Latest on Brownie
From Herald Tribune:
An official at the Federal Emergency Management Agency confirmed Monday that the agency had hired Michael Brown, the former agency director who resigned under fire on Sept. 12, as a contractor to aid in his successor's transition. The official said the contracting arrangement had been in place from the time that Brown announced his resignation and would last two more weeks.
It was earlier reported that he was having trouble shopping around his resume
From US News:
Ex-FEMA Administrator Michael Brown seems to be doing for his career what he did for the beleaguered agency. Less than a week after FEMA's dismal Hurricane Katrina response forced Brown out of the agency, he has been shopping his resume to headhunters and Washington PR firms. And it's not working. "He's radioactive," said one exec. An ally of Brownie in the PR world said he should have waited a month before starting his job hunt. "It's just a bad play."
There was a little confusion of whether he was 'rehired.'
From the Raw Story:
CBS says they've confirmed Brown had been rehired. Brown resigned after taking heat when a Time Magazine article revealed that he had padded his resume with bogus jobs.
The Associated Press, however, tells the story differently: "Brown is continuing to work at the Federal Emergency Management Agency at full pay, with his Sept. 12 resignation not taking effect for two more weeks, said Homeland Security Department spokesman Russ Knocke."
Late Monday evening, CBS contacted Knocke, and then published a story on their Website, which is co-credited to the Associated Press, that clarified Brown's current employment status with FEMA:
CBS News correspondent Gloria Borger reports that Knocke told her that technically Brown remains at FEMA as a "contractor" and he is "transitioning out of his job." The reason he will remain at FEMA about a month after his resignation, said the spokesman, is that the agency wants to get the "proper download of his experience."
During that time, Brown will advise the department on "some of his views on his experience with Katrina," as he transitions out of his job, Knocke told the Associated Press.
Meanwhile, he continues to "play the blame game"
From Local 6:
"I very strongly personally regret that I was unable to persuade Gov. Blanco and Mayor Nagin to sit down, get over their differences, and work together. I just couldn't pull that off," Brown said.
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