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Sep 11th, 2005 01:51 PM
mburbank That is curious. Maybe they're building temporary shelters, they do build thing. Like the Big Dig, here in my town, which is late, vastly over budget and leaky as all hell. With their water related problems, I sincerely hop the don't let them anywhere near the levees.
Sep 11th, 2005 12:27 PM
Abcdxxxx I'm confused about Bechtels participation. All it says is that they're giving housing to displaced people, but they're not a Real Estate management company.
Sep 11th, 2005 09:20 AM
mburbank
Pigs Line Up At Disaster Trough

Firms with White House ties get Katrina contracts

FEMA taps Halliburton subsidiary, Shaw Group, Bechtel for cleanup

Saturday, September 10, 2005; Posted: 1:26 p.m. EDT (17:26 GMT)




WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- Companies with ties to the Bush White House and the former head of FEMA are clinching some of the administration's first disaster relief and reconstruction contracts in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

At least two major corporate clients of lobbyist Joe Allbaugh, President Bush's former campaign manager and a former head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, have already been tapped to start recovery work along the battered Gulf Coast.

One is Shaw Group Inc. and the other is Halliburton Co. subsidiary Kellogg Brown and Root. Vice President Dick Cheney is a former head of Halliburton.

Bechtel National Inc., a unit of San Francisco-based Bechtel Corp., has also been selected by FEMA to provide short-term housing for people displaced by the hurricane. Bush named Bechtel's CEO to his Export Council and put the former CEO of Bechtel Energy in charge of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation.

Experts say it has been common practice in both Republican and Democratic administrations for policy makers to take lobbying jobs once they leave office, and many of the same companies seeking contracts in the wake of Hurricane Katrina have already received billions of dollars for work in Iraq.

Halliburton alone has earned more than $9 billion. Pentagon audits released by Democrats in June showed $1.03 billion in "questioned" costs and $422 million in "unsupported" costs for Halliburton's work in Iraq.

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