George Rebane
This afternoon the Army Corps of Engineers opened a spillway in a massive containment levee (dam) to flood the few in order to save the many (see nearby AP photo). From wsj.com –
A steel, 10-ton floodgate was slowly raised Saturday for the first time in nearly four decades, unleashing a torrent of water from the Mississippi River, away from heavily populated areas downstream.
The water spit out slowly at first, then began gushing like a waterfall as it headed to swamp as much as 3,000 square miles (7,770 square kilometers) of Cajun countryside known for small farms and fish camps. Some places could wind up under as much as 25 feet (7.5 meters) of water.
Opening the Morganza spillway diverts water away from Baton Rouge and New Orleans, and the numerous oil refineries and chemical plants along the lower reaches of the Mississippi.
What puzzles me is that this massive piece of flood control infrastructure was built for the precise purpose of saving those 3,000 square miles of Cajun towns and farms from exactly this level of Mississippi flood waters. It is a fairly simple problem of flood control engineering to calculate that given a so-and-so river level at Morganza will mean that Baton Rouge and New Orleans are going to be flooded. Yet no appropriate flood control infrastructure has been built to protect those major population areas from flood levels that are provided for at Morganza.
It had to be known that the Morganza levee would never be used for its purported purpose unless and until the Baton Rouge and New Orleans flood control infrastructures were in place to handle the level of floods that Morganza can handle. Yet the decision was made to build Morganza first, and decades passed without a finger being lifted to protect the cities downstream.
Would it not have been more sane to use the monies to first protect the cities to the extent possible, and let the Cajun countryside suffer what floods may come, because the Morganza spillway, to obviate its purpose, would have to be opened in any case to save the unprotected Baton Rouge and New Orleans?
The media have not picked up on this little question. Maybe a reader can supply the simple explanation that eludes just me. Or is this another example of government overwhelmed?
[16may2011 update] The map below from the 16may11 WSJ gives an idea of the scope of the decision’s effect to flood the Atchafalaya River basin.



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