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HOUSE-SENATE NEGOTIATORS REACH AGREEMENT ON COLLINS-LIEBERMAN FEMA, HURRICANE KATRINA LEGISLATION

WASHINGTON, DC—Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman Susan Collins and Ranking Member Joseph Lieberman today announced that they have reached an agreement with House negotiators on their legislation to strengthen FEMA, paving the way for the bill to be included as part of the Department of Homeland Security spending bill, which will be considered by Congress later this month.  In the agreement with leaders of the House Committees on Homeland Security and Transportation and Infrastructure and other House Committees, FEMA will be strengthened and become an independent entity within the Department of Homeland Security with the same protections currently provided to the U.S. Coast Guard, nearly identical to the Collins-Lieberman FEMA legislation. The provision was one of the key findings of the Senate Homeland Security Committee’s report, “Hurricane Katrina: A Nation Still Unprepared.”               “It is crucial that we strengthen FEMA and provide it with the resources and tools necessary to help us be better prepared for the next hurricane or disaster. This agreement will move this legislation forward and help us to accomplish this important goal,” said Senator Collins.               Lieberman quote,”               A summary of the agreement, most of which mirrors the Collins-Lieberman FEMA bill, is as follows:    
  • FEMA becomes a distinct entity within DHS – as is the US Coast Guard and the Secret Service - and is therefore protected from future reorganizations by DHS.
  • The Administrator of FEMA is the principal advisor to the President for emergency management. The language is modeled after the Joint Chiefs of Staff language.
  • The Administrator has authority to report directly to Congress and may be designated as Cabinet level at the President’s discretion during disasters.
  • Reunites Preparedness and Response with FEMA so that the Administrator is responsible for all phases of emergency management  (preparedness, response, recovery, and mitigation).
  • Stricter qualification requirements for Administrator of FEMA.
   
  • Stronger Regional focus whereby FEMA would work closely and consistently with appropriate state and
local governments, as well as private sector and non-governmental entities for planning emergency operations  
  • Requires the administrator to appoint a Disability Coordinator to ensure that the needs of the disabled are taken into account in emergency planning and operations.
 
  • It strengthens personnel at FEMA by enabling the organization to recruit and retain skilled employees
 
  • Strengthens programs with in FEMA, for example, by requiring FEMA to improve its information technology systems and requiring FEMA to provide technical assistance for evacuation to state and local governments.
 
  • It creates a system for ensuring that FEMA is engaged in appropriate planning, training and exercise programs with its counterparts at the federal, state and local levels.  It also requires that FEMA establish specific performance measurements against which to measure progress in planning, training and exercises towards establishing readiness. 
  ·        Establishes a national disaster recovery strategy to assist with the recovery from future catastrophes such as Hurricane Katrina.      ·        Requires the FEMA Administrator to appoint a Disability Coordinator to ensure that individuals with disabilities are properly addressed in emergency preparedness and disaster relief.   ·        Establishes within the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children a center for locating children separated from their families after a disaster.    ·        Establishes a voluntary registry to help reunite families separated by a disaster.   ·        Requires a number of provisions that will help prevent waste, fraud, and abuse.       ####