Is Bush to Blame for New Orleans Flooding?
He did slash funding for levee projects. But the Army Corps of 
Engineers says Katrina was just too strong.

September 2, 2005

Summary

 

Some critics are suggesting President Bush was as least partly 
responsible for the flooding in New Orleans. In a widely quoted 
opinion piece, former Clinton aide Sidney Blumenthal says that "the 
damage wrought by the hurricane may not entirely be the result of an 
act of nature," and cites years of reduced funding for federal flood-
control projects around New Orleans.

Our fact-checking confirms that Bush indeed cut funding for projects 
specifically designed to strengthen levees. Indeed, local officials 
had been complaining about that for years.

It is not so clear whether the money Bush cut from levee projects 
would have made any difference, however, and we're not in a position 
to judge that. The Army Corps of Engineers – which is under the 
President's command and has its own reputation to defend – insists 
that Katrina was just too strong, and that even if the levee project 
had been completed it was only designed to withstand a category 3 
hurricane.

 

Analysis

 

We suspect this subject will get much more attention in Congress and 
elsewhere in the coming months. Without blaming or absolving Bush, 
here are the key facts we've been able to establish so far:

Bush Cut Funding

Blumenthal's much-quoted article in salon.com carried the 
headline: "No one can say they didn't see it coming." And it said 
the Bush administration cut flood-control funding "to pay for the 
Iraq war."

He continues:

Blumenthal: With its main levee broken, the evacuated city of New 
Orleans has become part of the Gulf of Mexico . But the damage 
wrought by the hurricane may not entirely be the result of an act of 
nature.

…By 2003 the federal funding for the flood control project 
essentially dried up as it was drained into the Iraq war. In 2004, 
the Bush administration cut funding requested by the New Orleans 
district of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for holding back the 
waters of Lake Pontchartrain by more than 80 percent. Additional 
cuts at the beginning of this year…forced the New Orleans district 
of the Corps to impose a hiring freeze.

We can confirm that funding was cut. The project most closely 
associated with preventing flooding in New Orleans was the U.S. Army 
Corps of Engineers' Hurricane Protection Project, which 
was "designed to protect residents between Lake Pontchartrain and 
the Missisippi River levee from surges in Lake Pontchartrain," 
according to a fact sheet from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 
(The fact sheet is dated May 23, long before Katrina). The multi-
decade project involved building new levees, enlarging existing 
levees, and updating other protections like floodwalls. It was 
scheduled to be completed in 2015.

Over at least the past several budget cycles, the Corps has received 
substantially less money than it requested for the Lake 
Pontchartrain project, even though Congress restored much of the 
money the President cut from the amount the Corps requested.

In fiscal year 2004, the Corps requested $11 million for the 
project. The President's budget allocated $3 million, and Congress 
furnished $5.5 million. Similarly, in fiscal 2005 the Corps 
requested $22.5 million, which the President cut to $3.9 million in 
his budget. Congress increased that to $5.5 million. "This was 
insufficient to fund new construction contracts," according to a 
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' project fact sheet. The Corps reported 
that "seven new contracts are being delayed due to lack funds" [sic].

The President proposed $3 million for the project in the budget for 
fiscal 2006, which begins Oct. 1. "This will be insufficient to fund 
new construction projects," the fact sheet stated. It says the 
Corps "could spend $20 million if funds were provided." The Corps of 
Engineers goes on to say:

Army Corps of Engineers, May 23: In Orleans Parish, two major pump 
stations are threatened by hurricane storm surges. Major contracts 
need to be awarded to provide fronting protection for them. Also, 
several levees have settled and need to be raised to provide the 
design protection. The current funding shortfalls in fiscal year 
2005 and fiscal year 2006 will prevent the Corps from addressing 
these pressing needs.

The Corps has seen cutbacks beyond those affecting just the Lake 
Pontchartrain project. The Corps oversees SELA, or the Southeast 
Louisiana Urban Flood Control project, which Congress authorized 
after six people died from flooding in May 1995. The Times-Picayune 
newspaper of New Orleans reported that, overall, the Corps had spent 
$430 million on flood control and hurricane prevention, with local 
governments offering more than $50 million toward the project. 
Nonetheless, "at least $250 million in crucial projects remained," 
the newspaper said. 

In the past five years, the amount of money spent on all Corps 
construction projects in the New Orleans district has declined by 44 
percent, according to the New Orleans CityBusiness newspaper, from 
$147 million in 2001 to $82 million in the current fiscal year, 
which ends Sept. 30.

A long history of complaints

Local officials had long complained that funding for hurricane 
protection projects was inadequate:

October 13, 2001: The New Orleans Times-Picayune reported 
that "federal officials are postponing new projects of the Southeast 
Louisiana Flood Control Program, or SELA, fearing that federal 
budget constraints and the cost of the war on terrorism may create a 
financial pinch for the program." The paper went on to report 
that "President Bush's budget proposed $52 million" for SELA in the 
2002 fiscal year. The House approved $57 million and the Senate 
approved $62 million. Still, "the $62 million would be well below 
the $80 million that corps officials estimate is needed to pay for 
the next 12 months of construction, as well as design expenses for 
future projects."
April 24, 2004: The Times-Picayune reported that "less money is 
available to the Army Corps of Engineers to build levees and water 
projects in the Missisippi River valley this year and next year." 
Meanwhile, an engineer who had direct the Louisiana Coastal Area 
Ecosystem Restoration Study – a study of how to restore coastal 
wetlands areas in order to provide a bugger from hurricane storm 
surges – was sent to Iraq "to oversee the restoration of the `Garden 
of Eden' wetlands at the mouth of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers," 
for which President Bush's 2005 gave $100 million.
June 8, 2004: Walter Maestri, emergency management chief for 
Jefferson Parish, told the Times-Picayune:
Walter Maestri: It appears that the money has been moved in the 
president's budget to handle homeland security and the war in Iraq , 
and I suppose that's the price we pay. Nobody locally is happy that 
the levees can't be finished, and we are doing everything we can to 
make the case that this is a security issue for us.

September 22, 2004: The Times-Picayune reported that a pilot study 
on raising the height of the levees surrounding New Orleans had been 
completed and generated enough information for a second study 
necessary to estimate the cost of doing so. The Bush 
administration "ordered the New Orleans district office" of the Army 
Corps of Engineers "not to begin any new studies, and the 2005 
budget no longer includes the needed money."
June 6, 2005: The New Orleans CityBusiness newspaper reported that 
the New Orleans district of the Corps was preparing for a $71.2 
million reduction in overall funding for the fiscal year beginning 
in October. That would have been the largest single-year funding 
loss ever. They noted that money "was so tight" that "the New 
Orleans district, which employs 1,300 people, instituted a hiring 
freeze last month on all positions," which was "the first of its 
kind in about 10 years."
Would Increased Funding Have Prevented Flooding?

Blumenthal implies that increased funding might have helped to 
prevent the catastrophic flooding that New Orleans now faces. The 
White House denies that, and the Corps of Engineers says that even 
the levee project they were working to complete was not designed to 
withstand a storm of Katrina's force.

White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan, at a press briefing on 
September 1, dismissed the idea that the President inadequately 
funded flood control projects in New Orleans :

McClellan: Flood control has been a priority of this administration 
from day one. We have dedicated an additional $300 million over the 
last few years for flood control in New Orleans and the surrounding 
area. And if you look at the overall funding levels for the Army 
Corps of Engineers, they have been slightly above $4.5 billion that 
has been signed by the President.

Q: Local people were asking for more money over the last couple of 
years. They were quoted in local papers in 2003 and 2004, are saying 
that they were told by federal officials there wasn't enough money 
because it was going to Iraq expenditures.

McClellan: You might want to talk to General Strock, who is the 
commander of the Army Corps of Engineers, because I think he's 
talked to some reporters already and talked about some of these 
issues. I think some people maybe have tried to make a suggestion or 
imply that certain funding would have prevented the flooding from 
happening, and he has essentially said there's been nothing to 
suggest that whatsoever, and it's been more of a design issue with 
the levees.

We asked the Corps about that "design issue." David Hewitt, a 
spokesman for the Army Corps of Engineers, said McClellan was 
referring to the fact that "the levees were designed for a category 
3 hurricane." He told us that, consequently, "when it became 
apparent that this was a category 5 hurricane, an evacuation of the 
city was ordered." (A category 3 storm has sustained winds of no 
more than 130 miles per hour, while a category 5 storm has winds 
exceeding 155 miles per hour. Katrina had winds of 160 mph as it 
approached shore, but later weakened to winds of 140 mph as it made 
landfall, making it a strong category 4 storm, according to the 
National Hurricane Center.)

The levee upgrade project around Lake Pontchartrain was only 60 to 
90 percent complete across most areas of New Orleans as of the end 
of May, according to the Corps' May 23 fact sheet. Still, even if it 
had been completed, the project's goal was protecting New Orleans 
from storm surges up to "a fast-moving Category 3 hurricane," 
according to the fact sheet.

We don't know whether the levees would have done better had the work 
been completed. But the Corps says that even a completed levee 
project wasn't designed for the storm that actually occurred.

Nobody anticipated breach of the levees?

In an interview on ABC's "Good Morning America" on September 1, 
President Bush said:

Bush: I don't think anyone anticipated breach of the levees …Now 
we're having to deal with it, and will.

Bush is technically correct that a "breach" wasn't anticipated by 
the Corps, but that's doesn't mean the flooding wasn't forseen. It 
was. But the Corps thought it would happen differently, from water 
washing over the levees, rather than cutting wide breaks in them.

Greg Breerword, a deputy district engineer for project management 
with the Army Corps of Engineers, told the New York Times:

Breerword: We knew if it was going to be a Category 5, some levees 
and some flood walls would be overtopped. We never did think they 
would actually be breached.

And while Bush is also technically correct that the Corps did 
not "anticipate" a breach – in the sense that they believed it was a 
likely event – at least some in the Corps thought a breach was a 
possibility worth examining.

According to the Times-Picayune, early in Bush's first term FEMA 
director Joe Allbaugh ordered a sophisticated computer simulation of 
what would happen if a category 5 storm hit New Orleans. Joseph 
Suhayda, an engineer at Louisana State University who worked on the 
project, described to the newspaper in 2002 what the simulation 
showed could happen:

Subhayda: Another scenario is that some part of the levee would 
fail. It's not something that's expected. But erosion occurs, and as 
levees broke, the break will get wider and wider. The water will 
flow through the city and stop only when it reaches the next higher 
thing. The most continuous barrier is the south levee, along the 
river. That's 25 feet high, so you'll see the water pile up on the 
river levee.

Whether or not a "breach" was "anticipated," the fact is that many 
individuals have been warning for decades about the threat of 
flooding that a hurricane could pose to a set below sea level and 
sandwiched between major waterways. A Federal Emergency Management 
Agency (FEMA) report from before September 11, 2001 detailed the 
three most likely catastrophic disasters that could happen in the 
United States: a terrorist attack in New York, a strong earthquake 
in San Francisco, and a hurricane strike in New Orleans. In 2002, 
New Orleans officials held the simulation of what would happen in a 
category 5 storm. Walter Maestri, the emergency coordinator of 
Jefferson Parish in New Orleans , recounted the outcome to PBS' NOW 
With Bill Moyers:

Maestri, September 2002: Well, when the exercise was completed it 
was evidence that we were going to lose a lot of people. We changed 
the name of the [simulated] storm from Delaney to K-Y-A-G-B... kiss 
your ass goodbye... because anybody who was here as that category 
five storm came across... was gone.

--by Matthew Barge

 

Sources

 

Sidney Blumenthal, "No one can say they didn't see it coming ," 
salon.com, 31 August 2005

Deon Roberts, "Bush budget not expected to diminish New Orleans 
district's $65 million," New Orleans CityBusiness, 07 February 2005

Manuel Torres, "Flood work to slow down; Corps delays new projects," 
Times-Picayune, 13 October 2001

Mark Schlefistein, "Corps sees its resources siphoned off; Wetlands 
restoration officials sent to Iraq ," Times-Picayune, 24 April 2004

"Mark Schleifstein, "Ivan stirs up wave of safety proposals; 
Hurricane-proofed stadium is one idea," Times-Picayune, 22 September 
2004

Deon Roberts, "Bush budget not expected to diminish New Orleans 
district's $65 million ," New Orleans CityBusiness, 07 February 2005

Mark Schleifstein, "Bush budget cuts levee, drainage funds; Backlog 
of contracts waits to be awarded," Times-Picayune, 08 February 2005

"Bush budget fails to fund flood control in New Orleans ," New 
Orleans CityBusiness, 14 February 2005

Deon Roberts, " New Orleans district of the U.S. Army Corps of 
Engineers faces ," New Orleans CityBusiness, 06 June 2005

Will Bunch, "Did New Orleans catastrophe have to happen? `Times-
Picayune' had repeatedly raised federal spending issues," Editor & 
Publisher, 31 August 2005

Toby Eckert, "Could disaster have been prevented?," Copley News 
Service, 02 September 2005

Jim VandeHei and Peter Baker, " Critics say Bush undercut New 
Orleans flood control ," Washington Post, 02 September 2005

"The City in a Bowl ," Transcript, NOW, Public Broadcasting Service, 
20 September 2002

Jon Elliston, " A Disaster Waiting to Happen ," 
bestofneworleans.com, 28 September 2004

Scott Shane and Eric Lipton, " Government saw flood risk but not 
levee failure ," New York Times, 02 September 2005

Paul Krugman, " A can't-do government ," New York Times, 02 
September 2005

"Lake Pontchartrain, LA and Vicinity Hurricane Protection Project, 
St. Bernard, Orleans, Jefferson, and St. Charles Parishes, LA ," 
Project Fact Sheet, US Army Corps of Engineers New Orleans District, 
website, 23 May 2005

"Fiscal Year 2006: Civil Works Budget for the U.S. Army Corps of 
Engineers ," Department of the Army, February 2005

"Press Briefing by Scott McClellan ," whitehouse.gov, 01 September 
2005

Karen Turni, "Upgrade of levees proposed by corps; gulf outlet levee 
may be too low, officials worry," Times-Picayune, 12 November 1998

John McQuaid and Mark Schleifstein, "The big one: A major hurricane 
could decimate the region, but flooding from even a moderate storm 
could kill thousands. It's just a matter of time," Times-Picayune, 
24 June 2002

 





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