News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinenature-healthenvironmentkatrina-hurricane-2005 — Viewing Item


Levees didnt act appropriately { November 3 2005 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/02/AR2005110202775.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/02/AR2005110202775.html

Levees' Construction Faulted In New Orleans Flood Inquiry
Contractors' Misdeeds May Have Led to Breaches, Panel Is Told

By Joby Warrick and Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, November 3, 2005; A03



Investigators yesterday added a possible new explanation for some of the flooding that devastated New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina: contractors who may have skimped on construction materials in building the city's floodwalls and levees.

Experts probing the cause of the flooding have received at least a dozen allegations of major cheating by builders and possibly others involved in levee construction, two investigators said in testimony before a Senate panel. They said these were potentially criminal acts that may well have contributed to the collapse of the city's flood-control system on Aug. 29.

The allegations, although not proved, have prompted investigators to request a meeting next week with federal law enforcement officials to share details of the reports.

The list of alleged misdeeds includes the use of weak, poorly compacted soils in levee construction and deliberate skimping on steel pilings used to anchor floodwalls to the ground.

"What we have right now are stories of malfeasance and some field evidence that seems to correlate with those stories," said Raymond B. Seed, leader of one of three independent teams of experts investigating why the levees failed. Seed, an engineering professor at the University of California at Berkeley, said it is not yet clear how big a role such acts played in the failure of the levees.

The reports emerged from one of two Senate hearings held yesterday to examine why New Orleans's levee system failed so spectacularly, and how it might be rebuilt to prevent catastrophic flooding by the next hurricane.

New Orleans Mayor C. Ray Nagin asked President Bush and Congress to commit the nation to rebuilding his city's levee system to withstand a Category 5 hurricane, calling it necessary to win back workers and businesses. The existing 200-mile system was designed to withstand a Category 3 storm.

"We can do much better. We definitely can build to a world-class standard that we don't have today," said Nagin, citing storm barrier systems in the Netherlands, United Kingdom and Italy.

Most of the devastation caused by Katrina was inflicted not by high winds, but by massive flooding that resulted when the city's levees breached. Four major breaches and dozens of smaller ones occurred on the morning of Aug. 29, sending water surging across 80 percent of New Orleans and swamping an estimated 100,000 homes. About 1,000 people died.

The levees were designed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and were built primarily by contractors hired by the Corps. The Corps has launched its own investigation of the levee failures; Paul Mlakar, a Corps scientist leading the inquiry, said though it is too early to draw firm conclusions, he promised a thorough investigation, with final results in July. The Corps is also cooperating with the independent investigations by the state of Louisiana, the American Society of Civil Engineers, and the University of California team, which is funded by the National Science Foundation.

Leaders of the three teams yesterday presented preliminary findings of their two-month probe to the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. In recent weeks, findings by the independent investigators have pointed increasingly to human error -- flaws in design, construction, or both -- as a probable culprit in the breaches of two key floodwalls along Lake Pontchartrain.

Although Army Corps officials initially suggested that the 17th Street and London Avenue canals were simply overwhelmed by Katrina's storm surge, the new findings confirmed that the two floodwalls were never overtopped by rising waters. Instead, the concrete walls toppled when their earthen foundations weakened and gave way.

"Failure of the 17th Street and London Avenue canals was due to a design that did not take into account the very weak nature of the soils," Ivor Van Heerden, an engineering professor and leader of the Louisiana team, said in prepared testimony. "The design criteria of these levees was not exceeded."

In the eastern part of New Orleans, which suffered the greatest impact, levees were overtoppedby the storm surge. Still, poor design may have made floodwalls more likely to fail, Van Heerden said.

"Much of the flooding of New Orleans was due to man's follies," he said. "Not to have giventhe residents the security of proper levees is inexcusable."

Nagin, in his testimony before the Senate Environmental and Public Works Committee, said: "We need to rebuild this great city. . . . Now is the time for this country to make a commitment to upgrade our levy systems and associated protection with that." Existing Corps plans, he said, "will provide little comfort in a city devastated by a storm and whose flood protection is not as strong as it should be."

Committee members expressed concern at the slow pace of federal decisions. "People need absolute assurance that the level of hurricane and flood protection will be much greater than before Hurricane Katrina," Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) said.

The testimony underscored the centrality of the city's shattered, 200-mile levee system to both the Aug. 29 Hurricane Katrina disaster and to the future of New Orleans. Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco and Nagin have said a prerequisite to any rebuilding plan is restoring business confidence that the levee system will protect the city in future storms.

The Corps has pledged to rebuild levees to Category 3 levels, or 17 feet high, by the start of the next hurricane season, in June. Existing levees were built to 15 feet, but sections had settled to 12 or 13 feet, Nagin said.

The White House on Friday redirected $1.6 billion in untapped Katrina relief funds to levee reconstruction, plus $250 million to restore coastal buffers and wetlands.

But state officials have pushed a $14 billion plan to shore up the coast and marshlands, which absorb storm surges. Rebuilding levees to Category 5 levels could cost $2.5 billion, the Corps has estimated, and the state has requested as much as $20 billion to expand defenses and to include storm barrier and drainage systems.

New Orleans is facing a "critical point" as businesses decide whether to return, Nagin said. He said 80 percent of electricity and 60 percent of gas service have been restored to certain areas. About 150,000 people work in the city and about 75,000 reside overnight, compared with a pre-storm population of 480,000.

© 2005 The Washington Post Company



21 mysterious deaths during katrina
Airlines planes buses canceled during evacuation { September 1 2005 }
All parts of new orleans included in rebuilding plan { January 8 2006 }
Anger mounts at federal response { September 5 2005 }
Big oil loots new orleans { September 2 2005 }
Bodies in new orleans left uncollected { October 27 2005 }
Brown removed from fema
Bush admits serious deficiencies in katrina response
Bush chertoff warned of levees before katrina
Bush fema hire knew arabian horses { September 8 2005 }
Bush list of katrina charities are mainly religious groups
Bush plans to blame envinromentalists for katrina { September 16 2005 }
Bush rallies for robertson to get katrina charity { September 7 2005 }
Bush rebuffs castro offer for hurricane relief
Canadian rescuers in lousiana first { September 7 2005 }
Chavez offers victims food oil and water { September 2 2005 }
Cheney heckler is gulfport physician who lost house
Cheney heckler tells story on ebay
Cheney told to fuck himself in mississippi
Chertoff admits lapses in katrina responses
Chertoff delayed federal response memo shows
Conservative paper criticizes bush
Debit card idea from fema scrapped
Democrats secretly replaced black mayor { May 21 2006 }
Dismantling fema was a disaster { September 6 2005 }
District purposely flooded to alleviate another { September 4 2005 }
Engineering probe into levee failure { October 10 2005 }
Evacuation ordered from toxic timebomb { September 7 2005 }
Exxonmobile taking 110m a day { September 7 2005 }
Federal reserve downplays katrina fears
Feds hinder local response and rescue { September 6 2005 }
Fema blocks journalists from reporting
Fema destroyed by homeland security { August 30 2005 }
Fema director joked partied as katrina churned
Fema informed levee breach earlier
Fema planning and response faulted { September 2 2005 }
Fema promotes pat robertson diamonds { September 9 2005 }
Fema sent to sexual harrassment class instead
Fema to end paying for victims hotel
Former first lady hurricane donation aids bush son { March 23 2006 }
Gop bankcruptcy law hurts katrina survivors
Governor says troops from iraq know how to kill
Guardsman on hold with no mission
Halliburton tapped for katrina repairs { September 5 2005 }
Hospital may have euthanized patients during hurricane
Hospitals run out of food and power
Hurricane destructiveness increased over last 30yrs
Hurricane donation benefited president bush brother { March 25 2006 }
Instead of levee funding bush gave pork { September 8 2005 }
Katrina causes 44 oil spills in southeast louisiana
Katrina will turn new orleans into cesspool { August 29 2005 }
Lake water courses into mid city before hurricane
Levee leaks ignored before katrina hit
Levees didnt act appropriately { November 3 2005 }
Looting cartoon [jpg]
Louisiana superdome situation ghastly { September 1 2005 }
Louisiana vunerable from loss of wetlands { August 28 2005 }
Lousiana officials indicted for emergency fund misuse { September 17 2005 }
Major oil spills in mississippi river
Media outlets exaggerated some of new orleans woes { September 28 2005 }
Mexican military joins effort { September 8 2005 }
Military occupation turns new orleans into war zone { September 6 2005 }
Military threatens shooting journalists in new orleans { September 9 2005 }
Mississippi suffering overshadowed in news
Mississippi troops are refused leave to help families
Navy pilots who rescue victims are reprimanded { September 7 2005 }
New orleans convention center [jpg]
New orleans crime after katrina exaggerated
New orleans evacuation money misused
New orleans facing environmental disaster from hurricane
New orleans resident compares evacuation to nazis { September 12 2005 }
New orleans residents traumatized by police { September 12 2005 }
New orleans rocked by explosions
Neworleans housing demolition protesters clash { November 2007 }
Oil spills from katrina may be worst on record { September 16 2005 }
Potential infectious diseases outbreaks worries doctors
Presidents approval dips below 40 perc { September 10 2005 }
Private mercanaries protect rich in new orleans { September 12 2005 }
Reports of raped babies were ruinous rumors
Reports of rapes and murders were exaggerated { September 27 2005 }
Sewage in floodwaters carries disease { September 1 2005 }
Soldiers assaulted hurricane victim { September 7 2005 }
Storm survivors must show breasts for rescue
Superdome evacuations enter second day
Thousands dead and dying in new orleans { September 4 2005 }
Tons of ice for katrina victims went nowhere { October 2 2005 }
Troops ordered shoot to kill
Warning of unprecendented storm day earlier
Water pollution concern in new orleans

Files Listed: 89



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple