WASHINGTON - The tally for Hurricane Katrina waste could top US$2 billion
next year because half of the lucrative government contracts valued at
US$500,000 or greater for cleanup work are being awarded without little
competition.
Acting Inspector General, Department of Homeland Security
Richard Skinner testifies before the Senate Committee on Homeland Security
and Governmental Affairs on Capitol Hill in Washington in this May 18,
2005 file photo. [AP]
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Federal investigators have already
determined the Bush administration squandered $1 billion on fraudulent disaster
aid to individuals after the 2005 storm. Now they are shifting their attention
to the multimillion dollar contracts to politically connected firms that critics
have long said are a prime area for abuse.
In January, investigators will release the first of several audits examining
more than $12 billion in Katrina contracts. The charges range from political
favoritism to limited opportunities for small and minority-owned firms, which
initially got only 1.5 percent of the total work.
"Based on their track record, it wouldn't surprise me if we saw another
billion more in waste," said Clark Kent Ervin, the Homeland Security
Department's inspector general from 2003-2004. "I don't think sufficient
progress has been made."
He called it inexcusable that the Bush administration would still have so
many no-bid contracts. Under pressure last year, Federal Emergency Management
Agency director David Paulison pledged to rebid many of the agreements, only to
backtrack months later and reopen only a portion.
Investigators are now examining whether some of the agreements - which
in some cases were extended without warning rather than rebid - are still
unfairly benefiting large firms.
"It's a combination of laziness, ineptitude and it may well be nefarious,"
Ervin said.
FEMA spokesman James McIntyre said the agency was working to fix its mistakes
by awarding contracts for future disasters through competitive bidding. Paulison
has said he welcomes additional oversight but cautioned against investigations
that aren't based on "new evidence and allegations."
"As always, FEMA will work with Congress in all aspects to ensure that we are
carrying out the agency's responsibilities," McIntyre said.
The Aug. 29, 2005, hurricane swept ashore in southern Louisiana, Mississippi
and Alabama, leveling homes and businesses along the Gulf Coast. Its storm surge
breached levees in New Orleans, unleashing a flood that left more than 1,300
people dead, hundreds of thousands homeless and tens of billions of dollars
worth of damage.
A series of government investigations in the storm's wake faulted the Bush
administration for underestimating the threat and failing to prepare by
pre-negotiating contracts for basic supplies in what has become the nation's
costliest disaster.
Earlier this month, the Government Accountability Office said its initial
estimate of US$1 billion in disaster aid waste was "likely understated," citing
continuing problems in which FEMA doled out tens of millions of dollars in
fraudulent housing assistance.
Democrats in Congress called for more accountability. When they take over in
January, at least seven committees plan hearings or other oversight - from
housing to disaster loans - on how the $88 billion approved for Katrina
relief is being spent.
Among the current investigations:
-- The propriety of four no-bid contracts together worth $400 million to
Shaw Group Inc., Bechtel Group Inc., CH2M Hill Companies Ltd., and Fluor Corp.
that were awarded without competition.
The contracts drew immediate criticism because of the companies' extensive
political and government ties, prompting a promise last year from Paulison to
rebid them. Instead, FEMA rebid only a portion and then extended their contracts
once, if not twice - to US$3.4 billion total - so the firms could
finish their remaining Katrina work.
The four companies, which have denied that connections played a factor, were
among six that also won new contracts after open bidding in August. The latest
contracts are worth up to US$250 million each for future disaster work.
- The propriety of 36 trailer contract awards designated for small and
local businesses as part of Paulison's promise to rebid large contracts.
Homeland Security Inspector General Richard Skinner is reviewing whether some
small and local businesses were unfairly shut out in favor of winners such as
joint venture PRI-DJI. DJI stands for Del-Jen Inc., a subsidiary of Fluor, which
has donated more than $930,000 to mostly Republican candidates since 2000.
"It's not what you know, what your expertise is. I don't even believe it's
got much to do with price. It's who you know," contends Ken Edmonds, owner of
River Parish RV Inc. in Louisiana, a company of 9 people whose application was
rejected.
PRI, a minority-owned firm based in San Diego, said it is the "majority
partner" with Del-Jen as part of a federal mentoring program offered by the
Small Business Administration. The joint venture received four Katrina contracts
worth up to $100 million each based on price and "knowledge of work with the
federal government," president Frank Loscavio said.
- Whether small and minority-owned businesses were unfairly hurt after
the Bush administration initially waived competition requirements.
For many weeks after the storm, minority firms received 1.5 percent of the
total work - less than one-third of the 5 percent normally required -
because they weren't allowed to bid for many of the emergency contracts.
The National Black Chamber of Commerce called the figure appalling because of
the disproportionate number of poor, black people in the stricken Gulf Coast,
prompting Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, and Rep. Donald Manzullo, R-Ill., to
request GAO to investigate.
FEMA has since restored many of its competition rules, and the number of
contracts given to minority firms is now about 8.8 percent, according to the
agency.