How Best to Protect from Flooding?
Friday,
May 2st, 2014
Baton Rouge,
Louisiana
WHY HAVE LEVEE
DISTRICTS AT ALL?
Legislation is working its way
through the Louisiana legislature that would strip levee districts of their
autonomy. Board members of several large
levee boards are crying foul, and charge that flood protection will suffer and
emergency responses will slow down.
Louisiana has twenty-three levee boards that cover the state’s waterways
from the Arkansas border to the Gulf of Mexico.
But here’s the question. Why have
any levee boards at all?
For well over the first 200
years of Louisiana’s existence, all flood control efforts were constructed and initially
paid for by the riverfront landowner, then by parishes adjoining the river, and
then by funds raised by local levee boards. Federal involvement came about in
1917 with the passage of the Ransdell-Humphreys Flood Control Act, a flood
control program designed to give protection up and down the Mississippi Valley.
There was no requirement in this, and federal legislation that followed, that states
seeking flood protection form levee boards.
Few other states have levee
boards or levee districts. Mississippi has two. A number of states bordering
the Mississippi River have none.
Louisiana spends hundreds of
millions of dollars a year on various other construction projects without the
oversight of any appointed board. In this fiscal year, there is some $124
million in public building construction projects taking place in Louisiana. The
state budget for highway construction this year will top $794 million. No Governor
appointed board is in place to oversee any of this construction.
The simple fact is that having
non-professionals appointed to boards that are given direct authority and
control over basic protection to our public safety makes no sense in the 21st
century. Professionals within the Louisiana State Department of Public Works
and the U.S. Corps of Engineers would seem much better qualified to design the
necessary flood protection plan, and oversee both the construction and maintenance
of such important projects.
If the Corps of Engineers, as
was alleged following Hurricane Katrina, made some serious errors in design and
construction of our levy protection system, then certainly they should be held
accountable. But do we continue to allow untrained, average citizens with no
professional background to make decisions that, as we have tragically seen, can
lead to serious of consequences including the loss of human life?
Merely scaling down the present
23 levee boards to a handful doesn’t really address the problem. Levee boards
are outdated. They are a thing of the past.
The Dutch do not turn over the
protection of their entire nation, a country that rests primarily below sea
level, to a board of non-professionals. Neither do the Italians in their
efforts to defend their city on the sea, Venice. We live in the richest, most
powerful and technologically advanced nation on earth. Surely the Governor, the
Legislature, and the federal government can get together and work out a better
administrative system than what we now have in place. There’s too much at
stake.
Is electing levee boards the
answer, as has been suggested by U.S. Senator Mary Landrieu? That makes about
as much sense as electing firemen and policemen.
The 23 levy boards that are
scattered throughout Louisiana are, for the most part, made up of decent,
hardworking people who hold a variety of jobs, and they all have one thing in common:
they know nothing about building and maintaining levees.
In the levee district debate
presently before the legislature, there is an opportunity to end the
parochialism that pits one parish or district against another. Statewide
oversight would allow decisions to be made that are for the good of the state as
a whole instead of drawing lines that shouldn’t exist.
Simply put, these times call for
changes in the age-old system of political fiefdoms in the Bayou State. Take
the politics out of levee engineering. That’s the way it works all over the
world. Why should Louisiana be any different?
******
The changes we dread most may contain our salvation.
Barbara Kingsolver
Peace
and Justice
Jim
Brown
Jim
Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout
the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns
and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till 11:00 am,
central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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