U.S. Senator Mary Landrieu Finds Good Use for Levees.org’s Levee Map

Senator Mary Landrieu speaking before members of Congress on Dec 20, 2013

Senator Mary Landrieu speaking before members of Congress on Dec 20, 2013

Last Friday, U.S. Senator Mary Landrieu alerted her constituents that she had secured a vote on a bipartisan bill that will delay the most aggressive flood insurance rates until FEMA does more study.

(Flood insurance for many nationwide could have become spectacularly unaffordable.)

In her appeal to Congress, Senator Landrieu utilized a map that Levees.org created in 2009 with data obtained from FEMA in a records request filed under the Freedom of Information Act.

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A Sound Reason for Jindal to Oppose the Big Oil Law Suit Doesn’t Exist

Bobby Jindal at Levees.org press conference 8-22-06. Photo/Stanford Rosenthal

It’s embarrassing enough that the governor of Louisiana would side with corporate interests in trying to abort the lawsuit filed last summer by public officials against 97 oil, gas and pipeline companies for damaging the coast.

But equally telling is how rapidly he went ballistic on behalf of Big Oil.

The Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority-East filed the suit in July demanding that companies fulfill their legal obligation to fix the damage they did to coastal wetlands.

Within 24 hours, the Governor’s office came out swinging in oddly over-excited opposition.

If Jindal had a sound reason to oppose the civil lawsuit against Big Oil, he would have conferred calmly with his consultants, and he would have crafted a concise and meaningful explanation for his opposition. He also would have provided compelling data to support it. But he has not done that.

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Founder of Levees.org Meets with Visitors from Pakistan

Visitors from Pakistan under U.S. Dept of State program at site of London Avenue Canal breach

Today, Sandy Rosenthal, founder of Levees.org met with a group of seven visitors from Pakistan, who were in New Orleans learning about emergency preparedness. They requested a meeting to discuss advocacy, rebuilding and lobbying issues and to tour the sites where the levees collapsed during Katrina. Ms. Rosenthal met the group at the site of the east side London Avenue Canal breach.

After Rosenthal explained that, in New Orleans, the event considered a ‘natural disaster’ was in fact a failure of the Army Corps of Engineers to properly build flood protection, a member of the group offered a compelling observation.

“Nature is always very kind,” said Muhammad Hasseb Khan, Assistant Director of FATA Disaster Management Authority, Government of Pakistan. “Allah/God can never think of damage to humanity.”

To this, Ms. Rosenthal replied by quoting a well known sociologist, Gaye Tuchman who warned,

“Always be aware to look behind language that would seem to attribute social change or calamity to nature. It minimizes the individuals and institutions whose actions can often be found hiding behind all the talk of water and wind.”

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