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La. officials list needs: $32 billion for damage from Hurricane Katrina
2theadvocate.com ^ | 09/26/05 | WILL SENTELL/Kevin Blanchard

Posted on 09/26/2005 4:34:22 AM PDT by Ellesu

Even as they assessing damages from Hurricane Rita, state officials said Sunday they are asking the federal government for nearly $32 billion to repair and improve highways and bridges wrecked by Hurricane Katrina. The two storms knocked out electricity for more than million homes and businesses. Nearly 269,000 electric customers in south Louisiana were without power Sunday night.

Power was restored to about 144,000 customers on Sunday, trimming the list of those without it to 268,671.

Bill Doran, operations chief for the state Office of Emergency Preparedness, told reporters parish officials Sunday started the arduous process of putting a price tag on Hurricane Rita, which damaged homes and businesses in southwest and south central Louisiana after hitting land early Saturday morning. The storm triggered flooding in Lake Charles and elsewhere.

The National Guard and others took part in about 900 rescues in the past 36 hours, Maj. Ed Bush, public affairs officer for the Louisiana National Guard told reporters during a 5 p.m. briefing on Sunday.

Meanwhile, state transportation officials said they are asking the federal government for $31.7 billion in highway, bridge, airport, levee, maritime repairs and improvements triggered by Hurricane Katrina, which struck on Aug. 29.

The request includes:

n $7 billion in immediate repairs.

n $4.5 billion in future transportation needs.

n $20.2 billion for improved flood protection, including levee improvements from Morgan City to Slidell designed to withstand a Category 5 hurricane.

State transportation leaders said the list is reasonable.

"We are not seeking a blank check," said Eric Kalivoda, assistant secretary for planning and programming. "We were very conservative in our estimate."

The Federal Emergency Management Agency also announced it has issued $1.5 billion to about 911,000 Louisiana residents who suffered losses in Hurricane Katrina, said Rosemarie Hunter, a FEMA spokeswoman.

Officials detailed damage from Hurricane Rita in the southern parishes included:

ACADIA PARISH: Power lines and trees were toppled. Wind and water damaged houses. The parish did not have any problems from Katrina.

CALCASIEU PARISH: Lower parts of the parish still had flooding Sunday, but standing water in downtown Lake Charles was receding. All Interstate-10 exits in Lake Charles are closed.

Based upon early estimates, 20 to 25 percent of the parish's homes, or roughly 65,000, have serious damage from flood water or rain in homes. About 85 percent will have some damage, said Norman Bourdeau of the Calcasieu Parish Office of Emergency Preparedness.

EVANGELINE PARISH: The parish sustained heavy winds but had no damage assessment yet.

JEFFERSON DAVIS PARISH: Jennings was flooded and had no power or drinkable water. Many downtown businesses were damaged.

LAFAYETTE PARISH: Roads were blocked by fallen trees. Some power outages were reported Lafayette and the parish.

LAFOURCHE PARISH: Port Fourchon, a key supply port for offshore energy operations in the Gulf of Mexico, was still under at least 2 to 3 feet of water Sunday, said Chris Boudreaux of the parish's emergency preparedness office. He could not estimate the number of homes damaged. He said a lot of sugar cane sustained damage.

ORLEANS PARISH: Most of the city was spared significant new damage, but the hurricane's rain and storm surge breached levees along the Industrial Canal, causing renewed flooding in the 9th Ward. The Army Corps of Engineers worked through Saturday night to pile rocks and sandbags in the breaks. Workers believe that once the breaches are closed, the neighborhood can be pumped dry in a week, said Mitch Frazier, a spokesman for the corps.

Entergy Corp. restored power to most of the Central Business District as of Sunday night. The French Quarter should get power this week. More than 200,000 customers still lack power in the New Orleans area.

Mayor Ray Nagin said he wanted residents of the Algiers section, which has electricity and water, to be able to return as early as Monday or Tuesday, followed by people in other ZIP codes.

TERREBONNE PARISH: At least 9,000 homes in the southern part of the parish were inundated with flood water, said Mike Deroche, director of the parish's emergency preparedness office. Rescue workers had boats in the water again Sunday, looking for those who had been stranded by high water.

VERMILION PARISH: Widespread flooding was reported in the low-lying areas of the parish. Eight feet of water was reported south of Erath. Abbeville Mayor Mark Piazza said the shore of the Gulf of Mexico, usually about eight miles south of the town, is now about a mile away.

After Hurricane Rita passed, a tidal surge at the tail end of the storm pushed an additional 2 feet of water into already saturated areas of the parish, said Robert LeBlanc, director of the Vermilion Parish Office of Emergency Preparedness.

The surge flooded north of Erath, which was not flooded when Rita passed through the area earlier Saturday, he said.

Search and rescue was under way for as many as 1,000 people who did not follow mandatory evacuation orders.

Coast Guard units were conducting search and rescue activities using helicopters and boats. About 250 people were rescued. About 90 percent of the people who need assistance have been helped.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events; US: Louisiana
KEYWORDS: gimmegimme; iwantiwant; kathleenblankcheck; moneygrabbing

1 posted on 09/26/2005 4:34:24 AM PDT by Ellesu
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To: LA Woman3


http://www.washingtonpost.com
Louisiana Goes After Federal Billions

By Michael Grunwald and Susan B. Glasser
Washington Post Staff Writers
Monday, September 26, 2005; A01



Louisiana's congressional delegation has requested $40 billion for Army Corps of Engineers projects in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, about 10 times the annual Corps budget for the entire nation, or 16 times the amount the Corps has said it would need to protect New Orleans from a Category 5 hurricane.

Louisiana Sens. David Vitter (R) and Mary Landrieu (D) tucked the request into their $250 billion Hurricane Katrina Disaster Relief and Economic Recovery Act, the state's opening salvo in the scramble for federal dollars.

The bill, unveiled last week, would create a powerful "Pelican Commission" controlled by Louisiana residents that would decide which Corps projects to fund, and ordered the commission to consider several controversial navigation projects that have nothing to do with flood protection. The Corps section of the Louisiana bill, which was supported by the entire state delegation, was based on recommendations from a "working group" dominated by lobbyists for ports, shipping firms, energy companies and other corporate interests.

The bill would exempt any Corps projects approved by the commission from provisions of the National Environmental Policy Act and the Clean Water Act. It would also waive the usual Corps cost-sharing requirements, ensuring that federal taxpayers would pay every dime.

With the public eager to help Katrina's victims, President Bush and Congress have already approved $62.3 billion in spending for the Gulf Coast. But some budget hawks are grumbling about the impact on the deficit; the Louisiana delegation's $250 billion bill would cost more than the Louisiana Purchase under the Jefferson administration on an inflation-adjusted basis. Some critics of federal water projects said the $40 billion Corps request could make the delegation look especially greedy and undermine support for the state's reconstruction plans.

Vitter and Landrieu have described their bill as a starting point for congressional deliberations, but one GOP Senate aide said they should not expect to get their entire wish list, voicing particular skepticism of the funding for the Corps. Even before Katrina, Louisiana received more Corps funding than any other state, and that was less than $400 million a year.

The overall Corps budget for fiscal 2005 was $4 billion, and Corps officials have estimated that they could upgrade the New Orleans flood protection system to defend against a Category 5 storm for about $2.5 billion.

"This bill boggles the mind," said Steve Ellis, a water resources expert at Taxpayers for Common Sense. "Brazen doesn't begin to describe it. The Louisiana delegation is using Katrina as an excuse to resurrect a laundry list of pork projects."

Aides to Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco (D) helped shape the bill. The governor yesterday asked for $31.7 billion in federal funds for her state's infrastructure, including $20 billion for hurricane protections -- which aides described as a down payment on the larger sum.

The bill directs the Pelican (Protecting Essential Louisiana Infrastructure, Citizens and Nature) Commission to study several key flood-protection projects, as well as a $14 billion ecosystem restoration for Louisiana's vanishing coastal marshes, which help protect vulnerable communities against storm surges.

But the list of potential projects also includes a 50-year-old plan for a $750 million lock for the New Orleans Industrial Canal, a project rated the fifth-worst Corps boondoggle in the country by an alliance of taxpayer advocates and environmentalists. It also includes an effort to deepen the Port of Iberia for oil and gas tankers, a project that the Corps had concluded would provide only 30 cents of economic benefit for each dollar expended by taxpayers.

Vitter and Landrieu did not return calls. But in a news conference Thursday after they unveiled their bill, they described it as an unprecedented response to an unprecedented tragedy, and said that rebuilding their state as quickly as possible would have long-term benefits for the nation. They said their requests were based on recommendations from Louisiana's municipal, spiritual, educational, medical and commercial leaders.

"We're going to fight hard for every dollar," Landrieu said. "We wanted to tell people the truth: It's going to be an expensive recovery, but worth the investment."

Corps funding is only part of what Louisiana wants. The 440-page bill also includes $50 billion in open-ended grants for storm-ravaged communities and $13 billion for the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development, along with mortgage assistance, health care, substance abuse treatment and other services for hurricane victims. It also includes hefty payments to hospitals, ports, banks, shipbuilders, fishermen and schools, as well as $8 million for alligator farms, $35 million for seafood industry marketing, and $25 million for a sugar-cane research laboratory that had not been completed before Katrina.

The bill did not specify where the money would come from, but several billion dollars a year would presumably flow from a provision allowing Louisiana to keep half the offshore oil and gas revenue paid to the federal government, a long-standing demand of the state's delegation.

The coastal protection section may be the most contentious part of the bill, overturning a slew of Corps precedents, but Louisiana officials say that past practice has failed to protect their state. They say their communities do not have the money to pay the standard 30 percent local share for Corps hurricane protection, or the time to wait several years for standard Corps studies.

Their model is the federal response to the great Mississippi River flood of 1927, which launched a massive Corps project to control the river at federal expense. The Louisiana officials say it is no coincidence that the river's levees held during Katrina, while flood walls funded through the normal Corps process buckled.

"That's the kind of monumental effort we need today," said W. Clifford Smith, a member of the Mississippi River Commission from Louisiana.

Vitter and Landrieu tapped John M. Barry -- author of "Rising Tide," the definitive history of the 1927 flood -- to lead the working group on the Corps response to Katrina. Almost all the other members of the group were lobbyists from firms such as Patton Boggs, Adams & Reese, the Alpine Group, Dutko Worldwide, Van Scoyoc Associates, and a firm owned by former senator J. Bennett Johnston (D-La.). There was a lobbyist for the Port of New Orleans, a lobbyist for Verizon, and three lobbyists who were former aides to House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman Don Young (R-Alaska).

Internal notes from the working group obtained by The Washington Post suggest that hurricane protection was by no means its sole preoccupation. A list of "outstanding issues" from a Sept. 15 conference call mentioned the possibility of authorizing at least six unrelated navigation projects, and included questions such as "Are there other things we can do to boost our ports?" and -- perhaps a joke -- "How much can I bill my client?"

"My concern was that the focus was not on protecting Louisiana," said Ivor van Heerden, the deputy director of Louisiana State University's Hurricane Center and one of the few non-lobbyists on the working group.

Barry declined to comment on the bill, saying he needed to study the details. But several members of the working group said that van Heerden and Barry pushed for the National Academy of Sciences to oversee the work of the Corps, a recommendation not included in the final bill.

There was also discussion of closing the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet, a little-used navigation canal that may have helped amplify Katrina's storm surge, but there was no mention of that in the bill, either.

If Vitter, Landrieu and the rest of the delegation get their way, the final decisions will be made by the nine-member Pelican Commission -- which would have at least six Louisiana residents -- on the basis of a plan provided by the Corps.


2 posted on 09/26/2005 4:51:27 AM PDT by Ellesu (www.thedeadpelican.com)
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To: Ellesu

Ok, have their corrupt politicians empty their pockets and return all we've sent them over the years. That'll just about take care of it.


3 posted on 09/26/2005 4:59:37 AM PDT by mtbopfuyn (Legality does not dictate morality... Lavin)
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To: Ellesu

$2 Billion to fix the damage and $30 Billion to pay off the grafters.....


4 posted on 09/26/2005 5:08:08 AM PDT by Red Badger
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To: Ellesu
Power was restored to about 144,000 customers on Sunday, trimming the list of those without it to 268,671.

I know I am not good at math, but...

Meanwhile, state transportation officials said they are asking the federal government for $31.7 billion in highway, bridge, airport, levee, maritime repairs and improvements triggered by Hurricane Katrina, which struck on Aug. 29.

I know some money is needed in our state. No doubt. However, I can PROMISE you the government in power is already salivating on how to divvy this up. Sure, there will be contracts to pass out to friends, new projects they can sneak in, relatives to employ in new "consulting" business, etc., etc., etc. They will ask for money for legitimate reasons and use it shore up all their cronies and their party under guise of disaster relief, which I guess in their view, IS the REAL disaster relief.

5 posted on 09/26/2005 5:15:08 AM PDT by auntyfemenist (Show me your papers...)
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To: auntyfemenist

I do not know if this is true about the wetlands, but I've heard the levees were what caused their erosion. Now, the state wants $ for the wetlands restoration while at the same time it is wanting $ for the levees. Seems to me they need to choose one or the other. Yes, I agree about the corruption.


6 posted on 09/26/2005 5:35:39 AM PDT by Ellesu (www.thedeadpelican.com)
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To: Ellesu
I am considering a detailed analysis of the post article above. I see it is packed with pork, and plum jobs for all sorts of "consultants" and other firms, many of which we natives are familiar with. I see lots of jobs and shoring up of state legislature's side businesses, jobs for relatives and crony panels and groups. Yes, so much pork and so little time.

Trust me, the majority of this will go into the pockets of State legislators and their buds who run the businesses that keep them up at the state house. Our state legislators spend most of their time passing laws that benefit their insurance companies, payday loan companies and other businesses back home. Not to mention getting their unqualified children good jobs at public institutions where they surf the net and talk on the phone from their offices all day.

Open ended grants to communities means to me, things like, Tickfaw needs more patrol cars to run their speed trap,(population:400 yearly ticket take: $400,000, and the legislature passed a law allowing ONLY that police dept to confiscate your drivers license till you pay.)

The mayor of Independence needs more grant money so he can build a new house for one of his relatives etc., etc.(He already built a family compound of luxury homes and lucrative car wash at your expense folks.)

Yes folks, knowing many of these people personally, and knowing the workings of our government intimately, I remain horrified at these requests. I am even more horrified that David Vitter is part of this. I had such faith.
7 posted on 09/26/2005 6:02:14 AM PDT by auntyfemenist (Show me your papers...)
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To: Ellesu
Overall, I would have to say that Katrina has exposed many Louisiana residents to be lazy, thieving, corrupt, and unworthy of the aid and sympathy the rest of the nation has given them. It's sad.
8 posted on 09/26/2005 6:06:19 AM PDT by monday
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To: Ellesu

Given the current rate of wetlands erosion, how long before New Orleans is ocean front? The wetlands have arguably/traditionally protected NO from storm surge. You have to question the sanity of investing billions of dollars in rebuilding a city in a sinking hole. We need the port of course, but build on high ground.


9 posted on 09/26/2005 6:13:42 AM PDT by IamConservative (Man will occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of the time will pick himself up and carry on)
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To: Ellesu
Here in Lafayette, we have been very fortunate with regards to damages from both Katrina and Rita...The downside is that our infrastructure was generally inadequate for the pre-storm population, and now with the influx of relocated citizens, we have experienced app. 15-20 years population growth in in less than a month. Many of these people are quickly integrating into the private sector, and (not being a fan of public schools) I have to admit that from what I've seen, the schools have done great work accepting, enrolling and driving on with their schedules.

I have no doubt the private sector will do well: a number of businesses have relocated here from NO since Katrina and are up and running and the labor pool is healthy...I'm just watching to see how the local gov't responds and how long it takes to mature in reaction...

10 posted on 09/26/2005 6:15:11 AM PDT by Joe 6-pack (Que me amat, amet et canem meum.)
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To: Ellesu

Louisiana is starting to get on my nerves! Request after request for Federal dollars.

A legitimate question would be what about the billions raised by the private charities...how is that money going to be used to help the evacuees.

Surely using that $$$ should minimize some of the need for Federal dollars directed toward individuals.


11 posted on 09/26/2005 6:21:35 AM PDT by dawn53
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To: auntyfemenist

All bags of money going to Louisiana should contain exploding ink packets. ;-)


12 posted on 09/26/2005 6:32:55 AM PDT by auboy (Alabama The Beautiful)
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