[updated--published too fast] The recorded conversations could be transcribed into a database that could be matched against public information.
The bottomline is that as the bureaucracy kicks into gear with the provision of emergency help: grants, loans, shelter, whatever, the processing center can read the ID bracelet and match the person to the data in the database. This has many benefits:
- Finding lost children and reuniting families--because everyone is in the database with some sort of identification (even if only 1-year infant found near X), people could be speedily reunited. That would save much effort and more emotional strain.
- Avoiding fraud--while there could still be fraud it would remove the biggest causes of abuse in Katrina.
- Providing information--you'd have a much faster flow of more accurate information as to the extent of the disaster and its impact. That means much better management of relief efforts.
2 comments:
I'd be interested to hear your thoughts about taking FEMA back out and independent like it was before. It seems to me that part of the problem is that the layers of bureaucracy helped to obscure FEMA within that DHS (which itself be broken up in my view)and thus created conditions where Michael Brown could be appointed to that post. I couldn't see such an appointment happening prior to DHS.
What do you think, if anything?
George--I've some thoughts that I think I'll put in a separate post.
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