Without those levees…

  1. I’ve gathered they really don’t know how to make a Cat. 5, especially not before hurricance season ’06. The Corps of Engineers still promises they will get it back to an “improved” Cat. 3 with temporary flood gates and a piping system.
    Another reason: the BNOB comission wanting to amend the Baker Bill to cover 100 percent of equity lost in the damaged property, instead of the current 60 percent. If they get that through in an election year along with more levee money, I’d be absolutely apalled.

  2. d. sorrel – No, I don’t think they can even get the levees to the level of protection they were (such as it was) by June. This will be a very scary hurricane season.
    But aside from June – so far, the commitment is only to what they were already supposed to be (Cat 3)… and upgrades will take years more.
    There are a number of people who visit Polimom regularly who can define the levee potentials better than I can (there’s a great reason I’m not an engineer!lol…) There seems to be conflicting information about whether “they know how” to reach Cat 5.
    Just at the moment, though, with June looming, and water still seeping from the breaches, AND no commitment to upgrading the levee system – I don’t see how people are going to come off of the “wait and see”… and that just can’t continue indefinitely.

  3. There is no way to build “Cat 5” protection quickly. The problems to overcome include: 1. The scale of the project (hundreds of miles of levees, walls and floodgates), 2. The poor foundation soils of Louisiana, 3. The remoteness of the areas of construction, 4. The availability of material to build miles of high levees, 5. The coordination required with environmental interests, and the big one, 6. Funding.
    Can it be done? Absolutely. But it will be a long-term task akin to putting a man on the moon. Congress has a way of funding something for 3 or 4 years and then forgetting about it. We’ll have a new president in 3 years, too. So without a national committment, we’re sunk (pun intended!)
    Peace,
    Tim

  4. Bingo, Polimom. With the levee commitment, everything else starts to fall into place. Some neighborhoods won’t be rebuilt because no one will finance or insure, or simply because the residents won’t come bac. For everyone else, they can certainly begin to make their way once levees are going up on a plan: secure Cat 3 by ’06, say Cat 4 two years later, Cat 5 in five years. I still think there is a need to compensate people who lost more than flood insurance pays for, or who had no flood insurance because they were above elevation. But let’s do levees first. Then Congress figures out that the Louisiana lawyers are going to take out the entire property insurance system in the civilized world, they’ll figure out later about the need for the compensation fund.

  5. Thank you so much for keeping this dicussion going. Just the COMMITMENT would mean the world to people. The love of the city by its residents would do the rest. By the way, didn’t you love the demonstration by the Sacre Heart schoolgirls. You go girls!

  6. Sad to say I just got back from a dart tournament and decided to log in and do some surfing. I love your blog. It had some very good laughs. I am doing a paper on missouri home owner insurance and have been downloading information for the last two hours. I don�t know how I came across your blog but I am sure glad I did. It has set me back a little because I have spent the last 2 hours reading your archives. If you don�t mind I would like to add you to my favorites so I can back again and read some more. Well I need to get back to missouri home owner insurance. I am almost finished with it. Great job.
    p.s some great points on your site

Comments are closed.

Read Next

Sliding Sidebar