The National Oceanic and Atmospheric (NOAA) and Army Corps of Engineers shows an abundance of hurricane
activity along the Southern Shore of Louisiana. In fact, the Army
Corps of Engineers created a map of potential stillwater elevations for a
storm surge from a hurricane with a 1% chance
of occurring that has a
possibility to hit the New Orleans area in 2070. The 100-year storm
would be a devastation to all areas surrounding Lake Pontchartrain if
proposed new levees are not built.
Congress has before them $100 billion dollars in various flood
protection projects that the corps plan to build nationally. Many of the
projects would greatly help and reduce tragic loss during hurricane
season in the Greater New Orleans area. Fortunately, in 2014, Congress
approved the 2014 Water Resource Bill which was the first step in the
process of authorizing a levee to be built. Due to an emergency
supplemental appropriation that is linked to the recent devastation from
hurricanes and floods, the West Shore levee has been approved and fully
funded. The West shore project makes up only 1 % of the $100 billion in
projects before Congress.
According to U.S. Rep. Garret Graves, R-Baton Rouge, the fast pace of
the Congressional approval and funding for projects such as the West
Shore levee is unheard of. Graves believes funding projects such as this
should be the norm. It is reported that the nation spends billions on
restoring homes,
businesses and infrastructure loss due to hurricane
flooding. If the nation spent just millions on flood projects beforehand
many of the devastation could have been avoided. “This project pays for
itself,” Graves said. “Think about the cumulative money spent picking
up the pieces from Hurricane Isaac,” he said. “We cannot continue to
spend billions in the aftermath of disasters. We have to spend millions
in advance.”
The
West Shore Lake Pontchartrain hurricane levee project is set to be
completed by 2023 hurricane season. The $760 million-dollar project
includes 17 miles of levee and a mile of concrete T-wall. It will mostly
be located in St. John the Baptist parish which will include berms
around Gramercy and Lutcher, a separate berm around Grand Point North
and smaller berms around other smaller non-residential buildings. The
17-mile levee will separate populated areas west of I-10 from storm
surges moving inland from Lakes Pontchartrain and Maurepas and adjacent
wetlands.
The New Orleans Army Corps of Engineers’ office announced the project
will begin construction by early 2021. According to Col. Michael Clancy
the project will be divided into 11 smaller projects and will be under
the local sponsor, Louisiana’s Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority.
According to the federal law, the state’s Coastal Protection and
Restoration Authority will pay 35% of construction cost, however the
Army Corps of Engineers will pay construction cost upfront and will
allow the local sponsor to repay them over a 30-year period upon
completion of the project.
Once the project is complete the Pontchartrain district will control
and operate the levees. St. John Parish President Natalie Robottom looks
forward to what the future holds for this project. She feels it is the
parish responsibility to allow its residents and business owners to
participate in the $760 million-dollar project so the dollars spent will
stay within the parish.
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