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Leaders of the Army
Corps of Engineers say the city's flood walls were in excellent
shape before the storm but weren't designed to handle a hurricane
of Katrina's magnitude.
In a phone briefing Sept. 1, the
Army's Chief of Engineers, Lt. Gen. Carl A. Strock, addressed
some of the issues that have surfaced about Corps-built structures
around New Orleans. Strock said that the project that resulted
in the levees along Lake Pontchartrain was designed to protect
against a 200-to-300-year storm, which equates to about a
Category 3 hurricane, but Katrina was more severe.
Al Naomi, senior project manager
in the Corps' New Orleans District, says, "The [project's]
design was not adequate for a storm of this nature."
He adds that to cover a Category 5 storm, work on storm protection
improvements would have had to start 20 or 25 years ago.
The levee breaches occurred in
areas that were "in excellent condition" before
the storm and were inspected, said Naomi. He said there was
nothing the Corps could have done involving the completed
floodwalls that could have prevented the breaches.
Another question concerned the
allocation of national resources during a war. The war in
Iraq has not had an impact on the Corps budget, said Strock.
According to his analysis, Corps funding "has been fairly
stable" since the early 1990s and the Corps has spent
more than $300 million since 2002 on storm protection in the
New Orleans area. "We were just caught by a storm of
an intensity which exceeded the design of the [flood protection]
project we have in place," he said.
Some Corps contracts in the area
had been delayed, but Naomi says those contracts were not
in the sections of the levees that failed.
Since the 1930s, Louisiana has
lost more than 1.2 million acres of wetlands, which act as
a natural buffer against storms. But Strock contends that
wetlands losses "did not have a significant impact"
in the case of Katrina. He says that most of the losses of
wetlands and barrier islands were south and west of the city,
and not in Katrina's path.
Asked about the cost of the initial
repairs and the longer-term work, Strock said, "We're
doing everything humanly possible to stop the flow of water
and it's going to cost what it's going to cost."
Walter Baumy, chief of engineering
in the New Orleans District, says that a contract is under
way at the breached 17th Street Canal, where the Corps plans
to drive sheet piles to close the canal where it meets Lake
Pontchartrain. He says the first sheet pile has been driven
and he hopes that the canal will be closed sometime Sept.
1.
At the London Ave. Canal, which
parallels the 17th Street Canal, Baumy says the Corps is working
with contractors to get material to the site to fill in the
gap. "Once we seal those two places," he says, "we
should stop water going into the city."
After that, the next task will
be to pump out the remaining water that has covered large
parts of New Orleans. Baumy says the Corps is working with
the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board to identify pumping
stations to get into service quickly, then to get those stations
dry and ready to pump. "We need to give them a dry place
to work, " Baumy said, but didn't estimate how long the
de-watering would take.
Strock says that as Lake Pontchartrain's
level recedes, the water flows should stabilize--and should
be nearly at that point now--and then become reversed.
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