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The
Next Big One
Where America is most vulnerable and how the nation can
better manage the risks ahead.
USA (BusinessWeek) September 9,
2005 - Dr. Irwin E. Redlener is in Baton Rouge, La., setting up mobile medical
units. He has been in Louisiana and Mississippi for many long days helping
people deal with the horror of Hurricane Katrina, and his voice is full of anger
and despair. "The country is really just not prepared for a major catastrophic
event," says the director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at
Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health. "Whatever it is - the Big
One in San Francisco, a terrorist attack - it doesn't matter. The unfortunate
truth is our ability to imagine and plan for catastrophic disasters is woefully
inadequate."
For the moment, the nation's economy appears to have dodged the disaster bullet.
Repairs to refineries and pipelines are under way, gas prices are coming down,
and overall growth continues to be strong. With government and private funds
pouring into Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, that region should recover
over time. The same can't be said of relations between Washington and state and
local officials who are still battling over responsibility for the flooding and
looting in New Orleans. As criticism over the slow federal response rose like
the area's floodwaters, the White House responded with leaked reports of local
bumbling. That had Democratic Senator Mary Landrieu of Louisiana fuming on
ABC-TV's This Week that "if one person criticizes our sheriffs or says
one more thing - including the President of the United States - I might likely
have to punch him. Literally."
Yet, the political recriminations show that even as we approach the fourth
anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attacks, the nation remains divided on
what to do when terrible things happen. We still have difficulty grasping the
notion that we are not safe from disaster in our own country. We couldn't
imagine a foreign terrorist attack on our soil. It happened. We couldn't imagine
an entire city disappearing under water, its population evacuated - but too
late. It happened. We must begin to imagine future disasters, perhaps multiple
catastrophes, for they, too, may well occur. It is no accident that this is
precisely the conclusion that the 9-11 Commission reached in analyzing the
attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. "The most important failure
was one of imagination," it said.
However much we want to believe it, New York and New Orleans are not unique
events. The Next Big One is almost certain to come, and soon, perhaps in the
form of an earthquake in California, an avian flu pandemic starting in Chicago,
or a dirty bomb in Washington or Manhattan. Homeland security experts have
identified a wide range of grave risks.
We know this because an enormous amount of information flowing through our
political and civil organizations already reveals these risks - just as data
existed to foretell the New Orleans and New York disasters. In these two events
and in others (the Challenger and Columbia shuttle accidents and the breakdown
of the electric grid in the summer blackout of 2003), the issue wasn't
information. Problems emerged because of deeply flawed organizations beset by
poor management, siloed cultures, and inadequate communication. People could not
deal with what they believed to be remote, low-probability, high-risk
catastrophes even when confronted with irrefutable data.
In the business world, disruptive innovations and events occur frequently. CEOs
and companies get blindsided for the same reasons. The Internet, China,
startups, and surging oil prices are just some of the surprises in recent years.
But the consequences of these kinds of shocks are limited to a hit to the bottom
line, unemployment, and falling share prices. The stakes during a terrorist
attack or natural disaster are vastly higher.
There's no way to be sure, but a confluence of trends appears to be raising the
frequency, magnitude, and costs of many killer risks. Global integration is
bringing everything and everybody closer faster, from technology to terrorists,
visitors to viruses. Potential proliferation of small biological, nuclear, and
chemical weapons is making security more difficult. Whatever the cause, the
earth is warming, making much of the weather more ferocious. The U.S. appears
vulnerable today to a growing number of potential disasters. Avian flu alone
threatens to kill millions. It's a scenario people find difficult to absorb, let
alone act on. Yet even though any one disaster is unlikely, the growing number
of possible catastrophes raises the likelihood that at least one of them will
strike.
The good news is that preparing for one disaster prepares for all of them.
Planning relies on the same infrastructure and organizations. People are
reluctant to pay to prepare for an unlikely event that may happen once in a
lifetime. Paying for the possibility of a series of different unlikely events
seems to make even less sense. A new approach to both terrorist and natural
disasters may work better: Allow cities to deal with all contingencies at once
by using the same infrastructure. Pioneered by the State University of New York
at Buffalo's Multidisciplinary Center for Earthquake Engineering Research, this
approach to multiple hazards is being used in California to "enhance the
resilience of the critical infrastructure that communities will need," says
director Michel Bruneau. "The three most important things are power and water,
acute-care facilities like hospitals, and response-and-recovery capabilities."
Strengthen these three, and you are better prepared to deal with almost all
eventualities.
Here is what should be done to manage the nation's risks and prepare for the
worst.
PAY FOR REDUNDANCY
We live in a private,
hyper-efficient, just-in-time economy with no slack built into it. But dealing
with catastrophe requires just the opposite - extra capacity and backup.
Cell-phone communications failed in both New York and New Orleans in part
because there was little backup built into the systems. Telecom players have no
profit incentive to provide extra capacity to deal with emergencies. So
Washington has to either provide financial incentives for companies to build
spare capacity or pay for it directly.
The same just-in-time problems apply to hospitals, medical supplies, and
vaccines. There are few stockpiled beds and medicines to deal with catastrophes.
Access to cipro to fight anthrax and smallpox vaccines remains limited. A
medical cushion is needed. "Communities have to have a surge response in
hospitals," says Dr. Redlener.
PRIORITIZE SPENDING
The federal government
already spends billions annually on Homeland Security, public works, and public
health to defend against disasters, but it is not focused on areas of greatest
threat. The democratic political culture that so defines America also acts to
dilute resources across 50 states. Congress is pouring money into Wyoming to
defend against terrorist attacks that are far more likely in San Francisco or
Washington. It is sending millions of dollars to Alaska to build bridges to tiny
islands that could have gone to bolstering the levees of New Orleans.
The political game of buying off legislators to build a consensus around bills
makes little sense when preparing for disasters. Less pork and more focus of the
billions already appropriated in Congress to supporting bulwarks against
disaster would make the nation safer.
REORGANIZE THE ORGANIZATIONS
Establishing clear lines of
authority in case of disaster before disaster strikes is equally important. New
York had them. New Orleans didn't. U.S. Appeals Court Judge Richard A. Posner,
author of Catastrophe: Risk and Response, says each locality and state
must work out a compact with federal authorities beforehand. "There's urgency,
uncertainty, people running around like chickens without heads - you have to
have one person in command, with staff and authority," says Posner. Why did it
take four days for the National Guard to enter New Orleans?
Acting on information that falls outside the expected is also important. The FBI
agent who warned about terrorists in flight schools, the engineers who asked for
photos when the space shuttle's wing was hit by foam, the people who wrote
reports of problems with New Orleans' levees - all were signaling disaster, and
all were ignored by decision makers who couldn't, or didn't want to, imagine
what they foretold.
The economic cost of September 11 was $70 billion. The tab for the New Orleans
flooding could top $200 billion. An avian flu pandemic could cost trillions. We
are quickly learning the costs of not managing the risks of disaster. Spending
to prepare for worst-case scenarios may be far cheaper.
But much depends on our political culture. In the past America's political
system has chosen to react to rather than plan for catastrophe. Politicians
reflected the fears and reluctance of their constituents to grapple with
disaster. New Orleans and New York show that it is time for them to begin to
inform those they represent of the real risks that lie ahead and the real costs
of preparing for them. It may be that people are finally ready to hear that
message. What must be done is already clear. Getting there quickly is the
challenge ahead.
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