Army Corps of Engineers makes slow progress plugging levees | McClatchy Washington Bureau

×
Sign In
Sign In
    • Customer Service
    • Mobile & Apps
    • Contact Us
    • Newsletters
    • Subscriber Services

    • All White House
    • Russia
    • All Congress
    • Budget
    • All Justice
    • Supreme Court
    • DOJ
    • Criminal Justice
    • All Elections
    • Campaigns
    • Midterms
    • The Influencer Series
    • All Policy
    • National Security
    • Guantanamo
    • Environment
    • Climate
    • Energy
    • Water Rights
    • Guns
    • Poverty
    • Health Care
    • Immigration
    • Trade
    • Civil Rights
    • Agriculture
    • Technology
    • Cybersecurity
    • All Nation & World
    • National
    • Regional
    • The East
    • The West
    • The Midwest
    • The South
    • World
    • Diplomacy
    • Latin America
    • Investigations
  • Podcasts
    • All Opinion
    • Political Cartoons

  • Our Newsrooms

You have viewed all your free articles this month

Subscribe

Or subscribe with your Google account and let Google manage your subscription.

Latest News

Army Corps of Engineers makes slow progress plugging levees

Chris Adams and Carol Rosenberg - Knight Ridder Newspapers

September 02, 2005 03:00 AM

NEW ORLEANS—Every five minutes or so, an Army Blackhawk helicopter hovered 50 feet above the collapsed 17th Street Canal levee Friday and dropped a 3,000-pound bag of sand. Each one vanished into the water, showing no apparent results.

But after several false starts, the Army Corps of Engineers said their levee repair efforts are slowly taking hold.

If there is no more rain, the breaches in New Orleans' all-important levees could be closed by Sunday, said engineer Don Basham, chief of the engineering division, from headquarters in Washington.

Pumping the water out of the city is another matter.

The Corps predicts it will take days before workers can turn on the pumping system that moves overflow water through the city's canals back and forth to Lake Pontchartrain and the Mississippi River.

New Orleans' complex canal system failed in the wake of Category 4 Hurricane Katrina, when rising waters in the lake ripped holes in vital retaining walls. Lake water swamped the city, which is below sea level, and swallowed homes up to their rooftops.

While it will likely be months before the city is dry again, Army Corps officials said the sand-bag drops at the 17th Street Canal are one of several innovative steps being taken by soldiers, contractors and volunteers to fix the problem.

On one end of the canal, adjacent to the lake, workers are using a pile driver to erect a wall more than 100 feet long to stem the flow of water. The sandbag drop is shoring up the damaged levee, a sloping piece of land built from dirt, concrete and steel that's now drowning in lake water. And still other areas are being filled with sand and gravel.

"We're using a variety of materials, adapting the engineering to what we can find," said Walter Baumy, Army Corps chief of engineering for the New Orleans District.

They've trucked in gravel, sand and even ground-up road pavement from the storm's debris. "We're not sticking cars and motors and all that stuff in there," said Basham. "But normally we'd be pretty picky about the sand and gravel gradation."

But this is an emergency, he said.

(EDITORS: END OPTIONAL TRIM)

At the London Avenue Canal, the other major breach in the city's water control system, the Corps is walling off the lake with steel piling and filling in the nearby breach with gravel and sand.

Corps officials said they are planning to close both major breaches by Sunday.

Once the holes in the levees are repaired, the city's repaired pump system, plus additional portable pumps, must drain the city.

That process will likely take weeks.

Meanwhile, sandbag-heaving helicopters are the most visible portion of the levee repair effort—an innovation begun when heavy equipment couldn't reach the breaches before the Corps built roads to truck in gravel and other material.

The original idea was even grander—to drop 5-ton bags from heavy Chinook transport helicopters. But emergency coordinators commandeered those choppers for search and rescue missions.

So, instead, they are dropping 3,000-pound bags from lighter weight Blackhawk helicopters.

Between those efforts and the natural drop in the lake's level, Baumy offered a guarded analysis in a daily briefing Friday with the caution and understatement of a project manager sobered by seeing sections of his system implode under Katrina's fury just five days earlier.

"The lake has receded to within a foot of normal levels. We're still working to get the water out of the city."

———

(Adams reported from New Orleans. Rosenberg wrote the story from Miami.)

———

(c) 2005, Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services.

GRAPHICS (from KRT Graphics, 202-383-6064): 20050831 KATRINA levee, 20050902 KATRINA pumps

Need to map

Related stories from McClatchy DC

latest-news

1021228

May 24, 2007 02:33 PM

Read Next

Latest News

Trump administration aims to stop professional baseball deal with Cuba

By Franco Ordoñez

December 29, 2018 02:46 PM

The Trump administration is expected to take steps to block a historic agreement that would allow Cuban baseball players from joining Major League Baseball in the United States without having to defect, according to an official familiar with the discussions.

KEEP READING

MORE LATEST NEWS

Latest News

No job? No salary? You can still get $20,000 for ‘green’ home improvements. But beware

December 29, 2018 08:00 AM

Congress

’I’m not a softy by any means,’ Clyburn says as he prepares to help lead Democrats

December 28, 2018 09:29 AM

Courts & Crime

Trump will have to nominate 9th Circuit judges all over again in 2019

December 28, 2018 03:00 AM

Congress

Lone senator at the Capitol during shutdown: Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts

December 27, 2018 06:06 PM

Congress

Does Pat Roberts’ farm bill dealmaking make him an ‘endangered species?’

December 26, 2018 08:02 AM

Congress

‘Remember the Alamo’: Meadows steels conservatives, Trump for border wall fight

December 22, 2018 12:34 PM
Take Us With You

Real-time updates and all local stories you want right in the palm of your hand.

McClatchy Washington Bureau App

View Newsletters

Subscriptions
  • Newsletters
Learn More
  • Customer Service
  • Securely Share News Tips
  • Contact Us
Advertising
  • Advertise With Us
Copyright
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service