We can all take a lesson from these guys. |
Brings me to the response. A grand combination of public and
private organizations has mostly cooperated to maximize help and minimize
delay. FEMA was on the ground early and began doing what they do as soon as
they could. What they don’t do is restore power or water or sewer or
transportation. They provide disaster relief and coordinate disaster relief with
private agencies. The Red Cross, Salvation Army (a religious organization that
is for disaster relief and against gay marriage), many social organizations,
churches, corporations and individual people have all jumped in to help. Relief
after a disaster of unprecedented damage should be a National, State, City and
Town, Corporation, Religious and Social group activity. So what pisses me off
is for someone to take on one of the groups and claim things are going badly
because of them. Case in point: FEMA gets blamed for the slow restoration of
power when in fact the restoration has been amazingly fast and restoration is
being done by private contractors and municipal units. Not the purview of FEMA
to fix power lines. Or the City of New York Mayor being blamed for the time it
takes to get water out of the subway. There are only so many pumps.
Blame? Oh Yeah. Blame the politicians for being asleep when
30 years ago they were warned that seas would rise and eventually be swept
ashore. They were told that storms would get worse and that a more robust defense
should be mounted, like sea walls, and a more robust response plan should have
been funded. They didn’t and now the Northeast is in the crapper. Let’s pull
together and thank all the participants and put the blame squarely where it
belongs: Lazy, partisan, uneducated and shallow politicians. Not the ones in
office now, the ones who kicked the can down the block 30 years ago.
Image: http://images.politico.com/global/2012/10/121031_obama_christie_ap_605.jpg
The interesting thing is that the preventative methods even though seemed expensive at the time are nothing compared to the damage cost from a single storm... and this is just the beginning!
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