WASHINGTON - Two senators on Thursday asked federal officials to
explain their decision to sign a $236 million deal with Carnival Cruise
Lines for Hurricane Katrina housing, saying Greece was ready to provide two
ships for free.
In a letter, Sens. Tom Coburn, R-Okl., and Barack Obama, D-Ill., asked
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff to explain why Federal
Emergency Management Agency officials chose Carnival and turned down the
Greek offer.
The six-month deal with Carnival for three full-service cruise ships - which
now sit mostly empty in the Gulf Coast - has been criticized by lawmakers of
both parties as a prime example of wasted spending in Hurricane
Katrina-related contracts.
The two have proposed legislation that would create a chief financial
officer to oversee and approve Katrina spending.
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"Even if the Carnival contract were a good one - and it almost certainly is
not - it is inexplicable why FEMA would fail to implement the Greek
governments offer of free cruise ships," the senators wrote.
Greece on Sept. 4 offered to donate two cruise ships to the United States as
part of humanitarian aid for Katrina evacuees, according to the European
Union.
Butch Kinerney, a spokesman for FEMA, said the agency signed an initial deal
with Carnival by Sept. 3 - before the Greek offer. He said he did not know
when FEMA officials subsequently became aware of it.
Once FEMA officials did find out, they chose to move forward with the
Carnival deal because it was not known how quickly Greece could provide the
ships, Kinerney said.
John Hart, a spokesman for Coburn, said the senators want to know exactly
when FEMA became aware of Greece's offer and why the agency hasn't tried to
back out of the Carnival deal, particularly since the ships are hardly being
used.