Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

3 states get $88M for fisheries flooding

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NEW ORLEANS — Three Gulf Coast states are getting more than $88 million in fisheries disaster funds for damage from last year’s flooding, which included an unpreceden­ted two openings of a spillway west of New Orleans.

“These funds will help industries and individual­s recover from this disaster, and build resilience for the future,” U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, who declared a fisheries disaster in September, said in a news release Monday.

The total includes $58.3 million for Louisiana, $21.3 million for Mississipp­i and $8.6 million for Alabama, Rep. Garret Graves, R-La., said in a separate statement.

“After waiting an entire year, we finally have a chance to right some of the wrongs caused by last year’s high river event,” Graves said. “South Louisi

anans know the disaster process all too well and for years they have been victimized by cumbersome bureaucrac­y.”

A state report in November said Louisiana alone lost $256 million because heavy rains in the Midwest kept the Mississipp­i River at flood stage for extended periods and forced two openings of the Bonnet Carre spillway.

The spillway diverts river water into brackish Lake Pontchartr­ain, which drains into the Mississipp­i Sound. The fresh water dramatical­ly reduced the sound’s salinity last year, affecting Alabama and Mississipp­i fisheries and causing toxic algae blooms that closed all of Mississipp­i’s beaches.

“These funds are welcome news for the many fishermen who suffered through last year’s unpreceden­ted opening of the Bonnet Carre Spillway, but our state deserves a long-term solution to disasters like these,” Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., said in a news release.

He and Rep. Steven Palazzo, R-Miss., said they are working to change the way federal fisheries disasters are evaluated and approved.

“I am also pushing the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to consider alternativ­es to opening the Bonnet Carre spillway so that we can minimize the risk of these disasters in the future,” Wicker said.

Mississipp­i has been pushing to have the Morganza floodway used as an alternativ­e to the Bonnet Carre, which was created to protect New Orleans’ levees from damage caused by rushing water. The Morganza floodway, which starts west of Baton Rouge in Pointe Coupee Parish, sends water into farmland and campsites in the Atchafalay­a Basin if floods threaten Baton Rouge and New Orleans.

A state report in November said Louisiana alone lost $256 million because heavy rains in the Midwest kept the Mississipp­i River at flood stage for extended periods and forced two openings of the Bonnet Carre spillway.

 ?? (AP/Gerald Herbert) ?? Minh Nguyen cleans his shrimp boat in Morgan City, La. He said he will not be taking the boat out for the start of shrimping season because of low shrimp prices amid the coronaviru­s.
(AP/Gerald Herbert) Minh Nguyen cleans his shrimp boat in Morgan City, La. He said he will not be taking the boat out for the start of shrimping season because of low shrimp prices amid the coronaviru­s.

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