The city of New Orleans followed virtually no aspect of its own emergency management plan in the disaster caused by Hurricane Katrina. 
    
New Orleans officials also failed to implement most federal guidelines, which stated that the Superdome was not a safe shelter for thousands of residents. 
    
The official "City of New Orleans Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan" states that the mayor can call for a mandatory citywide evacuation, but the Louisiana governor alone is given the power to carry out the evacuation, which Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco has yet to do. She "begged" people to leave before the storm and is still asking the few thousand holdouts to evacuate the flooded city. 
    
Small-scale evacuations, according to the plan, are to be handled under the standard operation plans of city firefighters and police officers. 
    "However, due to the sheer size and number of persons to 
    be evacuated, should a major tropical weather system or 
    other catastrophic event threaten or impact the area, 
    specifically directed long-range planning and 
    coordination of resources and responsibilities must be 
    undertaken," the New Orleans plan says. 
    The plan does not say how such an evacuation should be 
    executed, but states that a full evacuation of the city 
    would take 72 hours, and that the city knows that there 
    are "approximately 100,000 citizens of New Orleans [who] 
    do not have means of personal transportation." 
    The guidelines of the Federal Emergency Management 
    Agency, which has little jurisdiction to act on its own 
    but is designed to work with local authorities, suggests 
    that local evacuation plans "coordinate the use of school 
    buses and drivers to support evacuation efforts." 
    Neither New Orleans Mayor C. Ray Nagin nor Mrs. Blanco 
    ordered buses to take people out of the city before the 
    storm. Two days after the storm hit, the governor issued 
    an order for buses to roll, but by then hundreds of buses 
    in New Orleans were underwater and useless. 
Both the mayor and the governor asked residents who couldn't evacuate themselves to go to the Superdome, which in the days after the storm was a scene of chaos and violence as it became an island in a submerged city. 
    Former FEMA Director Joseph Allbaugh told Fox News last 
    week that when he headed the agency, he refused to allow 
    the Superdome to be used as a shelter during hurricanes. 
    The city, however, ignored FEMA guidelines that designated
    "supershelters" should be located outside of floodplains 
    and outside of Category 4 storm-surge zones. 
    FEMA has been harshly criticized by Democrats in 
    Congress, who have demanded that Director Michael D. 
    Brown resign. But FEMA was in place as the storm 
    approached and the Louisiana National Guard delivered 
    seven trailers with food and water Aug. 29 and another 
    seven truckloads on Aug. 30 to the Superdome to help feed 
    the 25,000 people inside. 
    Confusion reigned in Katrina's aftermath. A state-of-the-
    art mobile hospital developed with Homeland Security 
    grants to respond to disasters and staffed by 100 doctors 
    and paramedics was left stranded in Mississippi because 
    Louisiana officials would not let it deploy to New Orleans. 
    Red Cross officials say the organization was well 
    positioned to provide food, water and hygiene products to 
    the thousands stranded in New Orleans. But the state 
    refused to let them deliver the aid. 
    "Access to New Orleans is controlled by the National 
    Guard and local authorities, and while we are in constant 
    contact with them, we simply cannot enter New Orleans 
    against their orders," the Red Cross said last week on 
    its Web site.