Gov watchdog looks at Corps Faulty Pumps

The Government Accountability Office has responded to pressure from Louisiana’s senior senator to review the US Army Corps of Engineers’ installation of $26 million worth of pumps installed last year in New Orleans even though senior officials knew they were defective.

After the Corps of Engineers’ supposedly Cat 3-proof levees failed in a Cat 2 that missed New Orleans, the Corps promised to install new pumps by the start of the next hurricane season.

The pumps, manufactured by a politically connected contractor who faces lawsuit on another issue, had mechanical problems that were spotted by their own engineers before the pumps were even installed.  The Corps installed them anyway.

The Corps’ rationale? According to Col. Jeffrey Bedey, “You have four months to build something that nobody has ever built before, and if you don’t, the city floods and the Corps, which already has a black eye, could basically be dissolved.”

It sure sounds like the Colonel is more concerned about the Corps’ reputation than the flooding of what is left of the City.

But there are more odd remarks being made by the Corps of Engineers even higher up the Col Bedey. Lt. Gen Carl Strock was quoted by the Washington Post as saying he was not aware of a Corps mechanical engineer’s misgivings about the pumps as outlined in a 2006 memo but added, “His concerns, I think, were valid.” The engineer, Maria Garzino, is, in fact, a woman. 

Lt Gen Strock is seems out of touch with the situation.

New Orleans was destroyed by bad engineering NOT bad weather. If you want to help New Orleans (and yourself, too) go to www.levees.org and sign the petition demanding a 9-11 style investigation into the failure of the federally built levees. We need to make certain this never happens again – anywhere.

Sandy Rosenthal
Founder, Levees.Org
www.levees.org

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PoP: The “Soul” of New Orleans has no boundary line

This, from a posting I placed on a professional meeting planning site, in response to a post regarding New Orleans.  You can take the girl out of New Orleans, but you’ll never take New Orleans out of the girl (or guy!)…

I’m from New Orleans and I’ve lived in No California/Silicon Valley for 20 years. I went home last August, a year after Katrina, and was almost dumbstruck by the level of destruction still visible throughout the City and for miles and miles, as far as the Gulf Coast. The Quarter, and the downtown highlights for all intents and purposes, are fine. The Quarter was protected and saved.

New Orleans is really between a rock and a hard place right now, desperately needing the life-blood of tourism that has always carried the “City that Care Forgot”. Almost two years later, residents are still struggling to get through the legal red tape of insurance dollars and FEMA issues to rebuild – how can you go home when you don’t yet have a home, for sure, to go home to? Rest assured, New Orleanians have a spirit and loyalty to the City that can’t be drowned out.

As a friend in the hospitality and meetings industry, please check out this web site, and take a minute to “click and join” – www.levees.org. We now have a California Chapter, a Florida Chapter, and the founding New Orleans Chapter.

Joining www.levees.org costs you nothing, and your show of support means so much to those who have lost everything due to failing levee systems.

Remember, Jazz Fest is coming up at end of April and first weekend of May. Whenever you plan to visit New Orleans, you’ll find a party, a parade, great food! and a graciousness that you’ll long remember.

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NEWS: Color of Change and bringing Katrina survivors home

A friend in New Orleans sent this to me in an email recently, via a student in the School of Social Work at CSU, Chico CA. I think it’s important to note, and so I’m sending it to you as NEWS.  Check it out, please:

Help the Gulf Coast Recover from Katrina

Professor Myers-Lipton from San Jose State has a plan to bring Katrina survivors home. The Gulf Coast Civic Works Project (http://solvingpoverty.blogspot.com/2006/11/gc.html) would hire 100,000 displaced residents who want to return, providing them with training and jobs to rebuild their homes and communities. Similar to post-Depression public works projects that helped Americans get back on their feet, it’s a solution that would rebuild the Gulf by investing in its residents.

But Congress won’t act without massive public support. Please go to Color of Change at the following address http://www.colorofchange.org/gccw/?id=2008-76965 and tell your representatives that you support the Gulf Coast Cific Works Project so these people can finally return home and begin to get their lives back together.

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