A state emergency official said the system will be “basically meaningless” to him during a major storm because the most reliable maps can not be issued until after he must order evacuations. And a UNO researcher who is expert on the risks facing communities on Louisiana’s sinking coast worries some of the maps could give residents a false sense of security.
Author Archives: Bob Marshall
From 2013 to 2017, Bob Marshall covered environmental issues for The Lens, with a special focus on coastal restoration and wetlands. While at The Times-Picayune, his work chronicling the people, stories and issues of Louisiana
Day after boasting of Gulf’s health, BP confirms 25,000-pound tar mat
On Monday BP released a statement claiming the environment of the northern Gulf of Mexico had returned its “baseline condition” five years after its Deepwater Horizon disaster pumped more than 200 million gallons of oil into the Gulf off Louisiana’s coast. But on Tuesday the U.S. Coast Guard was supervising the ongoing removal of a large oil tar mat on East Grand Terre Island that has yielded more than 25,000 pounds of oil mixed with sand since late February, a BPO spokesman confirmed.
Dam it: Fishers frustrated by closing of MRGO, but some catches increase
It’s a peculiar position for those who make their livings and live their lives around the fishing culture of St. Bernard Parish: They say that a post-Katrina rock dam restricting the waterway, which flooded the parish, is hurting their business. But scientists say it’s a return to a natural balance that was upset when the canal was dredged.
Confronting the enemy below: hydrologists float plan to keep water in city
A city that prides itself on embracing contradiction is now waking up to this one: The levees and pumping stations it has spent nearly 300 years perfecting to guard against external threats have also been the catalysts allowing an unseen enemy below to savage its budgets and cloud its future.
Flood authority discusses appeal of judge’s smackdown to its oil and gas lawsuit
Board members debate whether they’d owe about $1.7 million to attorneys if they quit now.
15 coastal projects approved by Congress in 2007 met different fates
Despite giving the go-ahead in concept, Congress has not sent a penny to build 15 approved projects.
Flood authority flexes technical muscle, and Corps of Engineers responds
Advocates say this was the professional oversight the post-Katrina levee board was designed to execute.
State’s coastal restoration efforts imperiled by Obama’s budget proposal
Louisiana’s Master Plan for the coast depends in part on offshore royalties that the president wants to redirect.
With recent ruling, federal judge cuts at least $240 million from state’s BP fine
Federal court ruling sharply reduces the determination of the amount of oil spilled.
State coastal experts beginning study to assess costs, benefits of river diversions
Fishing community says the huge infusions of fresh water will drive away their livelihood.