Ivor van Heerden receives award for Civic Courage

Supporters gather at LSU in New Orleans to protest firing of Dr. Ivor van Heerden - Apr 16, 2009

At a recent award ceremony in Washington DC, Ivor van Heerden spoke before a large engaged crowd about the metro New Orleans flood in August 2005 and its aftermath.

“150,000 families lost everything, and to add insult to injury, they were also moved away from their support base,” van Heerden said.

Indeed, the loss of families’ support base for the New Orleans region is likely why the Army Corps of Engineers was allowed in October of 2005 to convene and manage an investigation of its own failures, an obvious conflict of interest.

Dr. van Heerden spoke at a ceremony honoring him with the Joe E. Callaway award for Civic Courage.

The Callaway Award is presented annually by The Shafeek Nader Trust for the Community Interest recognizing individuals who take a public stance to advance truth and justice, at some personal risk.

Louisiana State University will not renew Dr. Van Heerden’s contract in 2010 and has not provided a specific reason for his dismissal. Many believe it is because of his investigations into the levee failures and his outspoken book, The Storm, after the Hurricane Katrina catastrophe.

“It’s a clear case of retaliation for his criticism of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,” says Dr. Charles N. Delzell, a professor of mathematics at LSU who spoke to the New York Times.

Within days of the announcement last April that Dr. van Heerden’s contract would not be renewed, dozens of supporters gathered in front of the LSU Health Science Center to protest. The event, organized by Levees.org, garnered national media.

But even though over 4,000 people signed a petition to the Chancellor of LSU, no consideration has been made to reinstate Dr. van Heerden’s contract.

Read More » 2 Comments

America Betrayed featuring Levees.org voted to Top 50 Documentaries of 2009

Sandy Rosenthal (left) and Leslie Carde at public screening for documentary America Betrayed on March 13, 2008 in New Orleans (photo by Stanford Rosenthal)

I just received word from the producer of the documentary America Betrayed that the film was voted yesterday as Top 50 Documentaries of 2009 by iTunes. This is a major honor.

The film by Leslie Carde which features H.J. Bosworth Jr and me, Sandy Rosenthal is an important film.

America Betrayed clearly exposes our government’s misappropriation of funds in spending its citizens’ hard-earned tax dollars on rebuilding the Iraqi infrastructure, while the bridges, dams, levees and highways in this country are crumbling. America Betrayed is a cautionary tale for those who trust their government, and hopefully a wake-up call to change the status quo in Washington.

Click here for photographs from Levees.org’s screening of America Betrayed in March 2008.

Click here for more about America Betrayed.

Read More » Leave a comment

Southern California Public Radio uses Katrina shorthand

More people in California are at risk of levee failure than Florida, Texas and Louisiana combined.

We now know this because the catastrophic flooding in metro New Orleans exposed that problem, and the problem of badly built federal levees nationwide.

But many news sources continue to depict the New Orleans flooding is “due to natural disaster” rather than tell the truth.

Southern California Public Radio, normally a fine outfit for its programs has continued the cruelty of Katrina shorthand in an article about a school that recently reopened in New Orleans. The reporter describes the school as flooded “by Katrina” instead of telling the truth.

The truth is the flooding was due to failure of the outfall canals badly designed by the Corps of Engineers and which failed three feet below design specs.

Katrina shorthand is harmful because it leads people to believe the flooding was unavoidable and that citizens were irresponsible for living in their own homes.

And saying Katrina caused the flooding also does a huge disservice to others who may be in danger, too. After all, fifty five percent of the American people lives in counties protected by levees.

Read More » Leave a comment