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Text 1497, 462 rader
Skriven 2005-09-27 23:34:06 av Whitehouse Press (1:3634/12.0)
Ärende: Press Release (0509272) for Tue, 2005 Sep 27
====================================================
===========================================================================
Press Gaggle with Scott McClellan
===========================================================================

For Immediate Release
September 27, 2005

Press Gaggle with Scott McClellan
Aboard Air Force One
En Route Beaumont, Texas

9:49 A.M. EDT

MR. McCLELLAN: All right, good morning, everybody. Let's get started with
the gaggle. The President had his usual briefing this morning before we
departed. He's continued to receive updates on the hurricanes and the
response, relief and recovery efforts.

Today the President will be meeting with state and local officials. Our
priority is making sure that people are getting the help they need, that
we're getting assistance to them, and that the federal government is doing
our part to help. And the President will have an opportunity to hear from
the state and local officials about efforts to meet the needs of the people
in the region, and what else we can do to support the state and local
response efforts. It will also be an opportunity for the President to get a
first-hand look at the damage that has been done by Hurricane Rita in the
region.

At the first stop, the President -- in Beaumont, the President will go to
the main terminal there, and meet in a conference room, I believe, with
state and local officials. Joining him will be General Clark, the Commander
of the Joint Task Force Rita; Admiral Hereth, the primary federal officer
for Hurricane Rita in Texas; Governor Perry; Mayors from Beaumont, Port
Arthur and other communities in the area; county judges will be there;
Senator Cornyn is traveling with us, he'll be there, as well.

Q Senator Cornyn?

MR. McCLELLAN: Yes, he's on board. Congressman Brady and Congressman Poe
are expected to be there, as well. And then following that meeting -- I
think, actually, Admiral Allen is going to join us there for the aerial
tour. The President will do an aerial tour of the Beaumont-Lake
Charles-Texas/Louisiana border region. I expect that he'll be able to get
-- be able to see the damage in the Beaumont/Port Arthur area, the Sabine
Pass area, Cameron, Louisiana -- Cameron Parish was a parish that was hit
particularly hard, including Lake Charles.

I think we're going to try to see an off-shore oil rig as part of the
aerial tour, as well. And as I mentioned, Lake Charles. And then we will
land in Lake Charles, where the President will participate in a briefing
with state and local officials, including Governor Blanco, the Mayor from
Lake Charles and some other cities in the area, the parish Presidents from
that area. I think Senator Landrieu will be there, as well. Congressman
Boustany, I think is supposed to be there, and then General Honore and
Admiral Allen will be there, as well.

Just some -- a brief update on some of the ongoing operations relating to
Hurricane Rita, as well as the recovery with Hurricane Katrina. One of the
-- the search and rescue -- in Texas, some of the search and rescue efforts
are really shifting more from flooding to addressing some of the problems
associated with the heat index. The heat index is supposed to get up to
about 105 degrees today, so that's where some of those search and rescue
operations will be focused on.

Texas is reporting about 707,000 thousand people remain without power.

Q How many?

MR. McCLELLAN: Seven-hundred-and-seven thousand people in Texas are
customers without power. And you've got power companies, the state, FEMA
and the Department of Energy all working together to address the problem.
It's going to take some time to get some of the power back on. Temporary
housing is, obviously, a priority that people are starting to focus on more
in Texas. And they continue to move forward on the phased return that began
on Sunday, that's a phased return occurring over a seven-day period.

In Louisiana, you've got damage assessments ongoing in some of the
hardest-hit areas, particularly some of the parishes. The Department of
Transportation has been providing some busing to continue to get people out
of the Lake Charles area. And the assessment on the flooding continues in
Cameron Parish, as well. There's flooding throughout the Parish. And the
flooding and debris in some of the parishes, obviously, have an impact on
some of the ability to do the damage assessments. The latest report I have
is about 821,000 customers without power in Louisiana. A number of those --
some 216,000 remain without power from Katrina. That's part of that overall
number. You've got some 8,700 evacuees in shelters in Louisiana. And in
terms of the levees in New Orleans, they put a large amount of rock and
sandbags into the levee there that was overtopped or breached, that flowed
into the 9th Ward. So they've been able to stop the inflow of water, and
now they are moving forward on the pumping operations to dewater that area.

The priorities remain on lifesaving and life-sustaining operations, making
sure people have food and water and ice and shelter, addressing some of the
housing needs, doing the ongoing damage assessments, and restoring some of
the critical infrastructure.

Just a couple of quick highlights, in terms of the federal government, or
some key statistics. U.S. Coast Guard units have rescued more than 124
people from Hurricane Rita. There are more than 700 urban search and rescue
personnel on the ground in Louisiana engaged in search and rescue missions.
Texas, Louisiana, Florida, Mississippi and Alabama have more than 34,000
National Guard soldiers and airmen positioned to assist and respond. You
have 246 shelters housing some 73,000 evacuees from Hurricane Rita
nationwide.

And in terms of Hurricane Katrina, more than 1,440,000 registrations have
been received for financial assistance, and more than $2.2 billion in
assistance has been delivered to over 680,000 households to help meet
immediate needs. And you have about 80,000 Hurricane Katrina evacuees
nationwide being housed in shelters right now.

Just to follow up on a couple of issues from yesterday. You heard the
President talk about or encourage the American people to do what they could
to conserve energy. We want to make sure that sufficient supplies are
available nationwide, but we also want to make sure that sufficient
supplies are particularly available in the hardest hit areas from the
hurricanes. We want to make sure -- that's natural gas, gasoline, diesel
fuel that they have the resources they need to meet needs.

And encouraging conservation has been something that this administration
has always done. If you'll recall, back in 2001, we took a number of
actions to promote energy conservation, including providing conservation
grants to accelerate the development of fuel cells, to promote the
advancement of -- to encourage the development of technologically advanced
engines, to encourage development of hydrogen technology for cars and
buildings of the future. And these were steps we took to really look at new
ways to produce power and develop vehicles that will dramatically lower
emissions and get more power out of fuel units.

And there are a number of steps we took back in the summer of 2001. I would
encourage you to look back at those actions that we took. We also took
actions at the White House to promote energy conservation and increase
energy efficiency. There were actions we took when it came to turning off
lights, turning off computers, increasing thermostats, and things of that
nature. And that information is all available --

Q Back then?

MR. McCLELLAN: Yes, all available on our website. That's why I'm saying
that -- what the President said yesterday really built upon the actions
that we've already been taking.

Q Turning up the thermostats, was back in the summer of 2001, or --

MR. McCLELLAN: Yes. You can look back at some of the steps that we were
taking to promote energy efficiency and conserve energy. And some steps
that we're already taking, since yesterday, in terms of the White House,
the President has directed the staff to take steps to increase the
thermostats, scale back non-essential travel, to look at other ways that we
can conserve energy, as well.

The White House has been looking at additional ways that we can conserve
energy. We'll also be sending out notices to staff about -- reminding them
to turn off lights and printers and copiers and computers when they leave
the office. We'll continue to move forward on more e-government, paperless
systems that would reduce the use of faxes and copiers and printers and
things of that nature, encouraging all government vehicles to try to
consume less. That would include by people sharing rides in government
vehicles, not letting cars idle, which wastes gas. We'll be sending out
notices to staff to promote mass transit options, as well, letting them
know about Metro stops and encouraging ride sharing, telling them where
pick-up and drop-off points are at the White House, or reminding them of
that, and just scrutinizing staff travel even more, so that people can
videoconference where they can versus actually traveling, and things of
that nature.

So, again, these actions that we are taking build upon steps that we've
already taken. And other areas -- the President did want everybody to look
at the motorcade, too, to see what could be scaled back there, as well. So
I think today we probably have a couple less vans than we normally would.

Q Press vans?

MR. McCLELLAN: Sorry?

Q The press vans will be there?

MR. McCLELLAN: I think probably -- I think there is usually like four press
vans. I think we're trying to do it in two or three -- staff and the guest
van is combined. I think we can -- all steps that people can take will
help, and that's why we look at all these measures.

Q Would the President consider maybe doing more meetings with these local
officials on video conference himself, either -- did he consider it for
this trip, or for future trips?

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, we do do video conferencing, and we do quite a bit of
that. But the President believes that it's important to get a first-hand
account of the operations that are ongoing to provide relief to the people
in need, as well as to hear first-hand from state and local officials about
the cooperation and the response from the federal government in terms of
meeting those needs. And it's also important for him to be able to see
first-hand some of damage that has been done. He is the President of the
United States, and overseeing -- the President is the one who is
responsible for the federal response efforts. So this is an important trip.
I don't expect that we're going to be returning any time this week, but --

It's also for the President to not only get a first-hand account of how
needs are being -- how the needs of the people are being met, but it's also
important for him to provide some comfort and reassurance that we are going
to do what we can to help get people back up on their feet and to lift the
spirits of all those who are working around the clock to meet the enormous
challenges that have been presented by these two hurricanes hitting in
roughly the same area.

Q Is he not returning this week because he wants to conserve his travels,
or is it just because he didn't have any plans?

MR. McCLELLAN: I don't know that it's necessarily that. I just think that
this will be the last trip to the region this week.

Q Senator Frist's office came up with a figure of $100 billion for Katrina
recovery. Does that sound like a reasonable figure?

MR. McCLELLAN: Again, I mean, the assessment of the longer-term rebuilding
efforts is ongoing. We're trying to move forward on that as quickly as
possible. A lot of that depends on getting a full assessment of the damage
that's been done, particularly to some of the critical infrastructure. And
it's the infrastructure that is going to be some of the larger cost. It
takes a little bit of time to get a good assessment of how much is at --
how much that will cost.

There's some things we can assess right now, or that we already have
assessed, but some of the larger costs relate to the infrastructure, and
those assessments are ongoing right now. And we're working with state and
local officials to get a good sense of how much is going to be needed. The
President has made it very clear that we're going to meet the needs of the
people in the region, and the federal government is going to do our part to
help. It's also important that we make sure we have accountability measures
in place for the money that -- the taxpayer money that is being spent now.
We do have strong accountability measures in place. We want to make sure
that we're not slowing down any of the important needs -- the immediate
needs that need to be -- I guess we don't want to slow down resources
getting to the people who need them. In fact, we've been cutting through
paperwork and cutting through red tape and bureaucracy to make sure people
are getting what they need.

At the same time, we want to make sure that the taxpayer money is being
spent wisely, and that it's going for the purposes that is intended. That's
why you have the Department of Homeland Security established inspector
general teams in the region to oversee that part of it. And the President
has made it clear that we want to work with Congress to look at ways to
offset some of the costs related to Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita.
And that's what we're going to do. We already have some savings that we
proposed in our budget, and we're ! going to continue to work with Congress
to identify additional unnecessary spending that can be cut.

Q And the Louisiana delegation is talking about a request of $250 billion
on top of what's already been allocated. Does that sound reasonable?

MR. McCLELLAN: Again, we don't know what the longer-term needs are right
now, because we don't have a complete assessment of what those needs are.
We hope to have that soon, hopefully in the coming weeks. We are committed
to working with state and local officials to make sure needs are met, and
working with Congress to do so, as well. And that's what we'll do. But the
President has said that the federal government has an obligation to help
this region recover, and to help the people in the region rebuild their
lives and rebuild their communities. And that's what we will do. So we'll
work with state and local officials and we'll work with Congress to meet
that commitment.

Q Are there going to be any more specifics from the President today on
refinery development? He seemed to signal yesterday we may need to cut the
red tape, some of the regulatory stuff, the environmental stuff. Are we
going to hear specifics on that today?

MR. McCLELLAN: I don't know if that's necessarily the purpose of today.
You'll hear from the President today. The purpose of today is to make sure
that the response and relief efforts -- the needs associated with the
response and relief efforts are being met, and hear from state and local
officials, and to get a first-hand account of some of the damage that has
been done because of Hurricane Rita.

But that is something that we believe needs to be addressed. It's one of
the problems associated with our dependence on foreign sources of energy,
and with our lack of ability to -- let me back up. We need to expand our
refinery capacity, because of demand. And that's one of the problems when
it comes with being able to refine the oil into gasoline. And there are a
number of people that have expressed to the President that they would like
to expand their existing operations, but the time and cost of it is very
restrictive. There are others that would like to be able to build new
refineries to meet some of the demand, and again, because of the
regulations and rules, it's costly, it's time consuming and restrictive on
people being able to do that.

Q The environmentalists are saying this is just an excuse to do a lot of
stuff the refinery folks have wanted to do, in terms of scaling back
environmental stuff, new source reviews, some of that stuff.

MR. McCLELLAN: It's to meet an important need of the American people. The
American people recognize that this is a problem area, and that's why the
President believes it's one of the areas that needs to be addressed. The
refineries are utilizing -- the President is concerned about the fact that
refineries are utilized at a rate higher than 90 percent right now, and it
takes three to four years to permit a refinery. That's too long.

And so you have to look at ways that maybe we can shorten the permitting
time, bringing about more certainty, and finding -- maybe finding other
sites. Remember, the President proposed looking at some of the military
sites that may be part of the Base Realignment and Closure process as one
way to expand refinery capacity.

Q You said that some of the focus has shifted from flooding to the heat.
Have there been new problems with some of the victims in dealing with this
--

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, the heat index is a concern. Remember, you have power
out in certain areas. That is a concern, and that's why some of the --
Texas is shifting some of those search and rescue more to addressing some
of the heat concerns.

Q How are they addressing the concerns?

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, maybe you can talk to state and local officials about
that, but that's one of the concerns. It's very hot in Texas right now,
you've got areas without power, you've got people who have had businesses
and homes that have been damaged. And it's something that is a priority for
the state right now, and we're there to assist them in those efforts.
Remember, the flooding wasn't -- in Texas wasn't what it was expected to
be. The hurricane didn't stall, it kept moving, and that was good in the
sense that it didn't lead to the kind of flooding that everybody expected.

And now -- so this is part of what you're seeing in the aftermath of the
hurricane, just making sure that the priorities are being met. And this is
one of the priorities, people becoming overheated, and so forth.

Q On the refinery issue, is legislation needed to cut through the red tape,
or what are you talking about?

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, there are some ideas that are being proposed. In fact,
I think Chairman Barton of the House Energy Committee is proposing some
ideas, and we'll certainly take a look at those ideas. But, yes, we're
looking at ways to address this issue.

Q There's been some scrutiny lately over the no-bid contracts that are
flowing through in the wake of the cleanup and FEMA. Is that a concern for
the administration?

MR. McCLELLAN: It's something that the Department of Homeland Security
Inspector General is committed to staying on top of. He expressed that the
other day. His job is to help prevent fraud and abuse, mismanagement and
things of that nature, and he -- obviously, there's a lot of resources
going out quickly, and you want to make sure that those resources are
getting to the people who need them. And that's the purpose of those
supplemental emergency requests that Congress passed at our request.

But you also want to make sure that there's accountability in place, and
that's what I was stressing with Steve, is that we do have accountability
measures in place. They are -- the Department of Homeland Security
Inspector General set up a special office for Hurricane Katrina, to address
these issues, and they've deployed inspector general teams in different
parts of the region, to stay on top of these issues. And I think the
Inspector General expressed how that was a concern, that money -- that it's
going out so fast, because you need to get resources to the people that
need them, and their job is to stay on top of that.

Q Scott, looking back over the past few weeks, it's obviously been one
hurricane thing after another. We're looking at a federal relief effort
that will be the biggest in history, natural disaster the biggest in
history. Have you heard the President reflect at all on how this has come
to dominate the agenda going forward?

MR. McCLELLAN: As he said, he said it's going to be one of the largest
reconstruction efforts ever. And what we're committed to doing is making
sure that it's a locally inspired vision, and that the federal helps
support that -- their efforts to implement that vision. That's why he was
down in Mississippi last week, meeting with the Governor's Commission, that
is moving forward on developing ideas for rebuilding. We want to rebuild
those communities better and stronger than ever. And the Mayor -- and New
Orleans is moving forward on efforts to start to look at some of the
longer-term vision for the area.

Q My question went more to the point of how it's dominating his agenda, and
the exclusion of other things that he intended to focus on this fall.

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, there are a number of important priorities that we
continue to address, and that we will continue to meet. This is -- the
response and recovery and rebuilding efforts relating to these hurricanes
is highest -- is of the highest priority for the President. And he's going
to continue to stay focused on making sure that we're meeting the needs of
the people in the region, that we're helping them get back up on their
feet, and that we're helping them rebuild their lives and their
communities.

Obviously, there are other priorities, as well. The President has a great
team in place throughout the federal government, and we're all working to
make sure that those priorities are addressed, too.

Q How much time is he spending on researching the next Court nominee, or
reading the materials, or consulting? How does that stand?

MR. McCLELLAN: You bring up another priority. That's a priority, moving
forward on filling that vacancy. The President indicated he was going to
move forward in a timely manner, and he is continuing to move forward on
it. In fact, maybe later today I can give you an update on the
consultations. I know that as of yesterday we had -- the White House had
spoken with -- the President and White House staff had spoken with 17 of 18
of the Judiciary Committee members. We had reached out to another one, and
I imagine we may have made contact yesterday with that member, as well. We
have consulted with -- it's well above 50, it may be even closer to 70 by
now. But the President was committed to doing extensive consultation ahead
of making a decision to fill that vacancy, and that's what we've been
working to do. I think we were, essentially, wrapping that process up,
maybe as early as today. The amount of consultation we did the first time
was unprecedented, and the President is committed to doing the same amount
of consultation this time.

He spoke yesterday to -- again, to step back -- the President is going to
appoint someone that all Americans can be proud of, and that is highly
qualified to fill the vacancy. That's what he did with Judge Roberts, and
that's what he will do with this vacancy, as well. He is, as he indicated,
he is considering a diverse group of potential nominees.

Q Is he reading materials on them, reading opinions, or -- remember, the
last time, he was doing all these things you told us about. We haven't
heard that much about it this time.

MR. McCLELLAN: I'll see if there's any additional update to give you on
that.

Q Just to be clear, the consultation is --

MR. McCLELLAN: We have a process in place. Obviously, he's very familiar
with a number of individuals that may be under consideration.

Go ahead, Dick.

Q Just to be clear, the consultations you were talking about in a moment
were with regards to Roberts, is that right?

MR. McCLELLAN: No, no, no. The ones -- I was talking about consultations
with regard to this vacancy. Remember, last week the President met with
Senators Specter and Leahy and Senator Frist and Senator Reid. That was
part of the consultation process, and White House staff -- Harriet Miers,
our Counsel, Andy Card, Chief of Staff, and Karl Rove, Deputy Chief of
Staff, have been reaching out to listen to ideas from members of the
Senate.

Q So the consultation process is nearly over, then.

MR. McCLELLAN: Yes, I think we're close to wrapping that up, if not
already. And I'll try to get you an update later.

Q Is he interviewing any candidates yet?

MR. McCLELLAN: If the President wants to share any more information with
you, I imagine he will. But out of respect for those who may or may not be
under consideration, I'm not going to get into those kind of issues.

All right.

Q Thank you.

MR. McCLELLAN: Thanks.

END 9:16 A.M. EDT

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