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Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Emergency Communications, Preparedness and 
Response, Committee on Homeland Security, House of Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 10:00 a.m. EDT:
Tuesday, March 17, 2009: 

Emergency Management: 

Actions to Implement Select Provisions of the Post-Katrina Emergency 
Management Reform Act: 

Statement of William O. Jenkins, Jr. 
Homeland Security and Justice: 

GAO-09-433T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-09-433T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
Emergency Communications, Preparedness and Response, Committee on 
Homeland Security, House of Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Hurricane Katrina severely tested disaster management at the federal, 
state, and local levels and revealed weaknesses in the basic 
elements—leadership, capabilities, and accountability—of preparing for, 
responding to, and recovering from disasters. In its 2006 work on the 
response to Hurricane Katrina, GAO noted that these elements needed to 
be strengthened. In October 2006, Congress enacted the Post-Katrina Act 
to address issues identified in the response to Hurricane Katrina. GAO 
reported in November 2008 that the Department of Homeland Security 
(DHS) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) had at least 
preliminary efforts under way to address most of the provisions, but 
also identified a number of areas that required further action. This 
statement discusses select issues within the basic elements related to 
(1) findings from the response to Hurricane Katrina, (2) provisions of 
the Post-Katrina Act, and (3) specific actions DHS and FEMA have taken 
to implement these provisions. GAO’s comments are based on GAO products 
issued from February 2006 through November 2008, and selected updates 
in March 2009. To obtain updated information, GAO consulted program 
officials. 

What GAO Found: 

GAO reported in September 2006 that the experience of Hurricane Katrina 
showed the need to improve leadership at all levels of government to 
respond to catastrophic disasters. For example, GAO reported that, in 
the response to Hurricane Katrina, there was confusion over roles and 
responsibilities under the National Response Plan, including the roles 
of the DHS Secretary, the FEMA Administrator, the Principal Federal 
Official (PFO), and the Federal Coordinating Officer (FCO). The Post-
Katrina Act clarified FEMA’s mission within DHS and set forth the role 
and responsibilities of the FEMA Administrator. The act also required 
that the FEMA Administrator provide a clear chain of command that 
accounts for these roles. In revising the National Response Plan—now 
called the National Response Framework—FEMA articulated specific roles 
for the PFO and FCO, which are described in GAO’s November 2008 report. 

GAO reported in September 2006 that various congressional reports and 
GAO’s own work on FEMA’s performance before, during, and after 
Hurricane Katrina suggested that FEMA’s capabilities were insufficient 
to meet the challenges posed by the degree of damage and the number of 
hurricane victims. The capabilities issues GAO identified related to, 
among others, (1) emergency communications, (2) evacuations, (3) 
logistics, (4) mass care, (5) planning and training, and (6) human 
capital. The Post-Katrina Act included a variety of provisions that 
related to these issues. For example, related to emergency 
communications, the act established an Office of Emergency 
Communications (OEC) within DHS. GAO reported in November 2008 that, in 
response to specific responsibilities outlined in its authorizing 
provision, OEC has been working with Urban Area Working Groups and 
states to assess gaps in communications infrastructure and to determine 
technical requirements to enhance interoperable communications systems. 

GAO reported in February 2006 that accountability mechanisms— 
specifically, internal controls—were lacking or nonexistent in 
processing applications for individual and household assistance 
following Hurricane Katrina, which left the government vulnerable to 
fraud and abuse. For example, GAO estimated that through February 2006, 
FEMA made about 16 percent ($1 billion) in improper and potentially 
fraudulent payments to applicants who used invalid information to apply 
for disaster assistance. The Post-Katrina Act required the development 
of a system, including an electronic database, to counter improper 
payments. GAO reported in November 2008 that FEMA established a process 
to identify and collect duplicative payments by, among other things, 
enabling its disaster assistance database to check automatically for 
duplicate applications. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO has made recommendations to DHS in prior reports, with which DHS 
generally agreed, regarding leadership, capabilities, and 
accountability controls for disaster management. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-433T] or key 
components. For more information, contact William O. Jenkins, Jr. at 
(202) 512-8777 or jenkinswo@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

I appreciate the opportunity to participate in today's hearing to 
discuss the efforts of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) 
and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to strengthen emergency 
management by implementing provisions of the Post-Katrina Emergency 
Management Reform Act of 2006 (Post-Katrina Act), which Congress 
enacted in October 2006 to address shortcomings in the preparation for 
and response to Hurricane Katrina.[Footnote 1] My remarks today are 
grounded in our prior work on FEMA's and DHS's response to Hurricane 
Katrina and the actions they have taken to implement the Post-Katrina 
Act.[Footnote 2] In September 2006, we identified leadership, 
capabilities, and accountability as elements that FEMA and DHS needed 
to strengthen to respond to catastrophic disasters. This testimony 
discusses these three elements in terms of our 2006 findings about 
select issues within the elements; provisions of the Post-Katrina Act 
that relate to those issues; the actions we reported in November 2008 
that FEMA and DHS have taken to implement those provisions; and where 
possible, updates to these actions as of March 2009. 

To conduct our 2006 work on Hurricane Katrina we visited the areas 
affected by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita--Alabama, Louisiana, 
Mississippi, and Texas--and interviewed the governors of those states 
and the mayor of New Orleans. We also interviewed senior federal 
officials. To conduct our 2008 work about actions to implement 
provisions of the Post-Katrina Act, we analyzed the text of the act and 
identified well over 300 discrete provisions within the legislation 
that called for FEMA or DHS action to implement requirements or 
exercise authorities. We reviewed agency documents and discussed the 
act's implementation with numerous senior-level program officials at 
FEMA and DHS to identify the actions that had been taken. In March 
2009, we consulted program officials about the status of select actions 
to provide updates in this statement. 

We conducted our work in accordance with generally accepted government 
auditing standards. More detailed information on our scope and 
methodology appears in our published work. 

This statement provides information about select actions related to our 
2006 work on the response to Hurricane Katrina that FEMA and DHS have 
taken to implement the Post-Katrina Act. The actions described are 
drawn from our November 2008 report and, where possible, March 2009 
updates from program officials. As we reported in November 2008, for 
most of the provisions we examined, FEMA and DHS had at least 
preliminary efforts underway to address them. We also identified a 
number of areas that still required action, and noted that it was clear 
that FEMA and DHS have work remaining to implement the act. 

Background: 

On August 29, 2005, and in the ensuing days, Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, 
and Wilma devastated the Gulf Coast region of the United States. 
Hurricane Katrina alone affected more than a half million people 
located within approximately 90,000 square miles spanning Louisiana, 
Mississippi, and Alabama, and ultimately resulted in over 1,600 deaths. 

Hurricane Katrina severely tested disaster management at the federal, 
state, and local levels and revealed weaknesses in the basic elements 
of preparing for, responding to, and recovering from a catastrophic 
disaster. Beginning in February 2006, reports by the House Select 
Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to 
Hurricane Katrina, the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental 
Affairs Committee, the White House Homeland Security Council, the DHS 
Inspector General, DHS, and FEMA all identified a variety of failures 
and some strengths in the preparation for, response to, and initial 
recovery from Hurricane Katrina. Our findings about the response to 
Hurricane Katrina in a March 2006 testimony and a September 2006 report 
focused on the need for strengthened leadership, capabilities, and 
accountability to improve emergency preparedness and response.[Footnote 
3] 

The Post-Katrina Act was enacted to address various shortcomings 
identified in the preparation for and response to Hurricane Katrina. 
The act enhances FEMA's responsibilities and its autonomy within DHS. 
FEMA is to lead and support the nation in a risk-based, comprehensive 
emergency management system of preparedness, protection, response, 
recovery, and mitigation. Under the act, the FEMA Administrator reports 
directly to the Secretary of Homeland Security; FEMA is now a distinct 
entity within DHS; and the Secretary of Homeland Security can no longer 
substantially or significantly reduce the authorities, 
responsibilities, or functions of FEMA or the capability to perform 
them unless authorized by subsequent legislation. The act further 
directs the transfer to FEMA of many functions of DHS's former 
Preparedness Directorate. The statute also codified FEMA's existing 
regional structure, which includes 10 regional offices, and specified 
their responsibilities. It also contains a provision establishing in 
FEMA a National Integration Center, which is responsible for the 
ongoing management and maintenance of the National Incident Management 
System (NIMS)--which describes how emergency incident response is to be 
managed and coordinated--and the National Response Plan (NRP)--now 
revised and known as the National Response Framework (NRF). In 
addition, the act includes several provisions to strengthen the 
management and capability of FEMA's workforce. For example, the statute 
calls for a strategic human capital plan to shape and improve FEMA's 
workforce, authorizes recruitment and retention bonuses, and 
establishes requirements for a Surge Capacity Force. 

The Post-Katrina Act extends beyond changes to FEMA's organizational 
and management structure and includes legislative reforms in other 
emergency management areas that were considered shortcomings during 
Hurricane Katrina. For example, the Post-Katrina Act includes an 
emergency communications title that requires, among other things, the 
development of a National Emergency Communications Plan, as well as the 
establishment of working groups within each FEMA region dedicated to 
emergency communications coordination. The act also addresses 
catastrophic planning and preparedness; for example, it charges FEMA's 
National Integration Center with revising the NRF's catastrophic 
incident annex, and it makes state catastrophic planning a component of 
one grant program. In addition, the act addresses evacuation plans and 
exercises and the needs of individuals with disabilities. 

In November 2008, we reported the actions FEMA and DHS had taken in 
response to more than 300 distinct provisions of the Post-Katrina Act 
that we had identified. We also reported on areas where FEMA and DHS 
still needed to take action and any challenges to implementation that 
FEMA and DHS officials identified during our discussions with them. In 
general, we found that FEMA and DHS had made some progress in their 
efforts to implement the act since it was enacted in October 2006. For 
most of the provisions we examined, FEMA and DHS had at least 
preliminary efforts under way to address them. We also identified a 
number of areas that still required action, and noted that it was clear 
that FEMA and DHS had work remaining to implement the provisions of the 
act. Throughout this statement, unless otherwise noted, the actions 
reported that DHS and FEMA have taken to address provisions of the Post-
Katrina Act are drawn from our November 2008 report. 

Leadership: 

Our 2006 report noted that in preparing for, responding to, and 
recovering from any catastrophic disaster, the legal authorities, roles 
and responsibilities, and lines of authority at all levels of 
government must be clearly defined, effectively communicated, and well 
understood in order to facilitate rapid and effective decision making. 
We further noted that the experience of Hurricane Katrina showed the 
need to improve leadership at all levels of government to better 
respond to a catastrophic disaster. Specifically, we reported that in 
the response to Hurricane Katrina there was confusion regarding roles 
and responsibilities under the NRP, including the roles of the 
Secretary of Homeland Security and two key federal officials with 
responsibility for disaster response--the Principal Federal Official 
(PFO), and the Federal Coordinating Officer (FCO). 

Updating the National Response Framework and Clarifying the Role of the 
FEMA Administrator: 

The Post-Katrina Act clarified FEMA's mission within DHS and set forth 
the role and responsibilities of the FEMA Administrator. These 
provisions, among other things, required that the FEMA Administrator 
provide advice on request to the President, the Homeland Security 
Council, and the Secretary of Homeland Security, and that the FEMA 
Administrator report directly to the Secretary of Homeland Security 
without having to report through another official.[Footnote 4] 

As a result of the limitations in the NRP revealed during the response 
to Hurricane Katrina and as required by the Post-Katrina Act, DHS and 
FEMA undertook a comprehensive review of the NRP. The result of this 
process was the issuance, in January 2008, of the NRF (the name for the 
revised NRP).[Footnote 5] The NRF states that it is to be a guide to 
how the nation conducts an all-hazards response and manages incidents 
ranging from the serious but purely local to large-scale terrorist 
attacks or catastrophic natural disasters. The NRF became effective in 
March 2008. 

As reflected in the NRF and confirmed by FEMA's Office of Policy and 
Program Analysis and FEMA General Counsel, there is a direct reporting 
relationship between the FEMA Administrator and the Secretary of 
Homeland Security. According to officials in FEMA's Office of Policy 
and Program Analysis, the FEMA Administrator gives emergency management 
advice as a matter of course at meetings with the President, the 
Secretary of Homeland Security, and the Homeland Security Council. 

The NRF also states that the Secretary of Homeland Security coordinates 
with other appropriate departments and agencies to activate plans and 
applicable coordination structures of the NRF, as required. The FEMA 
Administrator assists the secretary in meeting these responsibilities. 
FEMA is the lead agency for emergency management under NRF Emergency 
Support Function #5, which is the coordination Emergency Support 
Function for all federal departments and agencies across the spectrum 
of domestic incident management from hazard mitigation and preparedness 
to response and recovery. 

Clarifying the Roles of the PFO and FCO: 

We reported in 2006 that in response to Hurricane Katrina, the 
Secretary of Homeland Security initially designated the head of FEMA as 
the PFO, who then appointed separate FCOs for Alabama, Louisiana, and 
Mississippi. It was not clear, however, who was responsible for 
coordinating the overall federal effort at a strategic level. Our 
fieldwork indicated that the lack of clarity in leadership roles and 
responsibilities resulted in disjointed efforts of federal agencies 
involved in the response, a myriad of approaches and processes for 
requesting and providing assistance, and confusion about who should be 
advised of requests and what resources would be provided within 
specific time frames. 

The Post-Katrina Act required that the Secretary of Homeland Security, 
through the FEMA Administrator, provide a clear chain of command in the 
NRF that accounts for the roles of the FEMA Administrator, the FCO, and 
the PFO.[Footnote 6] According to the NRF, the Secretary of Homeland 
Security may elect to designate a PFO to serve as his or her primary 
field representative to ensure consistency of federal support as well 
as the overall effectiveness of federal incident management. The NRF 
repeats the Post-Katrina Act's prohibition that the PFO shall not 
direct or replace the incident command structure or have directive 
authority over the FCO or other federal and state officials. Under the 
NRF, the PFO's duties include providing situational awareness and a 
primary point of contact in the field for the secretary, promoting 
federal interagency collaboration and conflict resolution where 
possible, presenting to the secretary any policy issues that require 
resolution, and acting as the primary federal spokesperson for 
coordinated media and public communications. 

According to DHS officials, at the time of our 2008 report, no PFO had 
been operationally deployed for any Stafford Act event since the 
response to Hurricane Katrina. DHS's appropriations acts for fiscal 
years 2008 and 2009 have each included a prohibition that "none of the 
funds provided by this or previous appropriations acts shall be used to 
fund any position designated as a Principal Federal Official" for any 
Stafford Act declared disasters or emergencies.[Footnote 7] Our Office 
of General Counsel plans to address the implications of this funding 
prohibition in future work.[Footnote 8] 

According to the NRF, the primary role and responsibilities of the FCO 
include four major activities: 

* representing the FEMA Administrator in the field and discharging all 
FEMA responsibilities for the response and recovery efforts under way; 

* administering Stafford Act authorities, including the commitment of 
FEMA resources and the issuance of mission assignments to other federal 
departments or agencies; 

* coordinating, integrating, and synchronizing the federal response, 
within the Unified Coordination Group at the Joint Field Office; and: 

* interfacing with the State Coordinating Officer and other state, 
tribal, and local response officials to determine the most urgent needs 
and set objectives for an effective response in collaboration with the 
Unified Coordination Group. 

Updating the Catastrophic Incident Annex and Supplement: 

The Catastrophic Incident Annex to the NRP (now NRF) was a source of 
considerable criticism after Hurricane Katrina. The purpose of this 
annex is to describe an accelerated, proactive national response to 
catastrophic incidents and establish protocols to pre-identify and 
rapidly deploy essential resources expected to be urgently needed. Lack 
of clarity about the circumstance under which the annex should be 
activated contributed to issues with clear roles and lines of 
responsibility and authority. Because questions surrounded whether the 
annex should apply only to events that occur with little or no notice 
rather than events with more notice that have the potential to evolve 
into incidents of catastrophic magnitude, like a strengthening 
hurricane, it did not provide a clear guidance about the extent to 
which the federal government should have been involved in the 
accelerated response role that it describes. We noted in 2006 that our 
review of the NRP and its catastrophic incident annex--as well as 
lessons from Hurricane Katrina--demonstrated the need for DHS and other 
federal agencies to develop robust and detailed operational plans to 
implement the catastrophic incident annex and its supplement in 
preparation for and response to future catastrophic disasters. 

Under the Post-Katrina Act, FEMA's National Integration Center is 
statutorily responsible for revising the Catastrophic Incident Annex 
and for finalizing and releasing an operational supplement--the 
Catastrophic Incident Supplement.[Footnote 9] The annex was revised and 
released in November 2008.[Footnote 10] Officials from FEMA's National 
Preparedness Directorate told us in March 2009 that operational annexes 
of the Catastrophic Incident Supplement are being updated to reflect 
the current response capabilities of the federal government. FEMA 
officials told us that the annex and its operational supplement were 
not activated during the 2008 hurricane season because none of the 
storms resulted in a catastrophic incident that would require their 
use. 

Capabilities: 

In our 2006 report, we noted that developing the capabilities needed 
for large-scale disasters is part of an overall national preparedness 
effort that is designed to integrate and define what needs to be done, 
where, based on what standards, how it should be done, and how well it 
should be done. The response to Hurricane Katrina highlighted the 
limitations in the nation's capabilities to respond to catastrophic 
disasters. Various reports from Congress and others, along with our 
work on FEMA's performance before, during, and after Hurricane Katrina 
suggested that FEMA's human, financial, and technological resources and 
capabilities were insufficient to meet the challenges posed by the 
unprecedented degree of damage and the resulting number of hurricane 
victims. Among other things, in 2006 we reported on problems during 
Hurricane Katrina with (1) emergency communications, (2) evacuations, 
(3) logistics, (4) mass care, (5) planning and training, and (6) human 
capital. 

Emergency Communications: 

Our 2006 report noted that emergency communications is a critical 
capability common across all phases of an incident. Agencies' 
communications systems during a catastrophic disaster must first be 
operable, with sufficient communications to meet internal and emergency 
communication requirements. Once operable, they then should have 
communications interoperability whereby public safety agencies (e.g., 
police, fire, emergency medical services) and service agencies (e.g., 
public works, transportation, hospitals) can communicate within and 
across agencies and jurisdictions in real time as needed. Hurricane 
Katrina caused significant damage to the communication infrastructure-
-including commercial landline and cellular telephone systems--in 
Louisiana and Mississippi, which further contributed to a lack of 
situational awareness for military and civilian officials. 

Among other provisions aimed at strengthening emergency communications 
capabilities, the Post-Katrina Act established an Office of Emergency 
Communications (OEC) within DHS. The statutory responsibilities of OEC 
include, but are not limited to, conducting outreach, providing 
technical assistance, coordinating regional emergency communications 
efforts, and coordinating the establishment of a national response 
capability for a catastrophic loss of local and regional emergency 
communications.[Footnote 11] 

Stakeholder Outreach: 

OEC's stakeholder outreach efforts have included coordinating with 150 
individuals from the emergency response community to develop the 
National Emergency Communications Plan. OEC officials stated that the 
outreach was primarily carried out through several organizations that 
represent officials from federal, state, and local governments and 
private-sector representatives from the communications, information 
technology, and emergency services sectors. 

Technical Assistance: 

Through the Interoperable Communications Technical Assistance Program, 
OEC has been working with Urban Area Working Groups and states to 
assess their communications infrastructure for gaps and determine 
technical requirements that can be used to design or enhance 
interoperable communications systems. According to the Deputy Director 
of OEC, OEC provided technical assistance to 13 recipients of the 2007 
Urban Area Security Initiative grants by providing guidance on 
technical issues such as engineering solutions and drafting requests 
for proposals, as well as providing best practices information. In 
addition, OEC offered assistance to states and territories in 
developing their Statewide Communication Interoperability Plans and, as 
of August 1, 2008, had conducted plan development workshops for the 30 
states and five territories that requested such help. 

Coordinating Regional Communications: 

Officials from OEC stated that they have been coordinating to minimize 
any overlap between the roles and responsibilities of various DHS 
regional staff offices related to emergency communications. According 
to the officials, officials from these regional staff offices plan to 
attend and share information through the Regional Emergency 
Communications Coordination Working Groups--also established by the 
Post-Katrina Act.[Footnote 12] OEC officials said that OEC had hired a 
federal employee to represent OEC at working group meetings. In 
addition, OEC officials stated their intention to hire regional 
interoperability coordinators for each of the 10 FEMA regions in fiscal 
year 2009 to work with FEMA on the activities of the working groups. 

FEMA officials told us in March 2009 that FEMA's Disaster Emergency 
Communications Division has filled one national and nine regional 
positions to coordinate the working groups. FEMA's Region II has not 
yet filled the regional position. As of March 2009, all working groups, 
with the exception of Regions II and IX, have been established. 
According to FEMA officials, the eight established groups have had 
various levels of activity, with the number of meetings ranging from 
one time (Regions VI and X) to eight times (Regional IV). No updated 
information about specific efforts to minimize overlap or to achieve 
the Post-Katrina Act objectives for the working groups was provided. 

Establishing a National Response Capability: 

To establish a national response capability for a catastrophic loss of 
local and regional emergency communications, OEC officials told us they 
had been working with FEMA and the National Communications System (NCS) 
[Footnote 13] to coordinate policy and planning efforts relating to the 
existing response capability managed through the NRF's Communication 
Annex, Emergency Support Function 2.[Footnote 14] According to OEC 
officials, an example of this coordination was the inclusion of 
continuity of emergency communications and response operations in the 
National Emergency Communications Plan. 

The officials also said that OEC would represent NCS in regions where 
the system has no presence and would support the system's private- 
sector coordination role, as appropriate. In addition, the Director and 
Deputy Director of OEC told us that OEC, FEMA, and the NCS were 
developing a strategy that involved the OEC's regional interoperability 
coordinators providing technical support, playing a role as needed in 
Emergency Support Function 2, and providing response capabilities 
within their designated regions, among other things. 

FEMA officials told us in March 2009 that FEMA and NCS have worked 
closely to develop revised operating procedures that define their roles 
and responsibilities under Emergency Support Function 2. In addition, 
they said that NCS recently hired three Regional Emergency 
Communications Coordinators with responsibility for coordinating with 
regional, private-sector communications providers. The NCS coordinators 
are working with FEMA regional coordinators to ensure that 
infrastructure communications restoration efforts are supported by and 
consistent with FEMA tactical communications support to state and local 
response efforts. 

To improve the national response capability, FEMA officials also 
reported in March 2009 that they had defined an integrated response 
framework and five critical disaster emergency communications incident 
support functions--mission operations, facilities, tactical, 
restoration, and planning and coordination. Additionally, the officials 
also reported acquiring assets, assessing networks, and establishing 
prescripted mission assignments to enhance response capabilities. 
Finally, the officials said that FEMA Disaster Emergency Communications 
Division has coordinated the development of 24 state and territory 
disaster emergency communications annexes. They noted that some of 
these state and territorial annexes were used in Hurricanes Gustav and 
Ike, as well as during the Presidential Inauguration to support 
response activities, understand state and local communications 
capabilities, and prepare for any shortfalls that may arise. 

In terms of tactical support, FEMA officials told us that FEMA's Mobile 
Emergency Response Support mission carried out a variety of support 
activities during Hurricanes Gustav and Ike. For example, among other 
activities reported by the officials, FEMA provided mobile emergency 
communications infrastructure to support continuity of local government 
and supported maintenance and repair of communications equipment for 
local first responders on Galveston Island. 

Evacuations: 

We reported in 2006 that by definition, a catastrophic disaster like 
Hurricane Katrina would impact a large geographic area necessitating 
the evacuation of many people--including vulnerable populations, such 
as hospital patients, nursing home residents, and transportation- 
disadvantaged populations who were not in such facilities. 

Transportation Assistance: 

The Post-Katrina Act amended the Stafford Act to authorize 
transportation assistance to relocate displaced individuals to and from 
alternate locations for short-or long-term accommodations, or to return 
them to their predisaster primary residences.[Footnote 15] FEMA 
officials in the Disaster Assistance Directorate told us that they have 
developed a draft policy for implementing the transportation assistance 
authority. They noted that it would require implementation of proposed 
regulatory changes before becoming effective, and as of March 2009, it 
was on hold due to these required changes. In addition, they noted that 
according to FEMA's July 2006 Mass Sheltering and Housing Assistance 
Strategy, if the scale of the evacuation overwhelms affected states' 
sheltering capabilities, FEMA will coordinate and provide air or 
surface transportation in support of interstate evacuation. If the 
evacuated area is without extensive damage to residences, as stated in 
the strategy, FEMA will coordinate and fund return mass transportation 
to the point of transportation origin. If the evacuated area suffered 
extensive damage to residences, eligible evacuees are authorized, with 
host state consent, to use FEMA funding known as Other Needs Assistance 
to purchase return transportation when they are able to do so. 

Mass Evacuation Planning and Technical Assistance: 

The Post-Katrina Act authorized grants made to state, local, and tribal 
governments through the State Homeland Security Program or the Urban 
Area Security Initiative to be used to establish programs for mass- 
evacuation plan development and maintenance, preparation for execution 
of mass evacuation plans, and exercises.[Footnote 16] According to the 
Director of Grants Development and Administration, FEMA informed state, 
local, and tribal governments that they may use the grant awards to 
assist mass evacuation planning via the fiscal year 2008 Homeland 
Security Grant Program written guidance, which covers both grants. 

The act also required the FEMA Administrator, in coordination with the 
heads of other federal agencies, to provide evacuation preparedness 
technical assistance to state, local, and tribal governments.[Footnote 
17] FEMA developed the Mass Evacuation Incident Annex to the NRF, which 
provides an overview of mass evacuation functions, agency roles and 
responsibilities, and overall guidelines for the integration of 
federal, state, tribal, and local support for the evacuation of large 
numbers of people during incidents requiring a coordinated federal 
response. However, according to officials in FEMA's Disaster Operations 
Directorate, as of March 10, 2009, FEMA had not finalized the Mass 
Evacuation Incident Annex Operational Supplement to the NRF to provide 
additional guidance for mass evacuations. 

Officials in FEMA's Disaster Operations Directorate also noted that the 
states participating in FEMA's Catastrophic Disaster Planning 
Initiative--an effort to strengthen response planning and capabilities 
for select scenarios (e.g., a Category 5 hurricane making landfall in 
southern Florida)--benefit from detailed federal, state, and local 
catastrophic planning that includes examination of evacuation topics. 
These states include Florida, Louisiana, California, and the eight 
Midwestern states in the New Madrid Seismic Zone. National Preparedness 
Directorate officials also told us that FEMA had conducted mass 
evacuation workshops in Georgia and Florida and had provided technical 
assistance to the state of Louisiana, helping to develop a mass 
evacuation plan. FEMA officials told us that this plan--the Gulf Coast 
Evacuation Plan--was successfully implemented during Hurricane Gustav 
to evacuate 2 million people from New Orleans within 48 hours of the 
incident using a multimodal approach (air, bus, and rail) and to enable 
their return within 4 days. 

The Post-Katrina Act requires FEMA to provide mass evacuation planning 
assistance to institutions that house individuals with special needs 
upon request by a state, local, or tribal government.[Footnote 18] FEMA 
officials in the Disaster Operations Directorate told us that they had 
not received any requests for such assistance. These officials said 
that the draft Mass Evacuation Incident Annex Operational Supplement 
will include a tab on evacuation issues related to people with special 
needs and, once issued, can provide guidance to hospitals, nursing 
homes, and other institutions that house individuals with special 
needs. Officials from FEMA's National Preparedness Directorate also 
noted that the Homeland Security Preparedness Technical Assistance 
Program provides technical assistance upon request to jurisdictions 
interested in planning for mass evacuations. Additionally, they said 
the directorate was developing evacuation and reentry planning guidance 
for use by state and local governments, which is scheduled for interim 
release in the summer of 2009. 

Evacuation for Special Needs Populations: 

In establishing a Disability Coordinator within FEMA to ensure that the 
needs of individuals with disabilities are addressed in emergency 
preparedness and disaster relief, the Post-Katrina Act charged the 
Disability Coordinator with specific evacuation-related 
responsibilities, among other things. First, the act required the 
coordinator to ensure the coordination and dissemination of model 
evacuation plans for individuals with disabilities. Second, the act 
charged the coordinator with ensuring the availability of accessible 
transportation options for individuals with disabilities in the event 
of an evacuation.[Footnote 19] At the time of our 2008 report, FEMA had 
efforts under way for each provision, but provided little specific 
detail on the status of those efforts. The Disability Coordinator told 
us that FEMA was in the process of developing model evacuation plans 
for people with disabilities. She also told us that FEMA had begun to 
work with state emergency managers to help develop evacuation plans 
that include accessible transportation options, and that FEMA was 
working with states to develop paratransit options as well as to 
coordinate the use of accessible vans for hospitals and nursing homes. 

Family and Child Locators: 

In 2006, we conducted work examining the nation's efforts to protect 
children after the Gulf Coast hurricanes and identified evacuation 
challenges for this population. We noted that thousands of children 
were reported missing to the National Center for Missing and Exploited 
Children, which used its trained investigators to help locate missing 
children after the evacuation. Officials from this Center stated that 
both the American Red Cross and FEMA had some information on the 
location of children in their databases; however, they said it was 
difficult to obtain this information because of privacy concerns. These 
officials told us that standing agreements for data sharing among 
organizations tracking missing children, the Red Cross, and FEMA could 
help locate missing persons more quickly. 

The Post-Katrina Act established two mechanisms to help locate family 
members and displaced children. First, the act established the National 
Emergency Child Locator Center within the National Center for Missing 
and Exploited Children and enumerated the responsibilities of the 
center, among other things, to provide technical assistance in locating 
displaced children and assist in the reunification of displaced 
children with their families.[Footnote 20] Second, the act required the 
FEMA Administrator to establish the National Emergency Family Registry 
and Locator System to help reunify families separated after an 
emergency or major disaster.[Footnote 21] 

The National Emergency Child Locator Center and the Family Registry and 
Locator System have each established a hotline and a Web site. The 
family locator system has a mechanism to redirect any request to search 
for or register displaced children to the National Emergency Child 
Locator Center. 

FEMA officials told us in March 2009 that the family locator system was 
activated and used during Hurricanes Gustav and Ike after it was 
determined that the coastal evacuations of Louisiana and Texas would 
involve millions of people. Once activated, FEMA's Public Affairs 
Office informed the media in the affected areas about the availability 
of the service. Officials noted that use of the family locator system 
during Hurricane Gustav resulted in 558 registrants and 862 searches, 
and use during Hurricane Ike resulted in 1,162 registrants and 1,034 
searches. The National Emergency Child Locator Center was not 
activated, but three referrals (one during Hurricane Gustav and two 
during Hurricane Ike) were forwarded to the National Center for Missing 
and Exploited Children through the family locator system Web site. 

At the time of our 2008 report, FEMA had established a memorandum of 
understanding (MOU), effective March 6, 2007, with the following 
organizations: the Department of Justice, the Department of Health and 
Human Services, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, 
and the American Red Cross that, among other things, requires signatory 
agencies to participate in a cooperative agreement, and for FEMA, 
through the National Emergency Family Registry and Locator System, to 
provide relevant information to the National Emergency Child Locator 
Center. The Disaster Assistance Directorate Unit Leader told us that 
the child locator center was, at that time, in the process of 
finalizing cooperative agreements with federal and state agencies and 
other organizations such as the American Red Cross to help implement 
its mission. FEMA officials told us that, as of March 2009, a 
cooperative agreement between FEMA and the National Center for Missing 
and Exploited Children was being finalized. They said they expected the 
agreement to be tested during the 2009 hurricane season. 

Logistics: 

We reported in 2006 that our work and that of others indicated that 
logistics systems--the capability to identify, dispatch, mobilize, and 
demobilize and to accurately track and record available critical 
resources throughout all incident management phases--were often totally 
overwhelmed by Hurricane Katrina. Critical resources apparently were 
not available, properly distributed, or provided in a timely manner. 
The result was duplication of deliveries, lost supplies, or supplies 
never being ordered. 

FEMA is responsible for coordinating logistics during disaster response 
efforts, but during Hurricane Katrina, FEMA quickly became overwhelmed, 
in part because it lacked the people, processes, and technology to 
maintain visibility--from order through final delivery--of the supplies 
and commodities it had ordered. Similarly, our 2006 work examining the 
coordination between FEMA and the Red Cross to provide relief to 
disaster victims found that FEMA did not have a comprehensive system to 
track requests for assistance it received from the Red Cross on behalf 
of voluntary organizations and state and local governments for items 
such as water, food, and cots.The Post-Katrina Act required FEMA to 
develop an efficient, transparent, and flexible logistics system for 
procurement and delivery of goods and services necessary for an 
effective and timely emergency response.[Footnote 22] 

Logistics Management: 

In November 2008, we reported that FEMA had taken multiple actions to 
improve its logistics management. First, seeking to develop an 
effective and efficient logistics planning and operations capability, 
FEMA elevated its logistics office from the branch to the directorate 
level, establishing the Logistics Management Directorate (LMD) in April 
2007. 

Second, FEMA and the U.S. General Services Administration--FEMA's co- 
lead for Emergency Support Function 7[Footnote 23]--sponsored the 
National Logistics Coordination Forum in March 2008. The forum was 
intended to open a dialogue between the sponsors and their logistics 
partners, and to discuss how to better involve the private sector in 
planning for and recovering from disasters. The forum was attended by 
representatives from other federal agencies, public and private sector 
groups, nongovernmental organizations, and other stakeholders. 

Third, to improve its supply chain management, FEMA brought in a supply 
chain expert from the United Parcel Service through its Loaned 
Executive Program. FEMA also has a Private Sector Office to exchange 
information on best practices and to facilitate engagement with the 
private sector. In addition, FEMA established a Distribution Management 
Strategy Working Group in January 2008 to analyze and develop a 
comprehensive distribution and supply chain management strategy. 

Finally, in 2007, FEMA conducted the Logistics Management 
Transformation Initiative, a comprehensive assessment of FEMA's 
logistics planning, processes, and technology. LMD officials intend for 
this initiative to help inform the development of a long-term strategy 
to transform FEMA's business processes and identify information 
technology development opportunities. According to LMD officials, FEMA 
plans to complete this transformation by 2009, and review and refine 
business processes by 2014. 

We noted in our November 2008 report, as an area to be addressed, that 
the DHS Office of Inspector General reported in May 2008 that, while 
FEMA had developed a logistics planning strategy that calls for 
developing three levels of logistics plans (strategic, operational, and 
tactical), the FEMA Incident Logistics Concept of Operations and a 
Logistics Management Operations Manual were still in draft. 

Total Asset Visibility: 

Our 2006 findings about logistics challenges included FEMA's inability 
to maintain visibility over supplies, commodities, and requests for 
assistance. As of August 1, 2008, FEMA had fully implemented Total 
Asset Visibility (TAV) programs in FEMA Regions IV and VI to manage and 
track, electronically and in real time, the movement of its disaster 
commodities and assets. At that time, according to FEMA LMD officials, 
TAV was partially available in the other eight FEMA regions. FEMA 
officials told us in March 2009 that the strategy to fully implement 
TAV by 2011 was undergoing a comprehensive review. LMD had restricted 
spending to critical mission functions, pending completion of the 
review. In the meantime, they said LMD would focus on capabilities that 
could have the most significant impact during the 2009 hurricane 
season, specifically, the aspect of TAV used for warehouse management 
and the aspect that would allow FEMA to use the system to order 
materials and from and track shipments of its response partners. 
Initially LMD is working with four partners--the Defense Logistics 
Agency, the General Services Administration, the U.S. Army Corps of 
Engineers, and the American Red Cross. According to LMD officials, at 
the time of our November 2008 report, the aspect of TAV FEMA uses for 
warehouse management was only available at distribution centers in 
Atlanta, Georgia, and Fort Worth, Texas. The officials stated that FEMA 
expected to deploy the warehouse management portion of TAV to the other 
six FEMA distribution centers--in Berryville, Virginia; Frederick, 
Maryland; San Jose, California; Guam; Hawaii; and Puerto Rico--in 
fiscal years 2009 and 2010. Further, the officials said that shipments 
from FEMA's logistics partners were not yet tracked through TAV, but 
FEMA and the four initial partners were working to provide full 
visibility of critical shipments to disaster areas. 

FEMA officials told us in March 2009 that during Hurricanes Gustav and 
Ike, they used TAV to create and track commodity requirements fulfilled 
by FEMA or its partners and to track FEMA shipments in-transit. The 
officials noted that they were not able to track shipments from 
partners before they arrived at FEMA sites but that deficiency could be 
corrected when the partner-tracking aspect of TAV was fully 
implemented. They also said they used TAV's warehouse management 
system, where available, to track and manage shipments, receipts and 
inventory for eight critical commodities daily. Other commodities that 
could not yet be tracked through TAV's warehouse management system had 
to be manually entered into the system. Finally, they said they used 
TAV to track in-transit visibility of ambulances, buses, and temporary 
housing units. 

In March 2009, FEMA officials also shared four major lessons learned 
and planned corrective actions resulting from the response to 
Hurricanes Ike and Gustav. The four lessons learned related to: (1) 
inconsistent use of TAV in the field during Hurricane Ike, (2) lack of 
TAV specialists to support all distribution sites, (3) slow and 
unreliable connectivity to the TAV system, and (4) use of standard 
operating procedures. To address inconsistent use of TAV, FEMA 
officials say they have increased standardized training and awareness 
at all levels within FEMA and have developed a TAV communications plan 
intended increase awareness of TAV capabilities. To address issues with 
the availability of TAV specialists, FEMA officials told us they have 
identified and screened additional TAV specialists, are planning to 
hire additional Disaster Assistance Employees, and are planning to 
crosstrain additional employees. To address connectivity issues, FEMA 
officials said they are testing use of portable satellite equipment and 
scanners that are hardwired to a satellite. They also said they are 
seeking to use extended wireless access to support operations during 
the 2009 hurricane season. To address issues with standard operating 
procedures, FEMA officials said they are reviewing and updating the 
procedures and reemphasizing the appropriate use of TAV through 
training. 

Mass Care: 

Mass care is the capability to provide immediate shelter, feeding 
centers, basic first aid, and bulk distribution of needed items and 
related services to affected persons. As we reported in 2006, during 
Hurricane Katrina, charities and government agencies that provide human 
services, supported by federal resources, helped meet the mass care 
needs of the hundreds of thousands of evacuees. The Post-Katrina Act 
contained multiple provisions aimed at strengthening capabilities to 
provide for immediate mass care and sheltering needs, particularly for 
special needs populations. 

Accelerated Federal Assistance: 

The Post-Katrina Act amended the Stafford Act to authorize the 
President to provide accelerated federal assistance in the absence of a 
specific request where necessary to save lives, prevent human 
suffering, or mitigate severe damage in a major disaster or emergency. 
The act required the President to promulgate and maintain guidelines to 
assist governors in requesting the declaration of an emergency in 
advance of a disaster event.[Footnote 24] FEMA issued an interim 
Disaster Assistance Policy in July 2007, which provides guidelines to 
assist governors in requesting the declaration of an emergency in 
advance of a disaster. 

According to officials in FEMA's Disaster Operations Directorate, FEMA 
has established a program to preposition goods and services in advance 
of a potential disaster. For example, the officials explained that FEMA 
was able to respond quickly to a state that had been affected by ice 
storms because the agency, acting without an initial request from the 
state, had prepositioned goods in advance of the storms. FEMA officials 
told us FEMA was reviewing a draft policy directive that would allow 
FEMA to provide federal assistance without a declaration if a state 
would agree to assume the normal cost share after a declaration has 
been made or to assume total cost if no declaration is made. 

Special Needs Populations: 

In establishing a Disability Coordinator within FEMA to ensure that the 
needs of individuals with disabilities are addressed in emergency 
preparedness and disaster relief, the Post-Katrina Act charged the 
coordinator with coordinating and disseminating best practices for 
special needs populations.[Footnote 25] The Disability Coordinator 
shared with us two such practices that were in progress at the time of 
our November 2008 report. First, FEMA was developing "go kits" for 
people with developmental impairments, the hearing impaired, and the 
blind. The go kits are to contain visual and hearing devices. For 
example, the go kit for the hearing impaired will include a 
teletypewriter, a keyboard with headphones, and a clipboard with sound 
capabilities. The go kits are to be stored in the regions and include a 
list of their contents and directions for use. Second, the Disability 
Coordinator said FEMA was developing a handbook for federal, state, and 
local officials to use in the field to help them better accommodate 
those with disabilities. 

In addition, the Post-Katrina Act required that the FEMA Administrator, 
in coordination with the National Advisory Council, the National 
Council on Disabilities, the Interagency Coordinating Council on 
Preparedness and Individuals with Disabilities, and the Disability 
Coordinator, develop guidelines to accommodate individuals with 
disabilities.[Footnote 26] 

FEMA has published a reference guide titled Accommodating Individuals 
with Disabilities in the Provisions of Disaster Mass Care, Housing, and 
Human Services. The reference guide describes existing legal 
requirements and standards relating to access for people with 
disabilities, with a focus on equal access requirements related to mass 
care, housing, and human services. The reference guide states that it 
is not intended to satisfy all of the guideline requirements contained 
in the Post-Katrina Act. 

In addition to the reference guide, FEMA released for public comment 
guidance titled Interim Emergency Management Planning Guide for Special 
Needs Populations. This interim guidance--also known as the 
Comprehensive Preparedness Guide (CPG) 301--addressed some of the 
requirements contained in the Post-Katrina Act, such as access to 
shelters and portable toilets and access to emergency communications 
and public information. However, it did not address other requirements, 
such as access to first-aid stations and mass-feeding areas. 

FEMA officials told us in March 2009 that they had received final 
comments on CPG 301 and expected to release the final document in 
spring 2009. In addition, FEMA officials stated that they have 
developed guidance for the Functional Needs Support Unit, which they 
expect to publish by the end of March 2009. According to the interim 
version of CPG 301, the Functional Needs Support guidance will serve as 
a template for developing sheltering plans for special needs 
populations. Once the Functional Needs Support program is in place, the 
Functional Needs Support Unit can be used in shelters, so that trained 
and certified shelter staff will be assigned to serve as caregivers and 
provide the assistance normally supplied by a family member or 
attendant. FEMA officials told us that the agency will contract to 
provide training to states and localities on how to implement the 
Functional Needs Support guidance--such as how to provide staff, 
caregivers, durable medical equipment, and facility access. 

FEMA officials stated that, in the absence of completed guidance for 
the 2008 hurricane season, shelters received the Justice Department's 
Americans with Disabilities Act Checklist for Emergency Shelters. They 
also said that the 2008 hurricane season highlighted the need for a 
standardized but scalable approach to sheltering special needs 
populations, with attention given to durable medical equipment, 
caregivers, trained staff, and special diets for evacuees. 

Planning and Exercises: 

As we reported in 2006, ensuring that needed capabilities are available 
requires effective planning and coordination, as well as training and 
exercises, in which the capabilities are realistically tested, and 
problems identified and lessons learned and subsequently addressed in 
partnership with other federal, state, and local stakeholders. Clear 
roles and coordinated planning are necessary, but not sufficient by 
themselves to ensure effective disaster management. It is important to 
test the plans and participants' operational understanding of their 
roles and responsibilities through robust training and exercise 
programs. 

National Exercise and Training Programs: 

The Post-Katrina Act required the FEMA Administrator, in coordination 
with the heads of appropriate federal agencies, the National Council on 
Disabilities, and the National Advisory Council, to carry out a 
national training program and a national exercise program.[Footnote 27] 
FEMA's National Preparedness Directorate has established a National 
Exercise Program. According to officials from FEMA's National 
Preparedness Directorate, the National Exercise Program conducts four 
Principal-Level Exercises and one National-Level Exercise annually. 
These FEMA officials said that the Principal-Level Exercises are 
discussion-based (i.e., tabletop or seminar) to examine emerging issues 
and that one is conducted in preparation for the annual National-Level 
Exercise. The National-Level Exercises are operations-based exercises 
(drills, functional exercises, and full-scale exercises) intended to 
evaluate existing national plans and policies, in concert with other 
federal and nonfederal entities. We have ongoing work examining the 
National Exercise Program, and we expect to publish a report on the 
results of our work this spring. 

FEMA's Deputy for National Preparedness told us that DHS and FEMA were 
developing the Homeland Security National Training Program to oversee 
and coordinate homeland security training programs, increase training 
capacity, and ensure standardization across programs. 

National Exercise Simulation Center: 

The Post-Katrina Act also required the President to establish a 
National Exercise Simulation Center (NESC) that uses a mix of live, 
virtual, and constructive simulations to, among other things, provide a 
learning environment for the homeland security personnel of all federal 
agencies, and that uses modeling and simulation for training, 
exercises, and command and control functions at the operational level. 
[Footnote 28] 

According to FEMA officials, FEMA has been using FEMA Simulation 
Centers, Department of Defense facilities, and other facilities to 
support exercise simulation while it develops the NESC. For example, 
FEMA officials said that FEMA has provided initial exercise simulation 
support for exercises requiring the two highest levels of federal 
interagency participation in the National Exercise Program. According 
to an official in FEMA's National Integration Center, the NESC is 
currently under development and is estimated to take 3 to 4 years to 
fully establish. 

Remedial Action Management Program: 

The Post-Katrina Act also required the FEMA Administrator, in 
coordination with the National Council on Disabilities and the National 
Advisory Council, to establish a remedial action management program to, 
among other things, track lessons learned and best practices from 
training, exercises, and actual events.[Footnote 29] 

FEMA launched the Remedial Action Management Program (RAMP) in 2003 and 
released it as a Web application for all FEMA intranet users in January 
2006. RAMP uses FEMA facilitators to conduct sessions immediately after 
exercises or events, and these facilitators are responsible for 
developing issue descriptions for remedial actions. In addition, FEMA 
has a related program called the Corrective Action Program (CAP) that 
is to be used for governmentwide corrective action tracking by federal, 
state, and local agencies. While RAMP is FEMA's internal remedial 
action program, CAP is designed to serve as an overarching program for 
linking federal, state, and local corrective actions. FEMA developed 
RAMP prior to enactment of the Post-Katrina Act. However, FEMA has not 
yet established any mechanisms to coordinate ongoing implementation of 
RAMP or CAP with the National Council on Disabilities or the National 
Advisory Council. We have ongoing work related to FEMA's efforts to 
track corrective actions from exercises and actual events. We plan to 
publish a report this spring. 

Human Capital Issues: 

In 2006, we reported that the various Congressional reports and our own 
work on FEMA's performance before, during, and after Hurricane Katrina 
suggest that FEMA's human resources were insufficient to meet the 
challenges posed by the unprecedented degree of damage and the 
resulting number of hurricane victims. 

Surge Capacity: 

The Post-Katrina Act requires the FEMA Administrator to prepare and 
submit to Congress a plan to establish and implement a Surge Capacity 
Force for deployment to disasters, including catastrophic incidents. 
The act requires the plan to include procedures for designation of 
staff from other DHS components and executive agencies to serve on the 
Surge Capacity Force. It also required that the plan ensure that the 
Surge Capacity Force includes a sufficient number of appropriately 
credentialed individuals capable of deploying to disasters after being 
activated, as well as full-time, highly trained, credentialed 
individuals to lead and manage.[Footnote 30] 

The Director of FEMA's Disaster Reserve Workforce explained that unlike 
in the military model, FEMA's disaster reservists are the primary 
resource for disaster response and recovery positions, filling 70-80 
percent of all Joint Field Office positions. FEMA has interpreted Surge 
Capacity Force to include its Disaster Reserve Workforce of 5,000-6,000 
reserve Disaster Assistance Employees, who are full-time and contract 
staff. If additional capacity is necessary, another approximately 2,000 
Disaster Assistance Employees are available to perform immediate, 
nontechnical functions that require large numbers of staff. Other 
sources FEMA has identified include local hires--additional staff hired 
from the affected area to perform the same functions as disaster 
reservists; contract support for activities that require specialized 
skill sets and for general disaster assistance functions; other full- 
time FEMA staff detailed to perform disaster assistance work; and other 
resources--particularly employees from other DHS components--detailed 
to perform disaster assistance work. 

FEMA's Disaster Reserve Workforce provided information on the 
deployment of FEMA workforce in response to Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, 
as outlined in table 1. 

Table 1: Workforce Deployment during Hurricanes Ike and Gustav, 2008: 

Disaster reserve workforce: 1,987; 
Local hire: 4; 
Other: 1; 
Permanent full time: 486; 
Temporary full time: 46; 
Total: 2,524. 

Disaster reserve workforce: 3,127; 
Local hire: 213; 
Other: 2; 
Permanent full time: 519; 
Temporary full time: 62; 
Total: 3,923. 

Source: FEMA. 

[End of table] 

FEMA contracted to perform a baseline assessment and preliminary design 
for professionalizing the Disaster Reserve Workforce and its supporting 
program management function, including FEMA's Surge Capacity Force 
planning. The contractor developed a preliminary design for the 
Disaster Reserve Workforce, which included an organizational concept, 
workforce size and composition, concept of operations, and a policy 
framework. An Interim Surge Capacity Force Plan was announced in a 
meeting of the DHS Human Capital Council in March 2008 and communicated 
to the heads of DHS components in a May 2008 memorandum from the FEMA 
Administrator. 

Despite the initial actions FEMA has taken to assess its baseline 
capabilities and draft an interim Surge Capacity Force Plan, according 
to the Director of the Disaster Workforce Division, FEMA has not yet 
provided Congress with a plan for establishing and implementing a Surge 
Capacity Force. The director stated that her goal is to submit a plan 
to implement a surge capacity force by summer 2009 with timelines and 
information on select--but not all--positions in the disaster reserve 
workforce. 

In May 2008, FEMA sent a list of job titles and positions needed in the 
Surge Capacity Force to all DHS Human Capital Officers and asked them 
to identify approximately 900 employees throughout DHS for the Surge 
Capacity Force. According to the director of the Disaster Reserve 
Workforce Division, the initial DHS Agency Surge Capacity designation 
lists were submitted in June 2008. However, she stated that upon 
review, there were inconsistencies with the different agencies' 
interpretation of requirements for personnel, training, and skill sets. 
Therefore, a Surge Capacity Force Working Group met to review surge 
staffing requirements and to develop a timeline for the development of 
processes and a Concept of Operations Plan. Agency participants in the 
working group included FEMA, the Transportation Security 
Administration, and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. The 
Disaster Reserve Workforce Division told us that, as of March 2009, a 
draft of the Concept of Operations Plan was being reviewed within these 
three component agencies and a final product is expected to be 
delivered for DHS review by June 30, 2009. According to the Disaster 
Reserve Workforce Division, because internal FEMA resources were 
sufficient to respond effectively to Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, FEMA 
did not require the assistance of other federal agency employees for 
those events. 

The Disaster Reserve Workforce Division, in partnership with FEMA's 
Emergency Management Institute, has been developing standardized 
credentialing plans, which will incorporate existing position task 
books for the Disaster Assistance Employee workforce (a total of 230 
positions organized in 23 cadres). FEMA officials told us in March 2009 
that they had either initiated development of or completed 
credentialing plans for 102 positions. They said they expected to 
complete the remaining credentialing plans for all cadres and positions 
by spring 2010. Disaster Reserve Workforce Division officials explained 
that development of the credentialing plans in conjunction with the 
position task books will highlight gaps in the training curriculum that 
will assist in prioritizing curriculum development. 

Apart from the Disaster Reserve Workforce Division's credentialing 
initiative, the FEMA workforce is to be credentialed by the National 
Preparedness Directorate's NIMS credentialing program, the 
administrative process for validating the qualifications of personnel, 
assessing their background, and authorizing their access to incidents 
involving mutual aid between states. FEMA officials told us in March 
2009 that the NIMS Credentialing Guideline was posted to the Federal 
Register and issued for public comment on December 22, 2008, and the 
comment period closed on January 21, 2009. They said comments have been 
collected and were to be adjudicated March 11, 2009. According to the 
officials, following adjudication, the guideline is to be revised and 
submitted to the Executive Secretariat for formal FEMA adoption and 
release. According to FEMA officials, experiences from the 2008 
hurricane season confirmed the basic need for the credentialing 
program. 

Strike Teams and Emergency Response Teams: 

The Post-Katrina Act requires each FEMA Regional Office to staff and 
oversee one or more strike teams within the region to serve as the 
focal point of the federal government's initial response efforts and to 
build federal response capabilities within their regions.[Footnote 31] 
The act also requires the President, acting through the FEMA 
Administrator to establish emergency response teams (at least three at 
the national level and a sufficient number at the regional level). 
[Footnote 32] 

According to Disaster Operations Directorate officials, "strike teams" 
and "emergency response teams," the Post-Katrina Act's terms for the 
support teams deployed to assist in major disasters and emergencies 
under the Stafford Act, are now called Incident Management Assistance 
Teams (IMAT). IMATs are interagency national-or regional-based teams 
composed of subject matter experts and incident-management 
professionals, and are designed to manage and coordinate national 
response emergencies and major disasters. According to the officials, 
Regional Administrators oversee IMATs based within their regions. IMAT 
personnel are intended to be permanent, full-time employees whose 
duties and responsibilities are solely focused on their IMAT functions. 
The officials said that the IMATs' other functions include working with 
state and local emergency managers to plan, prepare, and train for 
disasters; running exercises; and building relationships with emergency 
managers and other IMAT personnel. National IMATs are to consist of 26 
positions, including a designated team leader and senior managers for 
operations, logistics, planning, and finance and administration 
sections. This sectional organization mirrors the incident command 
structure presented in the NIMS. 

FEMA has established a national IMAT in the National Capital Region and 
a second national IMAT in Sacramento, California, according to FEMA 
officials in the Disaster Operations Directorate. At the regional 
level, Disaster Operations Directorate officials said that IMATs had 
been established in FEMA Regions II, IV, V, and VI. According to these 
officials, they are in the process of establishing a fifth regional 
IMAT in Region VII, to become operational later this year. They said 
that FEMA's intention is to establish IMATs in all 10 regions by the 
end of fiscal year 2010 and a third national team in fiscal year 2011. 

According to FEMA officials in the Disaster Operations Directorate, 
although the National IMAT established in the National Capital Region 
was fully staffed, when we reported in November 2008, some IMAT 
positions were not yet filled with permanent full-time employees, but 
rather with FEMA detailees who had been selected for their advanced 
training and expertise. In general, the detailees were to provide 
guidance and support to the permanent full-time employees until the 
teams were fully staffed with personnel capable of managing their 
respective IMATs. 

According to officials in FEMA's Disaster Operations Directorate, at 
the time of our November 2008 report, FEMA had procured personal 
equipment for IMAT members and had ordered communications vehicles. In 
addition, the National IMAT had participated in the National-Level 
Exercise 2008. Also, Disaster Operations Directorate officials told us 
that IMATs supported a number of disasters and special events in 2008 
(including recent storms and hurricanes and the Democratic and 
Republican National Conventions). 

FEMA has established mandatory training courses for all IMAT personnel, 
in addition to the standard training required for all FEMA employees. 
According to officials in FEMA's Disaster Operations Directorate, they 
have been implementing a credentialing program for the IMATs. FEMA 
planned to incorporate training and credentialing for all hazards by 
identifying core competencies required for each IMAT position and 
assessing the competencies against existing task descriptions to guide 
the development of mandatory training and credentialing plans. 
According to these officials, as of March 2009, a draft of the 
credentialing plan was under review and they indicated that the 
credentialing process will be consistent with FEMA's Disaster Workforce 
Credentialing Plan. 

At the time of our November 2008 report, Disaster Operations 
Directorate officials told us that FEMA was finalizing an IMAT doctrine 
and a Concept of Operations Plan. However, FEMA did not describe to us 
how it established or intended to establish target capabilities for the 
IMATs, which are required by the Post-Katrina Act as the basis for 
determining whether the IMATs consist of an adequate number of properly 
planned, organized, equipped, trained, and exercised personnel. 
[Footnote 33] 

Accountability: 

Our 2006 report noted that when responding to the needs of the victims 
of a catastrophic disaster, FEMA must balance controls and 
accountability mechanisms with the immediate need to deliver resources 
and assistance in an environment where the agency's initial response 
efforts must focus on life-saving and life-sustaining tasks. We 
reported in February 2006 that weak or nonexistent internal controls in 
processing applications left the government vulnerable to fraud and 
abuse, such as duplicative payments.[Footnote 34] We estimated that 
through February 2006, FEMA made about 16 percent ($1 billion) in 
improper and potentially fraudulent payments to applicants who used 
invalid information to apply for disaster assistance. 

The Post-Katrina Act required the development of a system, including an 
electronic database, to counter improper payments in the provision of 
assistance to individuals and households.[Footnote 35] 

FEMA has established a process to identify and collect duplicative 
Individual and Households Program (IHP) payments. This process 
includes, among other things, FEMA's disaster assistance database 
automatically checking specific data fields in every applicant record 
for potentially duplicate applications, having a FEMA caseworker and a 
supervisor review potentially duplicate applications to determine if 
FEMA is entitled to collect a payment already made, and notifying the 
applicant of FEMA's decision to collect a duplicate payment while 
providing an appeal process for the applicant. 

In addition, FEMA provides applicants with a copy of its application 
and a program guide, Help after a Disaster: Applicant's Guide to the 
Individuals and Households Program. Updated and reissued in July 2008, 
this guide provides applicants with information on the proper use of 
IHP payments. 

Moreover, according to FEMA, the agency established identity 
verification processes, which include verifying that the applicant's 
social security number is valid, matches the applicant's name, and does 
not belong to a deceased individual. Further, FEMA reported that it has 
implemented procedures to validate that the address an applicant 
reports as damaged was the applicant's primary residence during the 
time of the disaster and that the address is located within the 
disaster-affected area. 

According to FEMA's Information Technology Report submitted to Congress 
in September 2007 under section 640 of the Post-Katrina Act,[Footnote 
36] FEMA uses the National Emergency Management Information System to 
perform numerous disaster-related activities, including providing 
disaster assistance to individuals and communities. Although this 
system interfaces with FEMA's financial accounting system through a 
special module, FEMA has not yet taken action to ensure that applicant 
information collected in the system is integrated with disbursement and 
payment records to determine ineligible applicants. 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee, this concludes my statement. 
I would be pleased to respond to any questions you or other Members of 
the Committee may have. 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

William Jenkins, (202) 512-8777 or jenkinswo@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, Leyla Kazaz, Assistant 
Director, and Kathryn Godfrey, Analyst-in-Charge, managed this 
assignment. Lara Kaskie, Christine Davis and Janet Temko made 
significant contributions to the work. Other contributors to the work 
include Jonathan Tumin, Sara Margraf, and Michael Blinde. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] The Post-Katrina Act was enacted as Title VI of the Department of 
Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2007, Pub. L. No. 109-295, 120 
Stat. 1355 (2006). The provisions of the Post-Katrina Act are codified 
in numerous sections of the U.S. Code. The applicable U.S. Code 
citations are included in this statement. The provisions of the Post- 
Katrina Act became effective upon enactment, October 4, 2006, with the 
exception of certain organizational changes related to FEMA, most of 
which took effect on March 31, 2007. 

[2] The results of this work were included in products published from 
February 2006 through November 2008. GAO, Emergency Preparedness and 
Response: Some Issues and Challenges Associated with Major Emergency 
Incidents, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-467T] 
(Washington, D.C.: February 2006); GAO, Catastrophic Disasters: 
Enhanced Leadership, Capabilities, and Accountability Controls Will 
Improve the Effectiveness of the Nation's Preparedness, Response, and 
Recovery System, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-618] 
(Washington, D.C.: September 2006); and GAO, Actions Taken to Implement 
the Post- Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act of 2006, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-59R] (Washington, D.C.: November 
2008). 

[3] See GAO, Hurricane Katrina GAO's Preliminary Observations 
Regarding, Preparedness, Response and Recovery, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-442T] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 8, 
2006) and GAO-06-618. 

[4] See generally 6 U.S.C. §§ 313-14. For specific information on the 
Administrator's reporting relationship and role as principal advisor on 
emergency management, see 6 U.S.C. § 313(c). 

[5] The Post-Katrina Act predated the NRF and referred to the NRF's 
predecessor, the NRP, which was then the name of the document that 
served as the nation's comprehensive framework for the management of 
domestic incidents where federal involvement was necessary. Because the 
Post-Katrina Act encompasses any successor plan to the NRP, it applies 
to the NRF just as it did the NRP. See 6 U.S.C. § 701(13). Therefore, 
this statement uses the term NRF, rather than NRP, in discussing any 
relevant Post-Katrina Act provisions and the status of their 
implementation, unless otherwise appropriate. 

[6] 6 U.S.C. § 319(c). 

[7] The Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act 
(Stafford Act) , 42 U.S.C. §§ 5121-5208, primarily establishes the 
programs and processes for the federal government to provide major 
disaster and emergency assistance to states, local governments, tribal 
nations, individuals, and qualified private nonprofit organizations. 
Upon a governor's request, the President can declare an "emergency" or 
a "major disaster" under the Stafford Act, which triggers specific 
types of federal relief. 

[8] The funding prohibition is set forth at Consolidated Appropriations 
Act, 2008, Pub. L. No. 110-161, Div. E, Title V, § 541, 121 Stat. 1844, 
2079 (2007) and Consolidated Security, Disaster Assistance, and 
Continuing Appropriations Act, 2009, Pub. L. No. 110-329, Div. D, § 
526, 122 Stat. 3574 (2008). 

[9] 6 U.S.C. § 319(b)(2)(C) 

[10] The Catastrophic Incident Annex is available online via the NRF 
Resource Center, [hyperlink, http://www.fema.gov/nrf]. 

[11] 6 U.S.C. § 571. 

[12] 6 U.S.C. § 575(a). 

[13] Established by Presidential Memorandum on August 21, 1963, the 
National Communications System was created to be a single unified 
communications system to serve the President, Department of Defense, 
diplomatic and intelligence activities, and civilian leaders. The 
National Communications System mandate included linking, improving, and 
extending the communications facilities and components of various 
federal agencies, focusing on interconnectivity and survivability. NCS 
membership currently stands at 24 federal department and agency members 
and is managed by the DHS Under Secretary for National Protection and 
Programs. 

[14] Emergency Support Function 2 provides a structure for coordinating 
federal actions to assist in the restoration of public communications 
infrastructure, public safety communications systems, and first 
responder networks. 

[15] 42 U.S.C § 5189c. 

[16] 6 U.S.C. § 321a. 

[17] 6 U.S.C. § 721. 

[18] 6 U.S.C. § 321a(c)(2). 

[19] 6 U.S.C. § 321b(b)(4), (b)(8). 

[20] 6 U.S.C. § 774. 

[21] 6 U.S.C. § 775. 

[22] 6 U.S.C. § 724. 

[23] Under Emergency Support Function #7: Logistics Management and 
Resource Support, FEMA is responsible for providing a comprehensive 
national disaster logistics planning, management, and sustainment 
capability that uses the resources of federal partners, public and 
private groups, and other stakeholders to meet disaster response and 
recovery needs. 

[24] 42 U.S.C. §§ 5170a(5), 5192(a)(8), (c). 

[25] 6 U.S.C. 321b(b)(4). 

[26] 6 U.S.C. 773. 

[27] 6 U.S.C. § 748. 

[28] 6 U.S.C. § 764. 

[29] 6 U.S.C. § 750. 

[30] 6 U.S.C. § 711. 

[31] 6 U.S.C. § 317(c)(2)(D). 

[32] 42 U.S.C. § 5144(b)(1). 

[33] 42 U.S.C. § 5144(b)(2)-(3). 

[34] See GAO, Expedited Assistance for Victims of Hurricanes Katrina 
and Rita: FEMA's Control Weaknesses Exposed the Government to 
Significant Fraud and Abuse, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-403T] (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 13, 
2006). 

[35] 42 U.S.C. § 5174(i). 

[36] 6 U.S.C. § 727(b). 

[End of section] 

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