Corps Finally Reveals $2.8 Million Flood Study | Jackson Free Press | Jackson, MS

Corps Finally Reveals $2.8 Million Flood Study

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A Laurel newspaper will close its doors this Thursday.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has finally released its 2007 Pearl River Watershed Feasibility Report to the public. The flood-prevention study has been long under wraps by the corps under the argument that it was in a "deliberative process."

Essentially, the study consists of the corps' comparison between a levees-only plan and a project devised by Jackson oilman John McGowan and Waggoner Engineering to flood the Pearl River between Hinds and Rankin counties and create two lakes. The Two Lakes plan has evolved under McGowan into its more recent incarnation proposing a 4,133-acre lake containing 36 islands ranging in size from 1.6 acres to 40 acres.

Douglas Kamien, chief of the Project Management Division of the Corps' Vicksburg District, said in an Aug. 11, 2009, letter to the Rankin-Hinds Pearl River Flood and Drainage Control District that "because the study has not been acted upon" by the levee board in more than two years, it has "lost the merits of protection sought by the deliberative process privilege." Kamien wrote that, under these circumstances, the Corps could do no foreseeable harm through releasing the study to the public.

The study, which cost $2.8 million, appeared on the Corps' web site this month. On Aug. 10, the Rankin-Hinds Pearl River Flood and Drainage Control District submitted a resolution requesting the Corps provide modifications of project schedules and costs of various flood-control propositions, including the McGowan plan. The board also requested the corps consider "all reasonable alternatives" to the McGowan plan and the Corps' own preferred levees-only plan.

On the same day, the board agreed to pull its selection of a locally preferred plan involving a smaller and less ambitious lake plan than the one featured in the corps' study, with board Chairman Billy Orr explaining that the Corps should move forward with its deliberations free of the local board's bias toward any particular plan.

The board also agreed to share the costs of upcoming modifications of the 2007 study with the Corps, not to exceed $50,000.

Levee board attorney Trudy Allen would not release a copy of the board's resolution to the Jackson Free Press on the day of the board's decision, even though the board issued their decision in a public vote. The JFP instead received a copy of the resolution from Jackson Mayor Harvey Johnson Jr., who is a board member.

In its 2007 study, the Corps included every estimated cost requirement for the Two Lakes Project advocated by McGowan and Waggoner Engineering, including flood and environmental mitigation. Total costs amounted to a staggering $1.5 billion, much of which would have to be financed on a local level--likely derived through property taxes. Interest on the financing, as well as annual operation and maintenance, amounted to almost $9 million by corps' estimates.

McGowan, who criticized the Corps for not releasing the study, says the federal agency inflated costs, and says he can build a project containing two lakes for $336 million to $400 million. Engineer Robert Muller, who works with McGowan, told the JFP in May that the price fluctuates because the plan has yet to be submitted through the Environmental Protection Agency's vetting process--the National Environmental Policy Act, or NEPA, which considers all potential costs.

The report also makes clear that the Corps seriously considered a lake plan strictly at the behest of political forces, stating that former U.S. Rep. Chip Pickering, R-Miss., pressed the issue of the local lake plan with then-Mississippi Economic Development Authority Director Leland Speed--a lake advocate--and representatives of the local levee board in 2006. The Corps report points out that even Pickering recognized at the time that the lakes plan, then referred to as the Lower Lakes Plan, "would probably not be justified economically" by the federal government, and that local funding would be needed to finance the brunt of the endeavor.

Previous Comments

ID
151073
Comment

Where can I access the study online?

Author
annyimiss
Date
2009-08-20T17:22:43-06:00
ID
151074
Comment

Here it is; linking it above now. This is BIG news that they finally released it. Long overdue.

Author
DonnaLadd
Date
2009-08-20T17:25:58-06:00
ID
151089
Comment

How much ya wanna bet that neither the CL nor Big TV will pick up on the Pickering angle?

Author
blogtw4
Date
2009-08-21T05:45:55-06:00
ID
151093
Comment

What interests me is Speed's involvement. And I trust the Corps estimate of costs much more than a land developer. Do you want a glorified realtor building your lake?

Author
Ironghost
Date
2009-08-21T07:35:54-06:00
ID
151094
Comment

Thanks for updating the link, I began reading it last night. For a report about too much water, it is pretty dry. Is there any local group looking at these flood mitigation ideas objectively? What are the positions of the local and national conservation and environmental groups?

Author
annyimiss
Date
2009-08-21T07:48:48-06:00
ID
151095
Comment

Does anyone care about what another dam system will do to the Pearl Wildlife Management area down south? Artificial lakes do nothing but line the pockets of politicians and developers, at the expense of the environment. It's time to stop abritarily messing with mother nature.

Author
Gorilla33
Date
2009-08-21T08:13:10-06:00
ID
151097
Comment

annyimiss, see see the JFP's Pearl River archive; tons of substantive reading there:

Author
DonnaLadd
Date
2009-08-21T08:29:03-06:00
ID
151103
Comment

Just read the conclusion only and it is not a big surprise. Estimated costs for the Lower Lakes Plan is 1.4 billion dollars with a flood reduction benefit/cost ratio of .2 (20 cents flood protection benefit for every dollar spent). Report mentions that economic development benefits are not factored into flood protection cost/benefit calculations. Also mentions that the levies only plan does not have big support but is not hampered by strong opposition either, whereas there is strong opposition to the lakes plan. There are environmental downsides with both plans but the lakes plan has a much bigger environmental downside.

Author
gwilly
Date
2009-08-21T10:41:13-06:00
ID
151106
Comment

To me it looks like the Corps studied the Lower Lakes plan rather than the Two Lakes plan. Or are they one and the same?

Author
QB
Date
2009-08-21T12:21:21-06:00
ID
151107
Comment

No need to play dumb, QB. ;-)

Author
DonnaLadd
Date
2009-08-21T12:39:53-06:00

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