Getting a handle on the Gulf Oil Spill – What the White House can do.

I normally wouldn’t touch a subject like this, because as a rule I think we need less government, not more.

However, the Gulf Oil Spill has become a national crisis with BP completely dropping the ball. Listening to BP’s CEO and marketing machine, it reminds me of speeches from George W. Bush where he would say, over and over again, “we’re working really, really hard…. this is a really hard problem”.  Clearly, BP just wasn’t prepared for this type of accident.  That is their biggest failure, they didn’t spend any of their $7 billion in net cash flow, each 90 days, on making sure they have back-ups, on back-ups.  They should of hired NASA to review their disaster plan.

How is this national disaster different than 911? With 911, Mayor  Rudy Giuliani TOOK charge and coordinated all the efforts on the ground. Was he perfect? No. Did he lead, hell yes. Mayor Giuliani didn’t focus on his speeches, he focused on his action plan, what assets he had on the ground, what he needed and then went to work. There was no question Mayor Giuliani was the leader on the ground. Obama, has once again failed to lead. I, like many of you, give him an “F” in his handling of this national environmental disaster. I keep waiting to see an action plan from the white house and all I see is political finger pointing.  Obama can use his LOUD VOICE all he wants, it isn’t going to help solve the problem.  So I’m going to give him one suggestion, which would really help…

Put Vice President Joe Biden in charge of the recovery.

Golf Oil Spill, Joe Biden and the WhitehouseEven though he lacks any experience or leadership, he does have the ability to cut through the red tape. He should be acting as the full time Spill Recovery Chief.  His office should be moved to ground zero and he should bring the full weight of the white house with him.  What can he do? He can cut through all of the red tape. If you listen to the five state governors, house and senate representatives of the gulf, they all share a common message – they can’t coordinate all of the federal and state agencies to get on the same page. BP comes up with a plan, then must get it approved by the  U.S. Coast Guard,U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Fish & Wildlife, FEMA and 20 other state and federal agencies. Each has veto authority.  As Alabama’s Governor Bob Riley has said, “We have no idea who is in control…there is absolutely no point where we ever have a resolution to any problem.” It’s truly a mess since any agency can say, “no you can’t do that” forcing them start the entire process over. That is why nothing is getting done. That is why they are not trying solutions like using hay to soak the oil, or testing the 32 centrifuge machines manufactured by Ocean Therapy Solutions (the company Kevin Costner funded). He could clear the way to get more booms, skimmers, create more barriers and try other solutions.

If VP Joe Biden just solved this problem and created a proper chain of command to bring focus and leadership to an action plan, it would be a step in the right direction. Give the Governors the air support they need and get all the agencies working together. Nothing could be more important for VP Joe Biden, or the white house for that matter.

…Jim

posted @ Friday, June 18, 2010 10:49 AM

Print

Comments on this entry:

# re: Getting a handle on the Gulf Oil Spill – What the White House can do.

Left by John at 6/18/2010 1:18 PM
Gravatar
Good suggestion BUT, in our lifetime, has any administration EVER given the VP anything valuable to do? That's always seemed odd to me that, during an election Pres & VP are called a team. After the election, they rarely work as such.

# re: Getting a handle on the Gulf Oil Spill – What the White House can do.

Left by Bill Harrer at 6/18/2010 5:36 PM
Gravatar
Well Jim, I was with you through the first paragraph, then we started to diverge. I agree that Mayor Guilani took the leadership role, but comparing 911 to the oil spill doesn't work for me. I also don't agree that VP Biden lacks the experience or leadership for this project. He might lack the technical knowledge for this project, but not experience and leadership.

I do agree that this would be a perfect role for VP Biden and that he and a designated lead from each agency should be located in a "war room", along with BP and oil exploration experts. In this room their sole job would be to come up with a solution that could quickly contain the spill then move on to beginning the restoration.

I would not have them worry about Congressional hearing until there is a plan in place and we know that it is working. The "war room" members would all be high level individuals with whatever support team they needed to assess the various plans real-time. They would all be part of creating the solution, instead of making the problem worse.

I believe something like this could me the model going forward on other catastrophes. Now if we only had a power to make this happen!

Bill

# re: Getting a handle on the Gulf Oil Spill – What the White House can do.

Left by jimharrer at 6/18/2010 5:39 PM
Gravatar
Exactly John. Why Presidents don't use their VP for these types of high exposure problems has always made me scratch my head. What a waste of resources.

# re: Getting a handle on the Gulf Oil Spill – What the White House can do.

Left by jimharrer at 6/19/2010 8:42 AM
Gravatar
Hi Bill,

On Biden, I think of him as a career politician, not someone with proven experience leading through a crisis. One specific example, he was put in charge of overseeing the $800b dollar economic stimulus bill yet we haven't heard from him on it.

I like your war room idea very much and also agree that if VP's were used more like COO, even just for the first 90 days of a national crisis, it would give their position more value.

...Jim

# re: Getting a handle on the Gulf Oil Spill – What the White House can do.

Left by Sam R at 6/23/2010 9:20 AM
Gravatar
"Very well put Jim.

As one who is living 'down here' now in New Orleans, I can say that I've heard a lot of 'perspectives' on the spill, the cleanup effort, the presidency, you name it. Bobby Jindal (my state Governor) has been pleading for action, and for the most part he's been ignored.

BP may be the bad guys, but the more we learn, the more we all realize it's not just BP, it's pretty much everyone involved who has failed here. Government inspectors getting pay-offs, drinks, drugs... It boggles the mind...

Let's not forget this region is still recovering from Katrina. If you recall President Bush spoke from a darkened jackson square in the heart of the french quarter and promised to fix New Orleans. Nothing substantial has been done, whatever money was sent down here was pocketed by layers and layers of corruption. The levee's are still not strong enough, there are entire sections of the city that are turning into grasslands and or crack dens (depending on if the buildings are still standing), and good luck if you want to be a good sam and try to take matters into your own hands.

I fear another 911. If we can't manage a hurricane, oil spill, and let's be honest 2 wars effectively, how can we possibly still expect the citizenry of this country to continue to give taxes to these people? I'm at that point in my life. I'm pretty sick and tired of this mess. I blamed Bush before, but Obama isn't turning out to be any better, so yeah..."

Your comment:



 (will not be displayed)


 
 
 
Please add 4 and 8 and type the answer here:
 

Live Comment Preview:

 

DV Jim at sea on the USS Lincoln

JimHarrer.com

(949) 607-0980

«September»
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
2930311234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293012
3456789