
Hurricane Katrina Information

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Money Flowed to Questionable Projects
State Leads in Army Corps Spending, but Millions Had Nothing to
Do With Floods
By Michael Grunwald
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, September 8, 2005; A01
Before Hurricane Katrina breached a levee on the New Orleans
Industrial Canal, the Army Corps of Engineers had already
launched a $748 million construction project at that very
location. But the project had nothing to do with flood control.
The Corps was building a huge new lock for the canal, an effort
to accommodate steadily increasing barge traffic.
Except that barge traffic on the canal has been steadily
decreasing.
In Katrina's wake, Louisiana politicians and other critics have
complained about paltry funding for the Army Corps in general
and Louisiana projects in particular. But over the five years of
President Bush's administration, Louisiana has received far more
money for Corps civil works projects than any other state, about
$1.9 billion; California was a distant second with less than
$1.4 billion, even though its population is more than seven
times as large.
Much of that Louisiana money was spent to try to keep low-lying
New Orleans dry. But hundreds of millions of dollars have gone
to unrelated water projects demanded by the state's
congressional delegation and approved by the Corps, often after
economic analyses that turned out to be inaccurate. Despite a
series of independent investigations criticizing Army Corps
construction projects as wasteful pork-barrel spending,
Louisiana's representatives have kept bringing home the bacon.
For example, after a $194 million deepening project for the Port
of Iberia flunked a Corps cost-benefit analysis, Sen. Mary
Landrieu (D-La.) tucked language into an emergency Iraq spending
bill ordering the agency to redo its calculations. The Corps
also spends tens of millions of dollars a year dredging
little-used waterways such as the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet,
the Atchafalaya River and the Red River -- now known as the J.
Bennett Johnston Waterway, in honor of the project's
congressional godfather -- for barge traffic that is less than
forecast.
The Industrial Canal lock is one of the agency's most
controversial projects, sued by residents of a New Orleans
low-income black neighborhood and cited by an alliance of
environmentalists and taxpayer advocates as the fifth-worst
current Corps boondoggle. In 1998, the Corps justified its plan
to build a new lock -- rather than fix the old lock for a tiny
fraction of the cost -- by predicting huge increases in use by
barges traveling between the Port of New Orleans and the
Mississippi River.
In fact, barge traffic on the canal had been plummeting since
1994, but the Corps left that data out of its study. And barges
have continued to avoid the canal since the study was finished,
even though they are visiting the port in increased numbers.
Pam Dashiell, president of the Holy Cross Neighborhood
Association, remembers holding a protest against the lock four
years ago -- right where the levee broke Aug. 30. Now she's
holed up with her family in a St. Louis hotel, and her
neighborhood is underwater. "Our politicians never cared half as
much about protecting us as they cared about pork," Dashiell
said.
Yesterday, congressional defenders of the Corps said they hoped
the fallout from Hurricane Katrina would pave the way for
billions of dollars of additional spending on water projects.
Steve Ellis, a Corps critic with Taxpayers for Common Sense,
called their push "the legislative equivalent of looting."
Louisiana's politicians have requested much more money for New
Orleans hurricane protection than the Bush administration has
proposed or Congress has provided. In the last budget bill,
Louisiana's delegation requested $27.1 million for shoring up
levees around Lake Pontchartrain, the full amount the Corps had
declared as its "project capability." Bush suggested $3.9
million, and Congress agreed to spend $5.7 million.
Administration officials also dramatically scaled back a
long-term project to restore Louisiana's disappearing coastal
marshes, which once provided a measure of natural hurricane
protection for New Orleans. They ordered the Corps to stop work
on a $14 billion plan, and devise a $2 billion plan instead.
But overall, the Bush administration's funding requests for the
key New Orleans flood-control projects for the past five years
were slightly higher than the Clinton administration's for its
past five years. Lt. Gen. Carl Strock, the chief of the Corps,
has said that in any event, more money would not have prevented
the drowning of the city, since its levees were designed to
protect against a Category 3 storm, and the levees that failed
were already completed projects. Strock has also said that the
marsh-restoration project would not have done much to diminish
Katrina's storm surge, which passed east of the coastal
wetlands.
"The project manager for the Great Pyramids probably put in a
request for 100 million shekels and only got 50 million," said
John Paul Woodley Jr., the Bush administration official
overseeing the Corps. "Flood protection is always a work in
progress; on any given day, if you ask whether any community has
all the protection it needs, the answer is almost always: Maybe,
but maybe not."
The Corps had been studying the possibility of upgrading the New
Orleans levees for a higher level of protection before Katrina
hit, but Woodley said that study would not have been finished
for years. Still, liberal bloggers, Democratic politicians and
some GOP defenders of the Corps have linked the catastrophe to
the underfunding of the agency.
"We've been hollering about funding for years, but everyone
would say: There goes Louisiana again, asking for more money,"
said former Democratic senator John Breaux. "We've had some
powerful people in powerful places, but we never got what we
needed."
That may be true. But those powerful people -- including former
senators Breaux, Johnston and Russell Long, as well as former
House committee chairmen Robert Livingston and W.J. "Billy"
Tauzin -- did get quite a bit of what they wanted. And the
current delegation -- led by Landrieu and GOP Sen. David Vitter
-- has continued that tradition.
The Senate's latest budget bill for the Corps included 107
Louisiana projects worth $596 million, including $15 million for
the Industrial Canal lock, for which the Bush administration had
proposed no funding. Landrieu said the bill would "accelerate
our flood control, navigation and coastal protection programs."
Vitter said he was "grateful that my colleagues on the
Appropriations Committee were persuaded of the importance of
these projects."
Louisiana not only leads the nation in overall Corps funding, it
places second in new construction -- just behind Florida, home
of an $8 billion project to restore the Everglades. Several
controversial projects were improvements for the Port of New
Orleans, an economic linchpin at the mouth of the Mississippi.
There were also several efforts to deepen channel for oil and
gas tankers, a priority for petroleum companies that drill in
the Gulf of Mexico.
"We thought all the projects were important -- not just levees,"
Breaux said. "Hindsight is a wonderful thing, but navigation
projects were critical to our economic survival."
Overall, Army Corps funding has remained relatively constant for
decades, despite the "Program Growth Initiative" launched by
agency generals in 1999 without telling their civilian bosses in
the Clinton administration. The Bush administration has proposed
cuts in the Corps budget, and has tried to shift the agency's
emphasis from new construction to overdue maintenance. But most
of those proposals have died quietly on Capitol Hill, and the
administration has not fought too hard to revive them.
In fact, more than any other federal agency, the Corps is
controlled by Congress; its $4.7 billion civil works budget
consists almost entirely of "earmarks" inserted by individual
legislators. The Corps must determine that the economic benefits
of its projects exceed the costs, but marginal projects such as
the Port of Iberia deepening -- which squeaked by with a 1.03
benefit-cost ratio -- are as eligible for funding as the New
Orleans levees.
"It has been explicit national policy not to set priorities, but
instead to build any flood control or barge project if the Corps
decides the benefits exceed the costs by 1 cent," said Tim
Searchinger, a senior attorney at Environmental Defense. "Saving
New Orleans gets no more emphasis than draining wetlands to grow
corn and soybeans."
© 2005 The Washington Post Company
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/07/AR2005090702462_pf.html
And a new development on the web: Wikopedia is being used to
constantly update Katrina news:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_Katrina
Should FEMA director Michael Brown be fired?
Yes, immediately. 30% (509 votes)
Yes, tomorrow. 0% (6 votes)
Yes, yesterday. 3% (57 votes)
Yes, and he should never have been appointed.
66% (1100 votes)
Total votes: 1672
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