Current:Home > NewsNew Orleans Levees Passed Hurricane Ida's Test, But Some Suburbs Flooded -TradeBridge
New Orleans Levees Passed Hurricane Ida's Test, But Some Suburbs Flooded
View
Date:2025-04-11 12:18:39
NEW ORLEANS — The levees, floodwalls and floodgates that protect New Orleans held up against Hurricane Ida's fury, passing their toughest test since the federal government spent billions of dollars to upgrade a system that catastrophically failed when Hurricane Katrina struck 16 years ago.
But strengthening the flood protection system in New Orleans couldn't spare some neighboring communities from Ida's destructive storm surge. Many residents of LaPlace, a western suburb where work only recently began on a long-awaited levee project, had to be rescued from rising floodwaters.
Marcie Jacob Hebert evacuated before Ida, but she has no doubt that the storm flooded her LaPlace home based on what she has seen and heard from neighbors. Her house didn't flood in 2005 during Katrina, but it took on nearly 2 feet (60 centimeters) of water during Hurricane Isaac in 2012.
"We haven't had these problems until everybody else's levees worked," said Hebert, 46. "It may not be the only factor, but I sure do think it contributes."
Louisiana State University professor emeritus Craig Colten, who has taught historical geography, said most of the New Orleans levee systems has been in place for decades. He said the flooding in LaPlace can be explained by wind direction, not by any floodwater diverted from New Orleans.
"Isaac was really a minor storm in terms of wind speed, but it did drive water into Lake Pontchartrain to the western edge, toward LaPlace, as this storm did. And that just is going to pile water up where LaPlace is," Colten said. "I haven't seen anything that was done since Katrina that's really going to make a huge difference."
Gov. John Bel Edwards said a preliminary survey of levees across Louisiana showed they did exactly as they intended and held water out.
"We don't believe there is a single levee anywhere now that actually breached or failed. There were a few smaller levees that were overtopped to a degree for a certain period of time," Edwards said.
Two flood protection districts oversee the system in Orleans, Jefferson and St. Bernard parishes. Neither district reported any breaches or overtopping of levees.
"The system performed as designed," said Nicholas Cali, regional director of the Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority-West, which oversees the west bank of Orleans and Jefferson parishes.
The Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority-East, which covers St. Bernard Parish and most of Orleans and Jefferson parishes, also planned to inspect its system Monday but hadn't found any problems, according to regional director Kelli Chandler.
Tulane University history professor Andy Horowitz, author of "Katrina: A History, 1915-2015," said it is "unequivocally great news" that the levees held up against Ida's surge. That doesn't mean that a city as vulnerable as New Orleans is safe from flooding "in the face of a changing climate," he added
"It does not mean that the lesson of Hurricane Ida is that metropolitan New Orleans has adequate hurricane protection. It means it had adequate protection against this storm surge," Horowitz said. "As the system is challenged by stronger and more frequent hurricanes. I think many experts are very concerned about the rather low level of protection that New Orleans has."
A federal judge in New Orleans ruled in 2009 that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' failure to properly maintain and operate the Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet was a significant cause of the catastrophic flooding during Katrina. Levee failures near Lake Pontchartrain also flooded New Orleans neighborhoods.
After Katrina, the federal government spent $14.5 billion on projects designed to enhance protection from storm surge and flooding in New Orleans and surrounding suburbs south of Lake Pontchartrain. Starting with a giant surge barrier east of the city, the system is a 130-mile (210-kilometer) ring built to hold out storm surge of about 30 feet (9 meters).
Work recently began on a levee project to protect tens of thousands of residents of LaPlace and other communities outside New Orleans' levee system. That project is not projected to be completed until 2024.
"I'm glad they're building us a levee, but I worry about what happens to the next group further to the west," Hebert said. "The water has got to go somewhere. We can't just keep funneling it from person to person, place to place."
Bernardo Fallas, a spokesperson for Phillips 66, said the company did not immediately have information about whether a reported levee collapse in Plaquemines Parish affected its Alliance Refinery in Belle Chasse. Fallas said the refinery has been shut down since Saturday, ahead of Ida's arrival.
"We will proceed to conduct a post-storm assessment of the refinery when it is safe to do so," Fallas said.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- 4-year-old American Abigail Mor Edan among third group of hostages released by Hamas
- 'Today, your son is my son': A doctor's words offer comfort before surgery
- Wilders ally overseeing first stage of Dutch coalition-building quits over fraud allegation
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Taylor Swift Meets Family of Fan Who Died in Brazil
- Texas CEO and his 2 children were among 4 killed in wreck before Thanksgiving
- Live updates | Israel and Hamas prepare for fourth swap as mediators seek to extend cease-fire
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- 2024 NFL draft first-round order: New England Patriots in contention for top pick
Ranking
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- 1 student killed, 1 hospitalized in stabbing at North Carolina high school
- Tesla sues Swedish agency as striking workers stop delivering license plates for its new vehicles
- Police arrest suspect in possible 'hate-motivated' shooting of three Palestinian students
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- What Lou Holtz thinks of Ohio State's loss to Michigan: 'They aren't real happy'
- Russia launches its largest drone attack on Ukraine since start of invasion
- Chill spilling into the US this week with below-average temperatures for most
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
The Excerpt podcast: The return of the bison, a wildlife success story
Putin signs Russia’s largest national budget, bolstering military spending
Representatives of European and Arab countries meet in Barcelona to discuss the Israel-Hamas war
'Most Whopper
Paris Hilton Details “Beautiful” New Chapter After Welcoming Baby No. 2 With Carter Reum
Indiana couple, 2 dogs, die when single-engine plane crashes in western Michigan after takeoff
Jean Knight, Grammy-nominated singer of 'Mr. Big Stuff,' dies at 80: 'Iconic soulstress'