Thursday night.

President Donald

Trump, in a call Wednesday with Bahamian Prime Minister Hubert Minnis, said the U.S. “will provide all appropriat­e support to the people of the Bahamas.” But the decision by FEMA to hold both Miami and Miami-Dade’s teams back in Florida has frustrated some in Miami.

U.S. Rep. Donna Shalala, D-Miami, called the hesitancy “unconscion­able.”

“We have world class search and rescue teams with tremendous experience dealing with the aftermath of hurricanes,” she said in a statement to the Miami Herald.

But there are also concerns about making sure the response is coordinate­d and effective.

Linda Mackey, consul general for the Bahamas in Miami, told the Miami Herald she understood why the U.S. and Bahamian government­s must take time to assess the situation before deploying additional rescue teams.

But she also said she feels an urgency because lives are at stake.

“There’s bureaucrac­y because there has to be a process in place,” she said, acknowledg­ing her frustratio­n. “But we’re working around that.”

Some of the complicati­on lies in red tape.

The Virginia and California teams that were deployed Wednesday to the Bahamas are internatio­nally certified by the Internatio­nal Search and Rescue Advisory Group, and fall under the authority of the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t. A Trump administra­tion source explained that Miami’s team has been on standby to assist with domestic efforts because the lack of certificat­ion creates complicati­ons related to insurance.

But Miami Fire Chief Joseph Zahralban disputed that, noting that Miami’s team was deployed to Haiti after the massive earthquake that killed hundreds of thousands of people in 2010. He said FEMA can deploy Miami’s team as long as it has a request to do so from the USAID.

Under the plan to send the team members in their roles as firefighte­rs, Zahralban said the city’s specialist­s will already be in the Bahamas if the federal government decides to deploy them.

“These are [urban search-and-rescue] team members trained in search and rescue that will be wearing a city of Miami fire department uniform, so they will be sent as city of Miami firefighte­rs,” Zahralban said. “If it moves to an urban searchand-rescue response, the transition is easy because it’s many of the same people.”

In a Wednesday conference call, representa­tives of the U.S. State Department, Coast Guard, and USAID said they will send more teams if needed.

“Right now, the capacity to receive flights to the Bahamas and move teams around is very limited,” a USAID official said. “We want to make sure that we are not wasting resources.”

U.S. Rep. Frederica Wilson, a Miami Democrat of Bahamian heritage, told the Miami Herald on Thursday that she has been assured by the federal government that Miami’s search-and-rescue team should get official clearance to work in the Bahamas within the next 24 hours. Wilson, who is often critical of the Trump administra­tion, said she understand­s the urgency to help the islands but also has concerns about the consequenc­es of an uncoordina­ted response.

“We have to remember that the Bahamas itself has its own equivalent of FEMA. They’re doing search and rescue also. And what we don’t want to do is compromise the air space,” she said. “It’s my understand­ing that whole casino tables are floating in the ocean. Refrigerat­ors, cars, parts of buildings. It’s very dangerous and the Bahamas itself needs to be in control of who is and what is coming, in conjunctio­n with USAID.”

But she said the South Florida rescue teams have had plenty of experience in such tragedies and should be in the Bahamas.

“We had this with [the earthquake in] Haiti and other places in the Caribbean. We have the kind of experience that LA County and Fairfax don’t have,” she said.

‘‘ IN THE FIRST FEW DAYS, THIS IS WHEN IT’S THE MOST CRITICAL. WE JUST FELT A MORAL OBLIGATION, FRANKLY, TO DO EVERYTHING WE CAN DO . ... LIVES ARE AT STAKE.

Miami Mayor Francis Suarez about sending the city’s search-and-rescue team to the Bahamas

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