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US President George W. Bush asked lawmakers Wednesday for another 51.8 billion dollars in emergency funding to defray costs related to the relief and recovery efforts tied to Hurricane Katrina. "We are sparing no effort to help those who have been affected by Katrina and are in need of help," spokesman Scott McClellan said as he announced the new request, which was expected to be approved as early as Wednesday. The new package will primarily pay for search-and-rescue efforts and drinking water, and will cover public health issues caused by the killer storm, said the spokesman. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) would get 50 billion dollars, the US Defense Department 1.4 billion, and the reamining 400 million would go to the US Army Corps of Engineers. Bush last week signed an initial emergency package totalling some 10.5 billion dollars but warned at the time that it would be merely a "small downpayment" on costs linked to the disaster. "It is being spent more quickly than we even anticipated last week at this point. And that's why we're moving forward on this additional request now, to make sure that there's no disruption," said McClellan. White House budget chief Josh Bolten told reporters on a conference call that the new request would not be the last as Washington confronts arguably the worst natural disaster in US history. "But we believe that this request will provide the ample funds to carry out the current activities and ensure that at least for the next few weeks, all of the relevant agencies have sufficient funds," he said. Senate Republican Majority Leader Bill Frist vowed fast action on the request. "We will not leave this week until we complete action on that bill," he said, adding that the emergency funds comprise just a small portion of what is expected to be billions more dollars in future aid. "There may be additional small and immediate Katrina-related legislation that we'll need to pass very quickly, very responsibly as the need arises," Frist said.
related report "I strongly recommend that we suggest to the administration that they quickly decide on some kind of an executive headquarters and chief recovery person so that all of this effort can be coordinated," Senator Pete Domenici said at a press briefing. He said without such central coordination, officials in Washington were in danger of duplicating their efforts and working at cross purposes. "We're going to be running in each other's way pretty soon, as are the cabinet members," he said. "Something has to be done to coordinate it, and I think an 'Office of Reconstruction and Rehabilitation' headed by some very distinguished person with ... could be telling everybody what the problems are, instead of us having these innumerable hearings which might run into each other, and might not even end up solving the right problems." On the floor of the US Senate later Wednesday, Democratic Senator Edward Kennedy also called for the creation of a new agency to handle issues related to Katrina. "I propose that we create a New Orleans and Gulf Coast Redevelopment Authority," the Massachusetts lawmaker said. "We should invest at least 150 billion dollars in its actions to work with governors and mayors and citizens and communities to plan, help fund, and coordinate for the reconstruction of that damaged region." He added that the new agency also "should help hire workers to put people back to work rebuilding their own communities and help them get back on their feet again." Meanwhile the top Democrat in the Senate called on the Bush administration to launch a massive "Marshall Plan" of relief initiatives to help the hurricane-flattened Gulf region get back on its feet. "We need a massive Marshall Plan to rebuild New Orleans," said Senator Harry Reid on the Senate floor, adding that such a broad package of relief measures -- as that which helped Europe rebuild after World War II -- could help "rebuild all of urban America." All rights reserved. � 2005 Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.` Related Links TerraDaily Search TerraDaily Subscribe To TerraDaily Express ![]() ![]() The number of US military forces in storm-ravaged Gulf Coast states swelled to more than 50,000 Monday as ground troops and naval vessels continued to stream into Louisiana and Mississippi, military officials said.
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