Huge, stalled Mississippi River diversion won't affect Plaquemines flood insurance: FEMA [The Advocate, Baton Rouge, La.]
Mar. 5—The Federal Emergency Management Agency has concluded that construction of the
The announcement blunts one of the main arguments made by residents and officials seeking to block the diversion, which has been paused since last week. It contradicts an email message sent to parish officials on
The diversion "may result in changes affecting the accuracy of the current flood risk identified on the regulatory maps in
The email was cited in the lawsuit
The suit has halted construction of the diversion for the time being.
In response to questions from The Times-Picayune, a senior Region 6
"
"In talking to the parish and CPRA on
But in a statement Monday evening,
The parish insists that under state law, the project must comply with parish permitting, including assurances it will not affect flood insurance maps.
"Rest assured there will be negative consequences if this project is not properly permitted," the statement said. "The parish is well aware of the laws and the consequences of not following those laws, which include altered flood mapping, higher flood insurance premiums, continued premium increases" and other consequences.
Officials with CPRA and the office of Gov.
The CPRA has a similar Freedom of Information Act request pending with
In its own suit filed in
However, a decision by Judge
The parish stop-work order was initially issued on
'We are committed' to building
The 2-mile-long concrete structure will divert up to 75,000 cubic feet per second of freshwater and sediment from the
The diversion is expected to be shut down whenever a hurricane or tropical storm threatens the area, and thus would not likely cause storm surges to be elevated along the parish levees. Some levee segments are designed to protect from a surge associated with a so-called 100-year storm — one that has a 1% chance of occurring in any given year.
However, part of the area that will be within the path of the diversion is protected by a lower, 50-year levee.
The land created by the diversion at 50 years also is expected to help reduce surge levels by as much as a half-foot along several sections of levees on the river's west bank, north of the diversion's outflow area.
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