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May, 2006 |
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Click to enlarge image
Lane Lefort, New Orleans District
USACE |

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April 21, 2006 |

USACE |
Hurricane
blockers
The Corps is building
gates at the mouths of three New Orleans drainage canals to protect 11 miles of
Katrina-weakened floodwalls from storm surges. Major components will include
frame structures such as these, headed for the
17th Street
Canal near Lake Pontchartrain. The 75-ton structures were fabricated by
Boh Bros. Construction Co. in eastern New Orleans and are 40 feet tall and 27
feet wide. The pushboat Tako Endeavor is moving them west on the Gulf
Intracoastal Waterway. The interim gates are to be completed by June 1 on the
17th Street,
London Avenue
and Orleans Avenue
canals, along with limited pumping capacity.
Task Force
Guardian
is repairing hurricane damage by June 1.
(Photo by Lane Lefort)
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March 3, 2006 |
USACE |
IPET Report 2
The graphic
illustrates a main finding of Report 2 by
IPET, the Interagency Performance
Evaluation Task Force, which is investigating Hurricane Katrina. The 17th
Street Canal floodwall collapse is attributed to high water bending the wall
landward, opening a crack that allowed hydrostatic pressure to reach the
bottom of the sheet piling. Second, weakness of the clay layer (dark, in upper 2
illustrations) beyond the edge of the levee caused the levee to fail. Both
forces, IPET Director Ed Link said, were necessary to move the whole landward
side of the levee within the clay layer and cause the failure.
IPET’s members were drawn from federal, state and local government, and
academia and private industry. Click here for
frequently asked questions and an
elevation datum sheet.
(Photo by Lane Lefort)
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October 15, 2005
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USACE
photo by Lane Lefort |
Investigators release 17th Street Floodwall sheet pile measurements
The U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers and the Interagency
Performance Evaluation Task Force measure sheet pile at the 17th Street
Canal levee breach Dec. 12, 2005, as part of an investigation into how the
hurricane protection system performed. Results of the measurements show the
sheet pile at over 23 feet with a -17.5 feet tip elevation. Portions of the
concrete floodwall and eight sheet piles were gathered for further analysis.
(Photo by Lane Lefort)
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October 15, 2005
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USACE
photo by Lauren Solis
|
Hurricane Rita and Terrebonne Parish
Although Terrebonne Parish weathered
well during Hurricane Katrina, the same couldn’t be said for Hurricane
Rita. Here, Robert Foret (left) and
Jeff Richie review some of the damaged levees annotated on a map of the
area. (Photo by Lauren Solis, U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers)
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September
21, 2005
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USACE
photo by Lane Lefort
|
Hurricane Katrina aftermath
An
aerator sprays water into the air on the
17th Street Canal to reduce pollution by
bacteria and petroleum products. Lake
Pontchartrain is in the background. The 17th
Street Canal is used solely for draining. It
drains most of the New Orleans neighborhood
known as Uptown and a portion of Jefferson
Parish. Click for full
size image.
Hurricane Katrina
Emergency Info for District Employees
Corps'
Disaster Resource Management site,
photos
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September
19, 2005
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Photo by Hank
Heusinkveld, Wilmington District
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Hurricane Katrina aftermath
New Orleans District members Greg Breerwood,
left, Chris Accardo, center, and David
Wurtzel observe dropping water levels at a
pumping site at the 17th Street Canal
temporary closure. According to Wurtzel,
Project Manager of Surveillance and
Monitoring of the canal, the water dropped
by 2.5 feet between early Saturday morning
and Saturday evening, much faster than Corps
officials had anticipated.
Hurricane Katrina
Emergency Info for District Employees
Corps'
Disaster Resource Management site,
photos
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September
18, 2005
|
Photo by Lane
Lefort |
Hurricane Katrina aftermath
Brig. Gen. Robert Crear, division engineer,
Mississippi Valley Division,
Col.
Richard Wagenaar, district engineer, New
Orleans District, U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, and Maj. George Stejic discuss
plans for unwatering the city. See latest
Corps hurricane response
news.
Hurricane Katrina
Emergency Info for District Employees
Corps'
Disaster Resource Management site,
photos
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August
26, 2005
|
Trawler Simple Man, used with permission |
Relocating a Loggerhead
This
is the MV Mississippi, the boat on which the
Mississippi River
Commission, will hold a public
meeting on Aug. 26 in
Morgan City
. Here, the Corps’ big motor vessel is
pushing barges on the
Mississippi River
about 10 miles above Donaldsonville. The
Corps employs the 241-foot boat as an
inspection, public meeting and workboat. The
Mississippi
spends more than 90 percent of the time
exercising its 6,300 horsepower as a working
towboat. Its main assignment is to move
barges, equipment and supplies in support of
revetment
placement work..
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August
19, 2005
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Lane Lefort,
New Orleans District |
Public
Meeting on MV Mississippi
This
is the MV Mississippi, the boat on which the
Mississippi River
Commission, will hold a public
meeting on Aug. 26 in
Morgan City
. Here, the Corps’ big motor vessel is
pushing barges on the
Mississippi River
about 10 miles above Donaldsonville. The
Corps employs the 241-foot boat as an
inspection, public meeting and workboat. The
Mississippi
spends more than 90 percent of the time
exercising its 6,300 horsepower as a working
towboat. Its main assignment is to move
barges, equipment and supplies in support of
revetment
placement work..
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| August
19, 2005
|
Lane Lefort,
New Orleans District |
Change
of Command
Col. Richard P. Wagenaar,
right, takes
command of the New
Orleans District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, on Tuesday, July 12, at
district headquarters in
New Orleans
. Brig. Gen. Robert Crear, division engineer, Mississippi
Valley Division, and president-designee of the
Mississippi River
Commission, passes the Corps of Engineers flag to Wagenaar, symbolic
of passing on command of the district. Wagenaar is the 59th district
engineer of the New Orleans District. Wagenaar
biography. More
photos.
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| July
10, 2005
|
Lane Lefort,
New Orleans District |
Archbishop
Blesses the Fleet
Former
Archbishop Phillip M. Hannan leads the blessing
of the fleet, a time-honored ceremony recognizing the perils faced by
mariners. The ceremony was held at the Corps’ New Orleans District on the
Mississippi River
, on May 13. In World War II, Hannan served the U.S. Army as a combat chaplain
jumping with the 82nd Airborne Division. As he wields the
aspergillum, a device used to sprinkle holy water, Archbishop Hannon is joined
by Col. Peter Rowan, the then-district engineer, and Rowan’s son, James.
More
photos.
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| July
6, 2005
|
Art Belala,
New Orleans District |
Cypress
Swamp in Bonnet Carré
Floodwater
flows through the cypress trees during a 1997 opening of the Bonnet
Carré Spillway. The spillway has been opened eight times (most
recently in 1997) to protect New Orleans and vicinity from the Mississippi River
by diverting floodwater six miles north into Lake Pontchartrain. The view is
from the lake. Bonnet Carré has more than 3,000 acres of cypress swamp and
bottomland hardwood forest. A proposed new airport would require most of this
land. Canadian National Railway is in mid-photo. Louisiana
coastal forest report More spillway
photos.
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| June
10, 2005
|
Lane Lefort, New Orleans District |
Fishy
Character
Bonnet
Carré Spillway. The stance is a trick to lull
fish into range for spearing with the sharp-pointed bill. These wading birds,
whose wings stretch up to 51 inches wide, are part of the spillway’s rich
wildlife. More than one species of two-legged fishermen enjoy the spillway. Some
of these are among the conservatively estimated 250,000 people who visit for
many kinds of recreation. More spillway photos.
|
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| May
12, 2005
|
Donn Young,
Port of New Orleans, used with permission |
Big
Changes on
Industrial Canal
New Orleans’
Industrial Canal is a key waterway linking the Mississippi River and the
eastbound Gulf Intracoastal Waterway. View is from the river. At top, the GIWW
goes to the right and the Industrial Canal turns left toward Lake Pontchartrain.
The Corps is building a new lock to replace the small one, foreground. The new, larger lock will be built between the second
and third bridges. Flanking this site are two light green areas where the Corps
has completed the environmental clean up and demolition necessary for the lock
replacement. At top right is the Port of New Orleans’ Jourdan Road Wharf with a
ship alongside the large white cargo shed. At the base of the canal’s “Y” is the
Port and Coast Guard’s new, wider Florida Avenue
bridge, which is scheduled to open in April. It will be a key element in
building the new lock. Canal in 1991.
|
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| March
8, 2005
|
Mike Maples, New Orleans District |
Corps Challenge sharpens students’ skills, teamwork
Using historical and
projected-change maps of coastal Louisiana, David Ramirez explains to a team of
Adams Middle School students how they’ll measure the land loss rate in average
acres per year. Ramirez, Heath Jones and Leslie Lombard oversaw the Land Loss
Station during the Engineer Week Corps Challenge Feb. 23. Ninety 7th and 8th
graders took up the Corps Challenge and spent the day in stiff competition here.
It was close, but the St. Mary’s Dominican High School team took 1st place, St.
Robert Bellarmine Middle School took 2nd, and 3rd place went to Adams Middle
School. The Challenge consisted of five stations:
bridge building, soil classification, surveying, water purification and land
loss estimation.
continued...
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| February
16, 2005
|

Lane Lefort, New Orleans District |
Governor,
Corps join hands
Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Babineaux
Blanco and Lt. Gen. Carl A. Strock, Chief of Engineers, U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, have reaffirmed the state-federal commitment to the great national
goal of reversing Louisiana’s coastal losses. They shake hands after signing
a partnership agreement at a ceremony on the LSU campus in Baton Rouge.
Strock also signed the Chief of Engineers Report, a crucial step to advance the
Louisiana Coastal Area Ecosystem Restoration Study, or LCA Study. Brig. Gen.
Robert Crear (center), Division Engineer, Mississippi Valley Division, presided
over the ceremonies. The Chief’s Report is on the LCA
Web site.
|
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| November
1, 2004
|

Anne Marino, New Orleans District |
Corps vs. the calendar
This
is the Corps of Engineers at work against the calendar to create hurricane
protection. Suspended from a 250-foot boom, a pile driver doing its stuff in the
Harvey Canal, in New Orleans’ West Bank area. The piles are for a $36 million
hurricane protection floodgate at the Lapalco Boulevard Bridge, background.
Floodgate completion is expected in 2006. Completion of the entire West Bank and
Vicinity New Orleans Hurricane Protection Project is expected in 2016, given
funding. News
release and hurricane project
fact sheets. More
illustrations.
|
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| October
25, 2004
|

Anne Marino, New Orleans District |
Hurricane
flood gate
Construction
has begun on this $36 million floodgate to protect 250,000 people in the West
Bank area of New Orleans from hurricane storm surges. It’s on the Harvey Canal,
an industrial waterway that was closed Oct. 4 for about 40 days of pile driving.
News
release and hurricane project
fact sheets.
|
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| September
12, 2004
|

Used with permission of
Offshore
Specialty Fabricators Inc. |
Squeezing through the
lock
A natural gas processing plant moves through the Harvey
Lock en route to installation in a producing
field in the Gulf of Mexico. The lock connects the Harvey Canal with the
Mississippi River. Lockmaster Ralph Guy is standing on the lock wall. The Corps
of Engineers operates 12 locks in
south Louisiana , including three in metro
New Orleans: The Harvey and Algiers locks link the Mississippi River with the
westbound Gulf
Intracoastal Waterway
(GIWW),
and the Industrial Canal Lock links the river with the eastbound GIWW. More
photos.
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| August
2, 2004
|

Tom Tobin, New Orleans District |
New threat to Miss. River ports
This 3-D visualization shows a new threat to navigation at
the mouth of the Mississippi River. It’s a scour hole at an outlet known as
Burrwood Bayou that’s gotten deeper in recent years. This view, constructed from
multi-beam sonar surveys, was taken when depths reached about 130 feet in March
2003. On this view, the river runs from left to right, with the scour hole
beginning just above the main ship channel and extending vertically. Read more on the hole and how the Corps is handling it.
Gray areas at top are surface photos; colors are the multi-beam survey. Photos.
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| June
14, 2004
|

Lane Lefort, New Orleans District |
Ready
for 2004's Rains
A
$61.7 million, four-project system
has been completed in New Orleans in time
for spring rains and the hurricane season.
New covered canals–underground box
culverts–were added that totaled 5,790
feet long. And pump station capacity was
enlarged accordingly. A partnership of the
Corps of Engineers and the New Orleans
Sewerage & Water Board built the system
over five years. This Napoleon Avenue scene
is an example of what residents faced in
that time to get better flood protection. More
photos.
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| May
11, 2004
|

Lane Lefort, New Orleans District |
Digging a land-building channel
A dredge cuts a
channel to divert sediment into West Bay, near the Mississippi River’s
mouth (map). It’s the first
large-scale diversion of sediment and fresh water into Louisiana’s coastal
marshes. This interim channel was completed in November, and the 2004
high-water season will put it to work. If it’s successful, a larger channel
with more than twice the flow will be cut. The project is designed to restore
10,000 acres of wetlands just south of Venice. West Bay
project fact sheet and more photos.
|
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| November
14, 2003
|

Lane Lefort, New Orleans District |
Anti-wetness machine
Pumping water out faster is the goal of the
SELA rainflood project in the New Orleans area, and that
requires more pumping capacity. The heart of a new pump at Elmwood Pump Station
in Metairie is this 11-foot diameter impeller. Bobby Porche, foreman for
installation contractor Universal Compression of Houma, works with Mike
Steagall, right, the Corps’ SELA Jefferson Parish project engineer. The Elmwood
expansion’s two new pumps will move 2,400 cubic feet per second, a 71 percent
increase. As viewed, the impeller rotates counter-clockwise, pushing water
(left) into Lake Pontchartrain. Partners on the estimated $16.5-million project
are the Corps and Jefferson Parish.
|
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| October
14, 2003
|

Lane Lefort, New Orleans District |
Not just plantations
Evergreen
Plantation, on the Mississippi River between New Orleans and Baton Rouge,
is a great example of the river plantations. These structures, however, are only
part of the Mississippi Valley’s varied cultural and natural heritage. For example, the river
formed much of coastal Louisiana, and now must be used to save it.
To foster interpretation
of these resources, a conference is
set Oct. 7-9 at the Old U.S. Mint New Orleans. Other topics will include African-American influence on the valley's culture, jazz and planning for interpretation. Participants will learn
state-of-the-art techniques to accomplish their interpretive objectives. See
program and register here.
|
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| September
24, 2003
|

Lane Lefort, New Orleans District |
Atchafalaya cypress
We value the Atchafalaya Basin for natural wonders such as
these cypress trees and as a floodway in the Mississippi River and Tributaries
System. We hope to begin construction in 2004 on the basin’s Buffalo Cove
Water Management Unit to enhance fish and wildlife by improving circulation.
The project’s 75-page environmental assessment is now available on disc
or paper by calling 504-862-2524. Buffalo Cove is described in the
fact sheet for the Atchafalaya Basin Floodway System
project.
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August 18, 2003
|

Lane Lefort, New Orleans District |
Hurricane cover
Emergency hurricane protection was replaced or repaired on Grand Isle in
mid-July by the Corps. Clay and broken concrete were emplaced to form a
2,275-foot temporary embankment. Corps hired labor unit workers, above, tug a
protective plastic sheet, or geotextile,
to
prepare for laying it over clay freshly
emplaced on their Gulf of Mexico side.
From left, Willie Harris, Unit D, and Troy Davis and Trent Lartigue, both Unit
C.
|
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| July
16, 2003
|

Lane Lefort, New Orleans District |
Sandbagging Bill
Emergency
sandbagging for Tropical Storm Bill
is inspected on a rainy June 30 by
Diane Callahan, a project engineer
for the Corps’ SELA rainflood
project. Sandbags were placed where
a portion of the floodwall had been
removed temporarily for a Jourdan
Road bypass. Orleans Levee District
furnished sandbags. They were placed
by levee district and Corps of
Engineers employees. This SELA project involves enlarging the Dwyer Road Pump
Station and its discharge tubes into
New Orleans’ Industrial Canal. New
84-inch discharge tubes awaiting
installation are in the background.
Corps’ Hurricane
& Emergency page. Click to view briefing for emergency .
|
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| June 21,
2003
|
 |
Making N.O. canal safer
A Corps of Engineers crew installs mooring buoys
(news release) on the
Industrial Canal, also known as the Industrial Canal, in New Orleans. The
black chain anchors the buoys. The Corps installed the nine buoys in April for
vessels waiting to transit the
Industrial Canal Lock . They will protect the bank line exposed
after demolition of the Galvez Street Wharf, completed in February as part of
the Industrial Canal Lock
Replacement Project. High water on the Mississippi can force
vessels to wait 24 hours or longer to lock through. Mooring, meanwhile, is
safer than nosing into the canalside.
Crew
members are from Hired Labor Unit A, from left, Owens Williams, Edgar Hall,
Adam McFarlain and Stephen Simmons.
|
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| April
22, 2003
|
 |
Earth Day observance
cypress stand in the Atchafalaya Basin illustrates the meaning of Earth Day,
whose observance is April 22, including events at New Orleans District. The
Corps is helping the environment and flood control by purchasing 388,000 acres
in the Atchafalaya Basin,
either outright, or in easements for environmental protection and developmental
control. Earth Day observances at district headquarters will begin at 6:30 a.m.
with a bird identification contest. At 10 the
agenda shifts to the District Assembly Room, including a nutria
cook-off judging. Earth Day
poster and Chief of Staff’s
message. For Corps’ role, click “Environment” pull down on left side of
this page.
|
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| April
18, 2003
|
 |
N.O. hurricane bridge
Workers smooth the concrete deck
on a Filmore Avenue bridge in New Orleans, which is being entirely replaced for
hurricane protection. Reopening of
the span over the London Avenue Canal is expected about June 1. Continuing
rains have delayed it and other construction projects. This is one of two
bridges over the London canal being replaced by James Construction Group LLC
for the Corps of Engineers and local partner Orleans Levee District. The
Mirabeau Avenue Bridge, one-quarter mile to the south, will be closed for
replacement once Filmore Avenue is reopened to traffic. See Hurricane &
Emergency page
here.
|
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| March
11, 2003
|
 |
Passing the test
Marsh is restored successfully just above Head of Passes (a)
near the Mississippi River’s mouth. The Corps of Engineers conducted the
dredging
demonstration
as a CWPPRA project. The dredge
Beachbuilder (b) uses a 700-foot flexible hose, connected to
an anchor barge (c) to maneuver and avoid the area’s heavy
ship traffic. The material was next pumped two miles upstream to a second
anchor barge (d) and then ashore, restoring 40 acres of marsh
(e). The Corps hopes to use this dredging technology as one
tactic to help restore the coast.
More
photos.
|
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| January
29, 2003
|
 |
Where the waters will meet
This underground drainage manifold,
analogous to a highway interchange, will receive rainwater from three
directions (bottom, left and right) and smoothly route it in a fourth direction
(top). It's in New Orleans at Napoleon and South Claiborne, part of the
SELA rainflood drainage project . Beginning in mid-2004, the manifold
is expected eventually to combine water from four underground culverts and
direct it into three. It is a key feature of a $14.5 million contract.
Inspecting are Tim Roth, SELA Orleans Parish resident engineer (left) and Stan
Green, SELA senior project manager. SELA brochures
here .
|
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| November 20,
2002
|
 |
Hurricane Bridge
Chris Wagner,
right, Corps of Engineers' construction representative, is with Bill Ray, a
Meyers Engineers construction inspector, at the Hammond Highway bridge, which
links New Orleans and Metairie over the 17th Street Canal. The 2-lane bridge is
being replaced by a 4-lane
hurricane-protection bridge. Weather permitting, completion is expected in
about December 2003. A hurricane bridge is also being constructed at
Filmore Avenue on the London Avenue Canal. They are the seventh and
eighth of 10 New Orleans-area bridges being rebuilt for hurricane protection.
The Corps' hurricane-protection maps are here.
|
Back to News Page |
| August 22,
2002
|
 |
Listening to Port
Dominic Izzo, the principal deputy assistant secretary of the Army (civil
works), hears out Gary LaGrange, executive director of the Port of New Orleans,
at the Industrial Canal Lock. At rear, center, is the Corps of Engineers' Ron
Elmer, project engineer. During a late July visit, the secretary was briefed on
construction of the replacement lock, the
SELA rainflood project in the New Orleans area, and the Louisiana
Coastal Area study by the multi-agency Coastal Restoration
Team. Izzo also viewed Louisiana wetlands by helicopter.
|
Back to News Page |
| July 12,
2002
|
 |
Change of Command
Col. Peter J. Rowan (left) receives the Army Corps of Engineers flag from Brig.
Gen. Edwin J. Arnold Jr., Mississippi Valley Division commander, in a
change of command ceremony July 12 at the New Orleans District
headquarters. Rowan became the 57th district engineer, assuming command from
Col. Thomas F. Julich. The passing of the command flag by the next senior
commander symbolizes the transfer of command responsibility. See Rowan's
biography.
|
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| June 13, 2002
|
 |
SELA upgrades pumping
The Corps of Engineers and local
sponsor Jefferson Parish are adding (right) 2,400 cubic feet per second to the
capacity of Pump Station No. 3 at the Elmwood Canal and Lake Pontchartrain
(top) in Metairie. The expansion is part of the $647-million
SELA rain-flood control project. Completion of the
expansion is scheduled for Sept. 30, 2002. Top: New hurricane breakwater by
Corps and East Jefferson Levee District.
|
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New SELA Pump Station
Construction is under way on the
Whitney-Barataria Pump Station near Belle Chasse. The Corps of Engineers and
local sponsor Jefferson Parish are building it as part of the $647-million
SELA rain-flood project. At scheduled completion in January
2003, the station would have the capacity to pump 3,000 cubic feet per second
into the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway (top).
|
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| May 13,
2002
|
 |
Opening Davis Pond
The Davis Pond
Freshwater Diversion sprang to life
March 26, as officials pulled a ceremonial lever and water for the
first time began to flow from the Mississippi into the salt-threatened
Barataria Basin. Left to right, they are Jack Caldwell, secretary, Louisiana
Department of Natural Resources; Lt. Gen. Robert Flowers, chief of engineers,
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers; Louisiana Gov. Mike Foster; and U.S. Rep. Billy
Tauzin of Louisiana. During the dedication of the $119.6 million project,
General Flowers introduced the Corps' seven
Environmental Operating Principles. |
Back to News Page |
| March 28,
2002
|

|
Hailing Davis Pond
U.S. Rep. Billy Tauzin of
Louisiana and Lt. Gen. Robert Flowers, chief of engineers, speak at the
dedication of the Davis Pond
Freshwater Diversion Project on March 26. Drawing from the Mississippi
River, the project will re-introduce fresh water, nutrients and sediment to
benefit 777,000 acres of wetlands in the Barataria estuary -- the world's
largest freshwater diversion project. At Davis Pond, General Flowers introduced
the Corps' new Environmental
Operating Principles
|
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| March 7, 2002 |
|
Suzanne R. Hawes 2001 Governor's Award
Suzanne R. Hawes was presented
this month the 2001 Governor's Award for Professional Conservationist of the
Year by the Louisiana Wildlife Federation. The district's project manager for
the environment, Sue was cited for her leadership, integrity and
accomplishements as a long-standing senior ecological advisor, and more
recently as co-chair of the Brown Marsh Scientific and Technical Committee,
where she coordinated more than 30 efforts by scientists studying the coastal
brown marsh syndrome. Sue serves on the boards of directors for the Coalition
to Restore Coastal Louisiana, and the New Orleans Group and Louisiana
Chapter of the Sierra Club. She's been a Corps employee since 1971.
|
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| December 26,
2001 |

|
Hurricane Protection
The Corps has completed 12,000
feet of foreshore dike at Empire, to protect the levees and floodgate (open,
foreground) from hurricane surges from Adams Bay (left), an arm of the
Gulf of Mexico. Over 100,000 tons of rock were used, as part of the New Orleans
to Venice Hurricane Protection Project. Mississippi River is in the background
(right). |
|
Before the floodgate
Here's the Empire area along Adams Bay, an arm of the Gulf of
Mexico, in February 1973, before the hurricane levee and floodgate were built
shortly afterwards as part of a Corps project. Now, a rock dike has been
emplaced to protect levee and floodgate. Mississippi River is in upper right
corner.
|
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| November 15,
2001
|
 |
The Gen. John Newton was a common sight on
the lower Mississippi River for almost 60 years, serving as a work boat for the
Corps of Engineers until 1957. Its steam engine with 32-inch cylinders is in
the possession of the New Orleans Steamboat Co., which operates the
sternwheeler Natchez today. Heritage preservation and tourism, and related
topics will be discussed at the
Third Randall L. Gibson Mississippi River Heritage Tourism Conference,
Nov. 29, at the Old U.S. Mint in New Orleans.
|
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| October 18,
2001
|
 |
Dust Protection
To protect workers and the neighborhood,
dust is hosed down regularly in demolition of the Galvez Street Wharf.
The $2.6 demolition project
is an early stage of the $603 million project to modernize and replace the
Industrial Canal Lock in New Orleans.
The claw machine, lower right, is demolishing the wharf shed.
|
 |
Demolishing Galvez Wharf
Demolition has begun on the Galvez Street
Wharf, part of the $603 million replacement of the
Industrial Canal Lock in New Orleans.
The claw machine is pulling down the obsolete wharf’s cargo shed as part of a
$2.6
million contract. The
worker in the bucket, upper right, is poised to hose down dust to protect
workers and the neighborhood.
|
Back to News Page |
| September 17,
2001
|
 |
Day of Prayer and Remembrance
New Orleans District team members gather in
front of the headquarters building to pray for the thousands who died in the
recent terrorist attacks on the United States. The brief ceremony included
prayers, a moment of silence and the ringing of the district’s bell in response
to the President’s call for a “national day of prayer and remembrance.
|
|
District Engineer Col. Thomas Julich and a
gathering of employees observe a moment of silence on the national Day of
Prayer and Remembrance, Sept. 14, for victims of the World Trade Center and
Pentagon terrorist attacks. Three district members have been called up in the
disaster, driving vehicles for the Corps' Deployable Tactical Operations to New
York City. Others on standby include structural engineers, urban search and
rescue personnel, quality assurance inspectors, and emergency managers. The
district's debris team is also on alert.
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| August 29,
2001
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Memento of appreciation from the Sierra
Club
Charles Fryling, chairman of the Sierra
Club Atchafalaya Basin Committee, gets a helping hand from U.S. Sen. Mary
Landrieu in presenting a gift Aug. 8 to the Corps of Engineers for obtaining
50,000 acres of wilderness land for public use. The acquisition was a major
environmental and recreational achievement for the Corps in Louisiana. The
Atchafalaya Basin, located in south-central Louisiana, extends 800,000 acres
between Simmesport and Morgan City. It is the nation's largest river basin
swamp.
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New Orleans District Real Estate members
(l. to r.: Marco Rosamano, Yvonne Barbier, former Division Chief Clyde Sellers,
Acting Chief Bill Lewis, Linda Labure, Deanna Walker and District Engineer Col.
Thomas Julich) are all smiles after the Sierra Club on Aug. 8 presented the
Corps of Engineers a framed memento of appreciation. The group was responsible
for acquiring 50,000 acres of wilderness land for public use and negotiating
144,000 acres of easement property. The land acquisition allows the Corps to
preserve the basin's natural environment and control development.
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| August 13,
2001
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Demolition on Industrial Canal
Hamp's Construction LLC of New Orleans demolishes an abandoned building in the
East Bank Industrial Area on the Industrial Canal in New Orleans. Hamp's is a
subcontractor in a $22.4 million environmental clean up and clearance of
industrial sites. This job is part of the $603 million replacement of the
Industrial Canal Lock. Hamp's equipment is known as an articulating
grapple clam. Visible in the left background is the North Claiborne Avenue
Bridge over the Industrial Canal.
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Locking up the dust
Keeping down the dust is one duty of the contractors on a $22.4 million
demolition and environmental clean up that is the first actual
construction project in replacing the
Industrial Canal Lock in New Orleans. The truck is operated by
Envirocon Inc. of Baton Rouge, a unit of general contractor Washington Group
International. The clean up, in the 32-acre East Bank Industrial Area, involves
removal of 50 buildings, concrete slabs, abandoned barges, wharves, bulkheads,
and more. Water is used to control dust from building demolition and trucking
out debris. Completion of the clean-up is expected in December 2002.
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| July 24, 2001
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Cops for kids
Michelle Spraul, an engineer in Operations Division, leads a group of 20 junior
high school students to the Corps vessel Alexander for a Mississippi River
tour. The students were part of the New Orleans Police Department's Cops
For Kids Summer Camp Program, which promotes educational and career
interests. A total of 40 students visited the New Orleans District on July 12.
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| May 25, 2001
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New Orleans hurricane excercise
Soldiers of the 249th Engineer Battalion
(Prime Power) work during a hurricane emergency
exercise in New Orleans in May: from left, SSG Micheal Wightman, 1st
Lt. Michelle Tope and Specialist Maxine Bethea. They were among 130 soldiers
and civilians who formed teams for a successful exercise in providing emergency
power, ice and water. The civilians came from ten Corps of Engineers districts
and four divisions. Behind them is an
emergency vehicle providing complete communications and control
facilities.
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| Apr 18, 2001
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Officials view pump station expansion
Maj. Gen. Hans Van Winkle, chief of the Corps of Engineers’ $4.5 billion civil
works program, talks with Jim Singleton, New Orleans City Councilmember at
Large, on an inspection of Pump Station No. 1 in New Orleans. The Corps and the
New Orleans Sewerage & Water Board are enlarging the station’s capacity by
29 percent to 5,300 cubic feet per second. The project is part of the Corps’
$537 million Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project (SELA)
to reduce damage from rain floods in metro New Orleans. Singleton chairs the
Sewerage & Water Board’s drainage committee.
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| Apr 9, 2001
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Corps sends freshwater diversion message
Twenty-one Corps volunteers spread the word about freshwater diversion projects
to children and adults alike at the annual Aububon Zoo Earth Fest, March 24 and
25. Find out more about restoring coastal wetlands with Mississippi River
freshwater diversion via our
Freshwater Diversion and
Davis Pond brochures.
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| March 23, 2001
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River is highest in two years at Carrollton
The Mississippi River is the highest it's been in two years, cresting March 6 at
14.6 feet at the Carrollton Gage in New Orleans. The stage has since fallen to
just over 12 feet as seen here March 22 on the Carrollton Gage at the Corps'
office, 7400 Leake Ave. New Orleans District provides both real time and
historical data for all the
district's river gages.
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| February 28,
2001
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Students tour flood control projects
Team Leader Mark Hintz talks to students of Archbishop Rummel High School about
construction to improve the flood drainage capacity of the Suburban Canal at
Veterans Blvd. New Orleans District hosted 24 physics students from Rummel on
Feb. 21 for briefings, an engineer career panel discussion, and a construction
site tour as part of Engineers Week.
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| February 12,
2001
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District talks up engineering to students
New Orleans District is hosting over 60 high school students on Feb. 21 for an
engineering career panel discussion, followed by a tour of urban drainage flood
control projects in Orleans and Jefferson parishes. The students are from a
physics class at Archbishop Rummel H.S. and a math and engineering club at
Grace King H.S.
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| January 18,
2001
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Waterway gets gentle giant to the Ohio River
A deck barge passes through the Industrial Canal Lock in New Orleans with two
crew members, bound for service at the Corps' Olmsted Locks and Dam Project on
the Ohio River near Paducah, Kentucky. The steel structure is called a nose
pier and its dimensions illustrate the unique value of the inland
waterways in the movement of objects incapable of movement by highway or rail.
Th 350-ton structure is 40 feet tall, 38 feet wide and 39 feet long. It, and
two similar structures also on the barge, were manufactured by Steward Machine
Co., Birmingham, Alabama.
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Contact:
Chief, Public Affairs Office, CEMVN-PA
P.O. Box 60267 New Orleans, LA 70160-0267
askthecorps@usace.army.mil
504-862-2201Updated
June 06, 2008
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