Big, Easy Iraqi-Style Contracts Flood New Orleans
The day Hurricane Katrina struck Louisiana, Robert Boh
watched the dramatic pictures of the unfolding disaster on television at his
in-law's house in Jonesboro, Arkansas, where his family had taken shelter. As
president of the biggest construction company in New Orleans, he was confident
that the hundreds of miles of levees that he and his rivals have built over the
decades would hold. "It never occurred to me," he said, that the 17th street
canal would gave way. "I was shocked."
The next day the phones started ringing off the
hook. One of the calls was offering work to repair the levees and drain the city
from the Army Corps of Engineers, a federal agency run by the US military.
Unable to access his New Orleans offices, which had six feet of water on the
first floor, Boh drove down to work in nearby Baton Rouge, to help save the city
where his grandfather had founded a construction business 96 years
before.
Military Blackhawk and Chinook
helicopters dropped sandbags into the breached levees in New Orleans, as Boh
Brothers crews worked around the clock for a week. The work was a financial
boost for the civil engineering company that had been $2 million in debt just
over a year prior, because the Army Corps of Engineers had no money to pay them
for installing floodgates for New Orleans’ Harvey
Canal.
Before Katrina struck, Boh was
starting to question if he really wanted to apply for more work from the Corps,
which oversees the levees. "In 2004 and 2005, funding for our work has been
cut," he told CorpWatch. Indeed, earlier this year, New Orleans district
projected that it would get just $82 million in flood and hurricane protection
projects, a 44.2 percent drop from the $147 million spent in
2001.
Today state and federal money and
contracts are flowing into the stricken area and Boh Brothers is one of the key
local beneficiaries. Right after completing the emergency repairs, Boh was
sub-contracted to help pump water from the flooded city by the Shaw Group, a
politically well-connected contractor that had worked on reconstruction in Iraq.
Then the state of Louisiana awarded the company a new $30.9 million contract to
fix the hurricane-damaged twin-span bridge that carries Interstate 10 traffic
over Lake Pontchartrain.
Boh’s
contract is tiny compared to the billions that will flow to the giants of the
industry: Halliburton, Bechtel and Flour. "The construction industry has stood
up and is saying we are standing ready for your call," Lieutenant General Carl
Strock told a September 2 Defense Department briefing. The Federal Emergency
Management Agency and the Army have budgeted at least $62.5 billion in emergency
aid for Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi, (not including rebuilding the
levees), creating a boom for construction
companies.
"They are throwing money
out, they are shoveling it out the door," said James Albertine, a Washington
lobbyist and past president of the American League of Lobbyists, told the New
York Times. "I'm sure every lobbyist's phone in Washington is ringing off the
hook from his clients. Sixty-two billion dollars is a lot of money -- and it's
only a down payment."
"You are likely
to see the equivalent of war profiteering -- disaster profiteering," said
Danielle Brian, director of the Project on Government Oversight, a nonprofit
government spending watchdog group. She notes that Joe Allbaugh, President
Bush's former campaign manager and a former head of FEMA is now a lobbyist and
consultant to both the Shaw Group and Halliburton. (Melissa Norcross, a
Halliburton spokeswoman, said Allbaugh has not, since he was hired, "consulted
on any specific contracts that the company is considering pursuing, nor has he
been tasked by the company with any lobbying
responsibilities.")
Many, including
Senator Richard Durbin, "are worried because we hear about no-bid contracts in
the Katrina areas going to the same companies that they went to in Iraq without
the kind of accountability that we have to demand," the Illinois Democrat told
National Public Radio, a public radio network in the US.
"
Prioritizing the
Budget
In Iraq, limited accountability,
corruption, massive cost overruns, and devastating failures fed the chaotic mess
that has followed the 2003 fall of Baghdad. Nonetheless, the largest Katrina
contracts have been won by many of the same politically connected companies that
oversaw that failed reconstruction. And it is perhaps no coincidence, since many
of the same people in the Army Corps of Engineers are awarding them–and in
much the same manner: as open-ended, no- or hastily bid contracts with
guaranteed profit margins.
But before
we look at the flawed contracting process that followed the destruction in the
Gulf states, let's go back the decisions that made the flooding not only
possible but inevitable. Let’s start with who decided what to spend on
levees and waterworks around the country and what monies to cut from projects in
Louisiana since 2001. The ultimate responsibility lies with the president who
signed the national budget and with the members of Congress who debated and
rewrote the plan that the White House draws up for them every
February.
But three high-ranking men in
Washington, DC, play a key role in presenting options to the White House and
Congress. Until about a year ago, they were Marcus Peacock, associate director
of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for natural resource programs, John
Woodley, assistant secretary of the Army for civil works and Lieutenant General
Robert Flowers, then commander of the Army Corps of
Engineers.
On April 28, 2004, the two
senators from Louisiana met with Woodley and Peacock and asked them for more
money for the state’s environmental restoration and water
projects.
There are two major pools of
money from which the Army Corps of Engineers draws for flood prevention in
Louisiana. The first is the Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project, or
SELA, which was approved following a massive rainstorm in May 1995 that killed
six people. The second is the Louisiana Coastal Area Comprehensive Coastwide
Ecosystem Restoration Study (LCA).
SELA
has spent $430 million on shoring up levees and building pumping stations, with
$50 million in local aid. Another $250 million in crucial projects remains
unspent.
LCA, on the other hand, is
only just getting started. It will ultimately take $1.9 billion over ten years
to reverse the 30 percent loss in coastal lands that is making the southern
Louisiana increasingly more vulnerable to floods. (This plan is significantly
scaled back from the original proposal to spend $14 billion over 30
years.)
"The senators emphasized a need
for support from the administration, not just passive inaction," said Sidney
Coffee, who heads the Governor's Office of Coastal Activities in Louisiana.
"They emphasized the need for financial support, and none came during this
meeting."
Woodley himself acknowledged
the necessity to cut costs-- and why--when he presented the budget earlier in
the year. "This is a frugal budget that reflects the priorities of a nation at
war," he stated.
The lack of support
for these crucial waterworks was predictable. Woodley and Peacock are both
political appointees tasked with implementing the White House priorities of
cutting budgets and regulations rather than supporting environmentalists or
engineers.
In a prior job at the Army,
Woodley opposed environmental regulations on military bases. And Peacock was
responsible for cutting money to Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and
instrumental in the Bush administration's decisions to freeze more than a dozen
Clinton-era rules related to environment, health, and safety, including
regulations on arsenic in drinking water, snowmobiles in national parks, and
protections for roadless areas of national
forests.
Diverted to
Iraq
White House priorities were also
reflected in the government’s failure to pay sufficient attention to the
well-document danger of hurricanes to Louisiana. One possible reason that Gen.
Flowers and his colleagues, were unable to focus on either SELA or LCA in 2003
and 2004, was because their attention was diverted to a more urgent White House
request: the reconstruction of Iraq's oil fields, which involved everything from
putting out oil fires during the invasion to trucking gasoline into Baghdad from
Kuwait and Turkey.
When Katrina
struck, resources were stretched. First there was the matter of the money. "It
appears that the money has been moved in the president's budget to handle
homeland security and the war in Iraq, and I suppose that's the price we pay,"
Walter Maestri, emergency management chief for Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, told
the Times-Picayune newspaper on June 8, 2004. "Nobody locally is happy that the
levees can't be finished, and we are doing everything we can to make the case
that this is a security issue for
us."
Corps commander Lieutenant General
Carl Strock acknowledged that disaster was inevitable. In a Defense Department
briefing on September 2, he said that "if a Category 4 or 5 hurricane were to
strike New Orleans, this levee system could not be relied upon." Secondly, there
was the matter of personnel. Two of Flowers' most senior staff were in Iraq:
Brigadier-General Robert Crear and Strock (who went on to head the Corp after
Flowers retired in 2004) spent a good chunk of 2003 working on Project Restore
Iraqi Oil, Halliburton’s now-infamous no-bid
contract.
As the chair of the February
26, 2003 Pentagon meeting at which this contract was drawn up, Strock attracted
some notoriety. Less than three weeks after it was signed, he and Crear posed
with Halliburton crews for photo-ops at the Al Zubair oil fields in southern
Iraq. For most of the rest of the year the two men worked in Baghdad and Basra,
rather than Baton Rouge and
Vicksburg.
Strock was one of the five
people who voted at a September 1, 2003 secret meeting in Baghdad to pay
Halliburton $500 million out of Iraq's own funds for the no-bid RIO project. No
Iraqis were present for the vote despite the fact that the money came from their
own coffers.
When whistleblower
Bunnatine Greenhouse revealed the details behind the no-bid contracts that
Halliburton had won in Iraq, Strock arranged to have her demoted, despite a
string of excellent performance reviews in her 23 years of service. "Ms.
Greenhouse's removal from the SES is based on her performance," Strock said,
"and not in retaliation for any disclosures of alleged improprieties that she
may have made."
(All told, Halliburton
has earned more than $12 billion in Iraq. Pentagon audits released by Democratic
party in June showed $1.03 billion in "questioned" costs and $422 million in
"unsupported" costs for Halliburton's work in
Iraq.)
Top experts on water management
from Army Corps were similarly unavailable for domestic programs. Dr. Eugene
Stakhiv, Jerry Webb, and Dr. Edwin Theriot to the Middle East were dispatched to
help the Iraqi Ministry of Water Resources, as part of the "New Eden" project to
restore the Mesopotamian Marshlands, which Saddam Hussein had
drained.
Back in the
Bayou
While Strock and Crear were
re-building pipelines and restoring marshes in Iraq, the effort to prevent a
disaster in New Orleans was floundering for lack of federal money and
commitment. The time to fix the levees and restore the coastal marshes was
rapidly running out.
Strock had
returned to the US in late 2003 to run the Corps’ civil works programs
including flood control and navigation and became commander in 2004. Crear--who
had been in charge of the day-to-day operations of Halliburton's work in Iraq--
would run the Mississippi Valley Division that includes the levees in New
Orleans.
The clock was quietly ticking
on January 31, when in a deja vu moment, Crear and Roberts were re-united for a
photo-op in Baton Rouge to sign an agreement with Louisiana Gov. Kathleen
Babineaux Blanco to finalize years of work on the Louisiana Coastal Area
Comprehensive Coastwide Ecosystem Restoration
Study.
The Corps inability to foresee
and plan for problems in the wake of Katrina was deja vu all over again. After
returning to the US, Crear testified to Congress on June 15, 2004 that when
working with KBR in Iraq, it was his "mission in the Department of Defense to
secure the oil. ... However, what we found was not oil well fires but
significant damage due to looting. It was estimated to be about $1.4 billion
overall damage and about 85 percent of that due to
looting."
Two and a half years after
Strock and Crear posed in the Iraqi oil fields, and seven months after the men
posed for the Baton Rouge photo, the threat of Katrina again challenged the Army
Corps of Engineers. And again it was slow off the mark. On August 29, as the
federal government struggled to respond, Katrina destroyed New Orleans and
devastated a massive area.
But putting
aside the slow response to disaster, the question remains: Could the disaster
have been predicted and prevented?
As
for prevention, experts say that even if Louisiana had gotten full funding in
2003 and 2004, the levees would still have collapsed. The Corps' own engineering
schemes over the last 70 years turned a "serpentine river into a straight one."
The destruction of a natural landscape that could have checked the devastating
floods increased the likelihood and severity of
disaster.
Joe Ballard who ran the Corps
from 1996 to 2000 and grew up in New Orleans does not blame it for failing to
prevent the damage. The Corps, he says, has been struggling unsuccessfully to
get more funding from the Congress and the White House to pay for corrective
work. "It pains me to see the finger pointed because I know what a juggling act
the Corps has to play," he said.
The
failure to predict the disaster and prepare an effective evacuation plan is
another matter. Despite President’s Bush statement that "I don't think
anyone anticipated the breach of the levees," Ballard told CorpWatch that there
was no way that the Corps did not know that a major flood was possible. "We were
walking whistling past the graveyard." he
said.
Today, Strock and Crear are back
in the saddle at the Corps overseeing emergency contracts in the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina, in collaboration with the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) and the Navy. Chief among these contractors are companies such as
Halliburton and Bechtel, which have been awarded pre-bid, limited bid, and
sometimes no-bid contracts to assess the damage, provide emergency shelters and
fix the infrastructure. (see
box)
Marcus Peacock is no longer at
OMB. He is now deputy administrator of the EPA, the very agency whose budget he
helped slash in the early days of the Bush administration. And Robert Flowers
has taken a job as chief executive officer of the federal contracts subsidiary
of HNTB, an engineering company in Kansas City, Missouri, that builds airport
facilities, bridges, and you guessed it:
levees.
Will we see the same
over-charging and failed projects that characterized Corps projects in Iraq?
Only time will tell, but on September 15, an important step was taken to track
the problem if it occurs: the creation of a special inspector general at the
Department of Homeland Security to investigate corruption and fraud in
post-Katrina contracts.
The same day
Senators Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut and Susan Collins of Maine introduced a
bill in Congress that calls for the expansion of the special inspector general
for Iraq reconstruction to include oversight of the spending in the Gulf Coast
recovery. The two senators said using an existing office was preferable because
it would be able to begin work
quickly.
In a September 15 speech to
the nation, Bush said that Americans "have every right to expect a more
effective response in a time of
emergency."
But the track record of
private contractors and federal agencies in Iraq and now in the Gulf states
bodes ill for the likelyhood that the public will enjoy that right. The Corps
contracts and those awarded FEMA replicate "the same flawed contracting strategy
that produced disastrous results in Iraq," Conresssman Seny Hoyer wrote to the
Government Accountability
Office.
"Where the train runs off the
tracks is when politics become part of the decision-making process," says
Ballard.
Posted: Sun - September 25, 2005 at 03:19 PM