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June 26, 2008 at 13:44:58

Headlined on 6/26/08:
Floods: New Orleans Keeping an Eye on 17th Street Levee

by Georgianne Nienaber     Page 1 of 2 page(s)

www.opednews.com

 

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Mark Twain once said about editors—“ I am not the editor of a newspaper and shall always try to do right and be good so that God will not make me one.”

The same might be said about Tim Doody, president of the eleven-member Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority-East in New Orleans. He might well be asking himself the question Twain posed in terms of his appointment to the local levee authority.



Doody has held the volunteer post since July 2007. He makes it clear right off the bat that he is not an engineer, but a CPA and director of the Chaffe McCall law firm.

Doody has his hands full right now trying to seat an independent review panel to look at leaks on the 17th street drainage canal that failed catastrophically during the aftermath of hurricane Katrina, flooding much of New Orleans.


Seepage Tuesday June 24

Image: New seepage near 17th Street Canal on Tuesday

In March of this year, The New Orleans Times Picayune summarized comments from an outside engineering expert from California who addressed the 17th Street Canal leaks. “Water persistently seeping out of the 17th Street Canal near the repaired levee and floodwall indicates serious flaws in the design, not only of that levee section but of much of the multibillion-dollar 100-year hurricane protection for the region,” the Times reported. The newspaper referred to comments made by University of California-Berkeley civil engineering professor Robert Bea.

The local levee authority has ownership of both the flood control and river control levees in the parishes in New Orleans. But, the USACE (Army Corps) has responsibility for the new construction on the 17th Street Canal.

“I have been in touch with the American society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) and finally compiled a list of fifteen names of truly independent engineers who have not worked for the Army Corps of Engineers (USACE),” Doody said in a phone conversation. He has to find three engineers from that list who are willing to examine what is a happening along the levee bank where water has been bubbling to the surface along the repaired breach since at least March 2008.

Doody also made it clear that he takes his post very seriously.

"I truly feel a sense of duty in serving on the board - I lost my home, along
with my family (all have relocated) as a result the hurricane, " Doody said.

Corps engineers maintain that the seepage is not cause for alarm.

Randall Cephus, press officer for the New Orleans USACE, came out to the levee with us to take some more photos of the bubbling water, which appeared to have increased in flow since Sunday. Cephus came out on short notice.


Randall Cephus and Sandy Rosenthal

Image: Randall Cephus PAO USACE and Sandy Rosenthal of levees.org

When asked what the USACE planned to do about the situation, Cephus said that the Corps did not want to disturb the ground around the three points of flowing water, since it would essentially “taint the investigative work” of the planned review board.

We noted that direct access to the leaks had been reinforced with a double padlock—installed since our initial visit and report two days prior. Senator Mary Landrieu (D-LA) was in New Orleans on Monday, and after Levees.org mailed her photos of the leaks and ducks swimming in pooled water on road nearby, Landrieu’s office said that the Senator would be in contact with the New Orleans Corps office to make sure they were addressing the issue.

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Georgianne Nienaber is a writer, author, and investigative journalist. She lives in the world. Her articles have appeared in The Huffington Post, SCOOP New Zealand, Glide Magazine, Rwanda's New Times, India's TerraGreen, COA News, ZNET, OpEdNews, The Journal of the International Primate Protection League, Friends of the Congo, Africa Front, The United Nations Publication, A Civil Society Observer, and Zimbabwe's The Daily Mirror. Her fiction exposé of insurance fraud in the horse industry, Horse Sense, was re-released in early 2006. Gorilla Dreams: The Legacy of Dian Fossey was also released in 2006. Nienaber spent much of 2007 doing research in South Africa, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo. She was in DRC as a MONUC-accredited journalist, and recently spent six weeks in Southern Louisiana investigating hurricane reconstruction. She is currently developing a documentary on the Gulf of Mexico DEAD ZONE.

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A native Californian, Jan Baumgartner is a freelance writer currently living in Maine. Her background includes scriptwriting, comedy writing for the Northern California Emmy Awards, and travel writing for The New York Times. She has worked as a grant writer for the non-profit sector in the fields of academia, AIDS, and wildlife conservation and anti-poaching for NGO's in the U.S. and Africa. Her articles and essays have appeared in numerous online and print publications in the U.S. and internat...

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Jan BaumgartnerA native Californian, Jan Baumgartner is a freelance writer currently living in Maine. Her background includes scriptwriting, comedy writing for the Northern California Emmy Awards, and travel writing for The New York Times. She has worked as a grant writer for the non-profit sector in the fields of academia, AIDS, and wildlife conservation and anti-poaching for NGO's in the U.S. and Africa. Her articles and essays have appeared in numerous online and print publications in the U.S. and internat...

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you've got to be kidding

"Corps engineers maintain that the seepage is not cause for alarm."

At this point in time after the catastrophe of Katrina, for anyone to utter those words is beyond astounding.  It's criminal.

It appears that you are the only one covering this story, the continued crisis, and any additional hell that may be in the works due to mismanagement, corruption, shoddy, ill-thought out construction, and denial. 

Keep it up, Georgianne.

 

 

by Jan Baumgartner (49 articles, 136 quicklinks, 10 diaries, 237 comments) on Thursday, June 26, 2008 at 2:10:18 PM
 


Currently I'm a cartoonist and contributing writer for The New Orleans Levee.
Mr MCurrently I'm a cartoonist and contributing writer for The New Orleans Levee.

confirmed: Cheney was the "duck eradicator " ...

and inside sources say Halliburton build that chain link fence ... you just can't blink with these guys ... 

Hey, you keep doing what you're doing and you're going to need some bodyguards ... I'll volunteer ...

Astounding with how well you work your craft, you're the best at what you do - keep up the great work

and I wasn't kidding about that bodyguard position ...

by Mr M (4 articles, 0 quicklinks, 9 diaries, 1246 comments) on Thursday, June 26, 2008 at 7:00:42 PM
 


I've learned, written & performed my own impressionistic southern folk blues for over 20 years with care to look and listen and practice practice. I write literate songs. I sing play harmonica & guitar percussively, no picks. I believe that Goddess takes care of fools & errant troubadours. Funk Organica. I live for fiction, particularly that written by scientists but also in the vein of Dick, Stephenson, Gibson & Sterling, though I cut my teeth on Faulkner & Pynchon. And not so ironically, I don...

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Bruce BilesI've learned, written & performed my own impressionistic southern folk blues for over 20 years with care to look and listen and practice practice. I write literate songs. I sing play harmonica & guitar percussively, no picks. I believe that Goddess takes care of fools & errant troubadours. Funk Organica. I live for fiction, particularly that written by scientists but also in the vein of Dick, Stephenson, Gibson & Sterling, though I cut my teeth on Faulkner & Pynchon. And not so ironically, I don...

to see more of bio, click on member name

Excellent Article!

Yes! The Duck Stops Here!

Now this dog will hunt. 

But rather than body guards, perchance we should get this Lady a pair of bolt-cutters and a 2nd Line.

I wonder if you can still walk around the fence along the wall from the bridge by the pumps? We should have a beach party complete with little plastic shovels and buckets. Hmmmm...

Thank you very much.

Rock On Mon'Chere.

Bruce Biles

Editilla~New Orleans News Ladder

by Bruce Biles (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 5 diaries, 15 comments) on Thursday, June 26, 2008 at 9:54:10 PM
 

 

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