El Dorado News-Times

17 years post-Katrina, New Orleans-area protection­s complete

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Seventeen years after Hurricane Katrina flooded New Orleans, the Army Corps of Engineers has completed an extensive system of floodgates, strengthen­ed levees and other protection­s.

The 130-mile (210-kilometer) ring is designed to hold out storm surge of about 30 feet (9 meters) around New Orleans and suburbs in three parishes.

It is “the largest civil works project in the Corps’ history and is the result of nearly two decades of hard work and collaborat­ion at the local, state and federal level,” Gov. John Bel Edwards said during a symbolic handoff to the state Friday. “The people of New Orleans have experience­d the worst Mother Nature has to offer, and with the completion of the system, they’ll be protected by the best of engineerin­g, design and hurricane protection.”

The Atlantic hurricane season begins June 1, and federal meteorolog­ists predict it will be busy.

Congress provided $14.5 billion for what is formally called the Hurricane and Storm Damage Risk Reduction System and related projects. It includes two features the Corps describes as the world’s largest — a pumping station and a 1.8-mile (2.9-kilometer) barrier that can be closed against storm surges.

The state must pay about a third of the cost, The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate noted.

The levees stood up to Hurricane Ida in 2021, though some suburbs outside the system flooded.

By 2011, the system could protect against a storm with a 1% chance of occurring in any given year, according to the Corps.

Features added since then include armoring levees to prevent erosion and scouring when stronger storm surges rise above their tops, and three permanent canal closures and pumps.

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