ROLLING FORK, Miss.  — Anderson Jones first remembers his home flooding in 1973, when water from the nearby Mississippi River blanketed his family’s 10-acre farm and surrounded the shotgun house his father built, leaving it an island. The family tried to keep the water out, but when puddles started forming on the floor, a teenage Jones and his siblings were forced to evacuate.

“We was the only ones out here. Everybody had left,” recalled Jones, now 65 and still living in the same house in Issaquena County, Mississippi. “When the water started seeping in, and we couldn’t bring no equipment to try to patch it up, we had to go.”

Jones’ home sits on the western edge of the Yazoo Backwater Area, a 1,446-square-mile basin in Mississippi’s Delta region once dominated by river swamps and floodplain forests. Crop fields have steadily replaced these wetlands over the years, but those that remain support hundreds of plant and animal species and serve as a rest stop for millions of migrating birds each year.

Jones’ family settled here in part because they could live off the rich land. His father was a forester, and he and his nine siblings grew up squirrel hunting and helping with the family farm. “I’m not gonna move,” said Jones. “I’m not gonna give up what my dad had worked hard for, no sir.”

While backwater wetlands depend on periodic flooding for survival, severe inundations in recent decades have decimated crops and pushed residents like Jones out of their homes, sometimes for months at a time. These floods have increased local support for a contentious government project that would install a sprawling pumping station in the backwater area.

Developed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the so-called Yazoo Pumps project purports to reduce flooding while protecting farmers and minimizing environmental harm. But conservation groups insist the project would disrupt the area’s delicate hydrology, damaging at least 90,000 acres of forested wetlands at a time when federal wetland protections are fraying.

Concerns over wetland degradation have stymied past versions of the Yazoo Pumps project. In 2008, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency used a rarely invoked authority to block construction of a smaller pumping station in the area.

Nearly two decades later, the agency has signed off on the Corps’ new pumps scheme, which cleared the way for the Corps to finally authorize the project on Jan. 16.

The EPA’s about-face has dismayed environmentalists, who argue the Corps’ latest pumps plan is just as harmful to backwater wetlands and wildlife as its predecessors.

“I don’t see how the damage is less than before,” said Eugene Turner, a professor at Louisiana State University’s Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences specializing in wetland management and loss. “You’re not getting conservation of wetlands—you’re having a drainage of wetlands.”

New scheme, old fears

Severe flooding in Mississippi’s Yazoo Backwater Area has increased local support for a long-in-the-works government project that would install a massive pumping station in the area. Environmentalists insist that the pumps would damage up to 90,000 acres of backwater wetlands. Credit: Imani Khayyam for the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk

The Yazoo Backwater Area is part of the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley, an ancient floodplain flanking the Mississippi River that stretches from southern Illinois to the Gulf of Mexico (which President Trump has ordered be renamed the Gulf of America). 

Once home to 24 million acres of wetlands fed by the river and its tributaries, the valley has lost most of these river swamps to agriculture, and the Corps has used levees and other diversions to shield farmers and crops from recurrent flooding.

The agency’s newly authorized Yazoo Pumps project seeks to address continued flooding in the backwater area caused, at least in part, by its own engineering. 

When the Mississippi River runs high, the Corps shuts a floodgate at the bottom of the basin to keep river overflow from backing up into the low-lying area. This traps rainwater from the entire Delta region on the other side of the gate and stops it from draining out of the basin, submerging farmland and properties in the area.

To remove excess water from the area during times of high flow, the Corps plans to install a giant pumping station next to the floodgate, capable of moving 25,000 cubic feet of water per second. Though the station would run year-round, the Corps claims its operating schedule will allow enough periodic flooding to sustain local wetlands while protecting homes and crops from the worst floods.

In all, the Corps estimates that about 780 homes in the backwater basin could see less flooding after the pumps are installed, including 309 homes in low-income communities burdened by environmental hazards. 

Agency officials said the new plan will protect vulnerable residents while preserving the basin’s remaining natural resources.

“One of the misconceptions of this [project] is that the pumps are going to drain the entire Yazoo backwater [area] out … and that’s not the case,” said Brandon Davis, the environmental planning chief at the Corps’ Vicksburg District.

Environmental groups counter that the Corps’ new pump plan would inflict lasting damage on a stretch of backwater wetlands roughly double the size of Washington, D.C.

Draining water from the area as proposed by the Corps would reduce how much and how often these wetlands are flooded—a change independent scientists confirmed would cause a chain reaction across local ecosystems.

“Reducing water levels will reduce the productivity of the wetlands,” said Alex Kolker, an associate professor at the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium. “It’ll reduce the amount of food they can produce, which will reduce the amount of wildlife and birds that a system like that can support.”

Kolker also worries the pumps could impair other wetland functions, like their ability to store carbon from the atmosphere and filter out contaminants from water. He said despite the Corps’ efforts to reduce environmental harm, the plan would still result in the “degradation” of habitats and ecological processes.

“You’re still going to have drying out in some of these wetlands, and particularly in some of the  swamps,” he said. “It does look like many of the concerns from the environmentalists are still there.”

Corps officials acknowledged that the pumping system could alter flood patterns across roughly 90,000 wetland acres in the backwater area. However, they stressed that these hydrologic changes could be slight in many cases and would not necessarily translate to adverse impacts.

Irreversible impacts

The Yazoo Backwater Area in western Mississippi is home to ecologically diverse forested wetlands that depend on periodic flooding for survival. Conservation groups warn that a newly authorized flood-control project from the Army Corps of Engineers would harm 90,000 acres of these swamp forests. Credit: Imani Khayyam for the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk

Since the Corps cannot avoid harming federally protected wetlands with its approved Yazoo Pumps plan, the agency is legally required to offset the damage through compensatory mitigation—creating or restoring similar habitats to those destroyed. 

The Corps plans to fulfill this obligation through a local “in-lieu fee program” operated by Ducks Unlimited, a national conservation nonprofit. 

Under the proposed arrangement, Ducks Unlimited would generate “mitigation credits” by restoring and building new wetlands in the Mississippi Delta. The Corps would then purchase those credits to offset damage from the pumps’ construction and operations, according to agency documents.

The Corps used a complex technical formula to determine the amount of mitigation required for the project. Based on those calculations, Ducks Unlimited confirmed that it will need to restore close to 6,000 acres of wetlands in the Yazoo basin—an area seven times the size of Central Park.

“This is probably one of the biggest wetland mitigation projects in the entire country,” said Patrick Raney, Ducks Unlimited’s director of conservation services.

The project’s scale is reflected in its price tag and expected timeframe: Based on previous restoration work, Ducks Unlimited expects mitigation for the Yazoo Pumps to cost around $90 million and take up to 12 years to complete.

Despite the project’s lofty targets, Raney said his organization is equipped to execute the plan, which hinges on converting flood-prone farmland into new marshes.

“We feel pretty good that the amount of habitat that’s going to be picked up is a net gain,” he said.

Other environmental groups described the Corps’ mitigation strategy as unrealistic and insufficient, claiming it doesn’t come close to compensating for damage to 90,000 acres of wetlands.

Erik Johnson, a conservation biologist and the director of conservation science at Audubon Delta, was skeptical that any mitigation plan could replace the distinct habitats and ecological benefits of the backwater area’s swamp forests.

“Some of this may, in fact, be unmitigable,” he said, explaining that it would take decades before restoration efforts could produce fully mature forested wetlands.

Davis, with the Corps, declined to confirm Ducks Unlimited’s cost estimate for the mitigation plan, saying it would be “premature” to speculate about pricing. The agency has committed publicly to purchasing all necessary mitigation credits before starting construction.

A costly about-face

Crop fields have steadily replaced wetlands in Mississippi’s Yazoo Backwater Area, which is part of the Lower Mississippi River Alluvial Valley and was once dominated by river swamps and floodplain forests. It’s now one of the world’s most productive agricultural regions. Credit: Imani Khayyam for the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk

Johnson and others’ warnings about the current Yazoo Pumps plan echo concerns from government agencies over past versions of the project.

When the Corps proposed building a pumping station in the backwater area in 2007, the EPA vetoed the project a year later, saying it would violate the Clean Water Act by causing “unacceptable adverse effects” on at least 28,400 acres of local wetlands. The agency stressed at the time that this veto would also likely apply to future versions of the project that did not significantly modify its main components.

More than 15 years later, the Corps put forward a new plan that would allow for more seasonal flooding than the rejected 2007 scheme—a change the agency hoped would make the project more palatable to the EPA.

On Jan. 8, the EPA released a letter expressing support for the Corps’ new project, stating that it would be “less environmentally damaging” than the 2007 proposal.

Stu Gillespie, a supervising senior attorney at the environmental law group Earthjustice, called the EPA’s January determination unprecedented and illogical. By allowing the current Yazoo Pumps plan to move forward, the agency is violating standards clearly established in its own veto, he said.

“This proposed project is going to impact over 90,000 acres of wetlands. That’s three times the amount that EPA prohibited in the veto,” Gillespie explained. “For them now to reverse course and say the veto doesn’t apply is unheard of.”

Anderson Jones has lived in the same house in Mississippi’s Yazoo Backwater Area for 65 years. Like other local residents, he hopes the Army Corps’ newly approved Yazoo Pumps will protect his family home from recurring flooding. Credit: Imani Khayyam for the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk

With the latest Yazoo Pumps plan now moving into its engineering and design phase, Gillespie did not rule out the possibility of litigation to force a judicial review of the EPA’s decision. Abandoning the veto and greenlighting the project dilutes the authority of the EPA and Clean Water Act, opening the door to further wetland conversion outside the Yazoo Backwater Area, he said.

“There’s a lot at stake,” Gillespie concluded. “Lifting this veto … lets the horse out of the barn, and there’s no way to get it back in.”

In Issaquena County, Anderson Jones said he hopes the approved Yazoo Pumps project will protect his ancestral home. The constant flooding has worn on him and his family, and he’s willing to try any solution that could offer some relief — even one that isn’t perfect.

“I’m trusting God that the pumps will work,” he said. “It can’t be no worser.”

This story is part of the series Down the Drain from the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk, an independent reporting collaborative based at the University of Missouri in partnership with Report for America, with major funding from the Walton Family Foundation.