The federal response to Katrina was immediate — in at least one case

If you haven’t already, be sure to check out this very interesting item from the Hattiesburg (Miss.) American. Dan Froomkin got the ball rolling with it yesterday, and it’s been making the rounds ever since, but the questions the article raises are in need of answers.

Shortly after Hurricane Katrina roared through South Mississippi knocking out electricity and communication systems, the White House ordered power restored to a pipeline that sends fuel to the Northeast.

That order – to restart two power substations in Collins that serve Colonial Pipeline Co. – delayed efforts by at least 24 hours to restore power to two rural hospitals and a number of water systems in the Pine Belt.

At first blush, the idea that the White House saw the protection of a fuel pipeline to much of the country as a national emergency makes some sense. But the circumstances here, at a minimum, are enough to raise some eyebrows.

Dan Jordan, manager of Southern Pines Electric Power Association, said Vice President Dick Cheney’s office called and left voice mails twice shortly after the storm struck, saying the Collins substations needed power restored immediately.

Jordan dated the first call the night of Aug. 30 and the second call the morning of Aug. 31. Southern Pines supplies electricity to the substation that powers the Colonial pipeline.

Mississippi Public Service Commissioner Mike Callahan said the U.S. Department of Energy called him on Aug. 31. Callahan said department officials said opening the fuel line was a national priority.

Between Aug. 29 and Aug. 31, the federal response to Katrina was, in a word, pathetic. Neither the president nor the vice president were even back from their vacations at that point, and yet, Cheney’s office managed to make immediate demands about protecting and securing this pipeline.

Local officials did what they were told and did an amazing job. Under a White House directive, they pulled workers off of other emergency projects and got the fuel pipelines working, even though it meant keeping some local hospitals without power in the aftermath of the devastation.

It seems odd.

The White House’s response to questions regarding this directive, I assumed, would be fairly direct: tens of millions of people depend on those pipelines along the eastern coast, so officials had to make this a top priority, even at the cost of local hospitals dealing with a crisis with no power. Except, that isn’t the White House response — because they refuse to respond at all.

Cheney’s office referred calls about the pipeline to the Department of Homeland Security. Calls there were referred to Kirk Whitworth, who would not take a telephone message and required questions in the form of an e-mail.

Susan Castiglione, senior manager of corporate and public affairs with Colonial Pipeline, did not return phone calls.

Their silence notwithstanding, this story raises questions that deserve answers. I’m not saying that there’s obvious wrongdoing here, but a White House explanation is warranted for why it leapt into action on just this project the week of the storm.

Josh Marshall says that that pipeline carries alot of military grade jet fuel.

  • Regardless of the motive for the directive, it reveals that the administration can act quickly when it’s sufficiently motivated. Moreover, that the administration in fact had good information about damage caused by the storm. Hell, I didn’t even know about this until you posted it, CB. For the WH to claim ignorance about levees breaking or people at the convention center (or even that LA did not declare a state of emergency, which really seems to show the WH disorganized and uninformed) seems pretty weak in light of their knowledge of this.

  • Josh Marshall says that that pipeline carries alot of military grade jet fuel.

    Yes and if the WH admits that, they’ll be connecting Katrina and Iraq in an uncomfortable way.

  • If Cheney was still on vacation in Wyoming until Friday or Saturday of that week, yet the calls came in on Tuesday and Wednesday, just who was it in his D.C. office that made the calls that ordered the pipeline power to be restored? Just asking…

  • Its pretty obvious this was the old boy network in actioin: oil pipeline + Halliburton + Cheney + oil industry profits at stake = immediate action. Twenty-five thousand citizens without food, water or security for four days – what’s the hurry? The roads are wet.

    The transparent attempt to link it to national security via a jet fuel shortage is absurd. If the Air Force and Homeland Security Department haven’t figured out that they need at least a two-week supply of jet fuel at each of its bases we are in deep, deep trouble.

  • Why get so upset about a hospital not getting power? So a few people die.What’s a few more dead bodies going to matter, right? It was their fault for being in the hospital during storm in the first place, right?
    People’s priorties are so screwed up. I mean we need that oil. Profits come first. Democracy has to come to Iraq and you can’t have it both ways. Quit whining already! They were going to die anyway, we just speeded up the process a little.
    Can you spell the word SOCIOPATH?

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