Bush says government ready for Rita
After criticism for Katrina response, administration steps up preparedness
![]() | Bush tells the Republican Jewish Coalition in Washington Tuesday that he is urging people in the path of Hurricane Rita to heed evacuation orders. |
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WASHINGTON - Eager to avoid the public pounding he got for his response to Hurricane Katrina, President Bush pledged on Wednesday to be “ready for the worst” as another big hurricane headed for the Gulf Coast.
Across the federal government, officials were advertising the Bush administration’s stepped-up response plans for Hurricane Rita as it swept across the Gulf of Mexico toward the Texas coastline.
Bush pleaded with people in the region to comply with mandatory evacuation orders issued in New Orleans and Galveston, Texas. And he said that federal, state and local governments are in close coordination on the preparation.
“I urge the citizens to listen carefully to the instructions provided by state and local authorities and follow them,” Bush said in a speech to the Republican Jewish Coalition. “We hope and pray that Hurricane Rita will not be a devastating storm but we got to be ready for the worst.”
Hundreds of truckloads of water, ice and ready-made meals arrived Tuesday at locations in Rita’s path and rescue and medical teams were standing by. “I think we’re going to be ready when it does hit land,” Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff promised.
A military cargo plane evacuated 25 patients from the Florida Keys, and more than 2,000 National Guard troops were put on active-duty alert to assist as Rita slammed into the string of islands and headed west, perhaps toward Texas.
FEMA urging early evacuation
R. David Paulison, the newly appointed director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said if people don’t evacuate before the arrival of Rita, which hit Category 5 strength on Wednesday, they could be out of reach of help.
“We know that there is going to be a period of time before help gets to you,” Paulison told reporters in Washington. “So you need to make sure you have your family’s plan in place, your evacuation plans in place. Make sure you have food, water, medicine, all the things you need to survive for a couple of days on your own.”
Paulison evaded reporters' questions concerning how his agency handled Katrina and the discrepancy between the level of preparedness for the two storms.
“I'm dealing with what we can do for Texas right now,” he said. “We're going to go back very carefully with what happened with Katrina, but now's not the time to do that.”
FEMA, Texas officials in regular contact
He expressed confidence in Texas' ability to deal with Rita and said FEMA communicates with local officials and emergency workers “almost on an hourly basis to make sure they have what they need to do their job.”
Helicopters are set up to move disaster teams into position, he said, and the military has 2500 hospital beds available if necessary.
Appearing on CBS’s “The Early Show,” Chertoff declared, “Ever since Katrina we’ve been reloading our resources.” He said federal officials are working very closely with their counterparts in Texas.
In an interview on ABC’s “Good Morning America,” Chertoff said, “The lesson is that when the storm hits, the best place to be is to be out of the path. ... There’s plenty of (advance) notice about Rita.”
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