On VP Cheney visit to New Orleans

Vice President Dick Cheney came to town to collect campaign cash at a Republican National Committee fundraiser. But he first he attended a meeting with Recovery Czar Donald Powell, US Sen. David Vitter, R-Metairie, and Brig. Gen. Robert Crear, commander of the MS Valley division of the Corps of Engineers. The briefing was to discuss levees and flood control.

I was not invited to this meeting but if I had been I would have soundly corrected the Vice President for making this statement: “Clearly, that’s (focusing on levees) one of the most important parts of the recovery process, which is altogether fitting given that this was the worst natural disaster in American history.”

Wrong. This was the worst manmade engineering disaster in American history.

Cheney goes on to say, “We’ve got a lot of work to do yet, but it looks like the levees are back to pre-Katrina levels, and in some cases, better than that.”

How does Cheney know this? The only way to know whether the levees are back to pre-Katrina levels is to ask the Corps, and this is the very same Corps that brought us the Great Flood of 2005. This is the same Corps that told us that New Orleans was prepared for a Cat 3 storm (Katrina was a Cat 3 storm when it grazed New Orleans). While the Corps is employing a heightened sense of urgency and more transparency, there has been no wholesale renovation or reorganization of the Corps. And there is still absolutely no independent peer review of the Corps’ work.

Levees.Org does not condemn any individuals at the Corps. We know that there are many good people at the Corps working hard to rebuild our levees. Levees.Org is devoted to changing the Corps’ administrative culture and its dysfunctional relationship with Congress so that no more lives and livelihoods are lost due to fault federal flood protection.

To help, go to www.levees.org/join

Sandy Rosenthal
Founder, Levees.Org

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Blaming Katrina survivors, Still

In a recent editorial by a Baton Rouge newspaper, The Advocate blamed New Orleanians and “their dysfunctional civic culture” as the reason for the slow pace of recovery in New Orleans. Simply put, The Advocate is blaming the victims.

If a skyscraper fell to the ground full of people, you would not blame the victims who were in the building. You would point your finger at the architect, the engineer and contractor, and all three of those are the US Army Corps of Engineers when it comes to the failure of the federally built levees.

Why does not The Advocate shout with rage that our nation’s Congress has not yet recognized that but for the actions of the Corps and its dysfunctional relationship with Congress, New Orleans would have suffered little more than wet carpets and missing shingles?

And why does The Advocate not demand that steps be taken by our Congress to make sure that no more lives and livelihoods be taken away due to faulty federal levees?

Sandy Rosenthal
Founder, Levees.Org

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Florida Chapter Launched!

Dr. Joyce Levine will serve as the director for the chapter in Florida which will be headquartered Fort Lauderdale.

“My initial contact with Levees.Org involved Louisiana’s urgent needs in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina,” says Levine, who teaches urban and regional planning at Florida Atlantic University. “However, my research focuses on disaster management and hazard mitigation, so it did not take me long to realize that we need a group like Levees.Org here in Florida, too. For example, the Corps is currently engaged in re-engineering the Everglades more to develop additional water supplies than to restore the water regime and ecosystem.

“In addition, we have our own critical levee concern. Just months ago, an independent engineering study led by the University of California at Berkeley concluded that the Hoover Dike surrounding Lake Okeechobee has a one-in-six chance of failure in the next big (Category 3+) hurricane. The Corps’s response was sadly predictable: ‘Yes, the dike needs some repairs, but the study is needlessly alarmist, ‘ said the Corps. Given that a failure would sweep away several communities, pour enough phosphorus into the Everglades ecosystem to kill it for all eternity, and contaminate the aquifer from which most of South Florida draws its drinking water, a little alarmism might not be such a bad thing. And Levees.Org can play a big role in sounding that alarm.”

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