FEMA: No role in island grid deal

‘A lot wrong’ with $300M contract, exec tells lawmakers

FEMA Administrator Brock Long (from left), Robert Salesses, a Defense Department deputy assistant secretary, and Maj. Gen. Donald Jackson, who oversees work by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Puerto Rico, prepare to testify Tuesday before a Senate panel about the no-bid contract to repair Puerto Rico’s power grid. Long said there was “a lot wrong” with the deal.
FEMA Administrator Brock Long (from left), Robert Salesses, a Defense Department deputy assistant secretary, and Maj. Gen. Donald Jackson, who oversees work by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Puerto Rico, prepare to testify Tuesday before a Senate panel about the no-bid contract to repair Puerto Rico’s power grid. Long said there was “a lot wrong” with the deal.

WASHINGTON -- Federal Emergency Management Agency officials had nothing to do with approving a pricey no-bid contract to restore the power grid in Puerto Rico, the head of the agency told Congress on Tuesday.

FEMA Administrator Brock Long told the Senate homeland security committee that there was "a lot wrong" with the contentious $300 million contract awarded to Whitefish Energy Holdings, a tiny Montana company from Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke's hometown.

Long testified that FEMA officials learned about the deal only after it had already been signed by the board of the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority last month, just days before Hurricane Maria slammed unto the territory. The head of the troubled utility, Ricardo Ramos, said Sunday that he would seek to cancel the contract, over scrutiny from multiple federal and congressional investigations.

"There's no lawyer inside FEMA [who] would have ever agreed to the language in that contract," Long said.

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He said no federal dollars have yet been provided to pay for the repairs. Long said his agency has serious concerns about some of the prices listed in the document and whether they are competitive.

A price list attached to the Whitefish contract sets rates for workers and equipment to be paid by the utility: $20,277 an hour for a heavy lift Chinook helicopter, $319 an hour for a journeyman lineman and $286 an hour for a mechanic. Each worker also gets a daily allowance of $80 for food and $332 for a hotel room.

Whitefish Energy Holdings is headquartered in Whitefish, Mont., which has a population of about 7,200. Zinke, a former Montana congressman, knows Whitefish Chief Executive Officer Andy Techmanski but has denied playing any role in helping the company land the big deal.

Whitefish has also denied any wrongdoing.

Long said his agency is now spending about $200 million a day on the ongoing emergency response to Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria, as well as a recent spate of devastating wildfires.

About 25 million Americans had been affected by natural disasters in the past 50 days, he said, with more than 4 million now registered for emergency aid. Long told the senators that more money may eventually be needed than the $52 billion in emergency relief allocated so far.

Pressed by members of the committee on how FEMA would ensure that electricity service on Puerto Rico is restored as quickly as possible, Long said he would need additional legal authority from Congress to spend federal funds to rebuild the island's power grid better than it was.

About 67 percent of the residents on the island are still without power, while nearly 1 in 5 Puerto Ricans still don't have reliable access to drinking water.

Maj. Gen. Donald Jackson, who oversees work by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Puerto Rico, told the senators that the current goal is to have electricity restored to at least half the island by the end of November.

About 450 soldiers are assigned to the effort, he said, with about 400 government generators now providing power to such critical facilities as hospitals and water treatment plants.

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AP/SUSAN WALSH

Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Brock Long arrives to testify before the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017, during a hearing on the federal response to the 2017 hurricane season. Long said the challenge presented by hurricanes Irma, Harvey and Maria is unprecedented in the history of his agency.

A Section on 11/01/2017

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