Leaders confirmed for FEMA, Interior

Posts filled in Budget, Homeland Security, too

Published: Saturday, May 27 2006 12:00 a.m. MDT

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, President Bush and Patricia Kempthorne, right, watch as Idaho Gov. Dirk Kempthorne, second from right, is sworn in as secretary of the interior by White House chief of staff Josh Bolten in the Oval Office.

Handout, Getty Images

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WASHINGTON — In addition to confirming Gen. Michael Hayden as the new CIA director Friday, the Senate also confirmed R. David Paulison on Friday as director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, a day after he assured lawmakers that tax-return errors found during the confirmation process would be quickly remedied and Gov. Dirk Kempthorne of Idaho was approved for interior secretary, succeeding Gale A. Norton, who stepped down in March.

Paulison's confirmation, by unanimous consent, came on a day when the Senate, in advance of a weeklong recess, moved to fill a number of other positions as well, including those of interior secretary, federal appeals court judge and director of the White House Office of Management and Budget.

Paulison, 59, a former chief of the Miami-Dade Fire and Rescue Department who heads the U.S. Fire Administration, has been serving as acting FEMA director since succeeding Michael D. Brown in September.

While his nomination was under review, Senate staff members found that in recent years he had taken improper tax deductions concerning travel between Florida and Washington.

In a letter Thursday to the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, Paulison said that the "previous advice I have received on state filing requirements and eligible federal deductions was in error" and that he would promptly pay any related delinquent taxes, penalties and interest. An official of the Department of Homeland Security, FEMA's parent, said the federal taxes amounted to less than $10,000.

The committee's chairwoman, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said Thursday that she considered the matter resolved.

The Senate also filled two other vacancies Friday at the Homeland Security Department: David L. Norquist won confirmation as the department's chief finance officer, and W. Ralph Basham as commissioner of Customs and Border Protection.

Kempthorne was opposed by some Democrats after saying he was open to supporting an expansion in oil and gas drilling in public lands and waters.

"As a part of my promise to Florida," said Sen. Bill Nelson, a Democrat from that state, "I have said I could not support an interior secretary who would advance this administration's willingness to acquiesce to the oil lobby and its ever-increasing desire for greater profits."

Eight Democrats indicated their opposition to Kempthorne's confirmation before it was approved on a voice vote.

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