Disaster drill derailed by disasters
Severe weather hampered the annual National Level Exercise this year by forcing some federal employees to cancel their participation in order to attend to real-life recovery efforts, according to a new audit.
The federal government’s annual nationwide disaster drill was a victim of Mother Nature this year, as real-world recovery efforts for areas affected by tornadoes and floods took priority over the exercise, according to a new audit.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency led the National Level Exercise from May 16 to 19 with a simulation of an earthquake in the Midwestern states. The annual drill is mandated by Congress and directed by the White House, with numerous state and local agencies participating as well.
However, the weeks leading up to the exercise were “a period of high-disaster activity,” with tornadoes and floods affecting the states and the FEMA region involved in the exercise, according to the audit from the Homeland Security Department’s Acting Inspector General Charles Edwards.
As a result, participation dropped, with four states and one FEMA region canceling their involvement, and the exercise was scaled back as a number of government employees were called to official recovery duties.
As those employees left, they were replaced by staffers who came less prepared, the audit states.
“The greater impact on exercise play involved using employees who were not originally scheduled to participate in exercise activities, since their counterparts had to address real-world events,” the audit states. “These employees were less trained and experienced, and some were not trained on exercise software. On occasion, they had to consult their counterparts who were working real-world events for advice and assistance. Furthermore, some employees were attempting to work both real-world events and the exercise.”
In addition, two other federal agencies did not participate in the drill or simulate their activities, despite a requirement to do so. It was unclear whether this was due to real-world events or not, the report states. The agencies were not named. FEMA officials said there would be stronger accountability measures for future drills.
Overall, the impact of real-world disasters hampered the play exercise, the auditors concluded. When asked about the effect of real-world events on NLE 2011, a FEMA official said it was “immeasurable.”
The audit, which was dated Oct. 19 but published online at an unspecified recent date, recommended several ways that other federal agency inspector generals can review their agencies’ participation in future large-scale disaster drills.