We often forget who really did in New Orleans: The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, with its ridiculous projects like the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet ("Mr. Go"), which quite literally welcomed storm surges into the city. But you won't forget after reading Michael Grunwald's great feature in the latest New Republic. You need a subscription or something, but believe me, it's worth it. The article puts me in mind of lyrics by Mike West, a fantastic New Orleans singer songwriter whom I now suspect is displaced, in a song called "Corps of Engineers":
there's been a lot of talk
about widening the lock
baby can you tell me is it true
they're gonna make the levee steeper
so they can dig the canal deeper
so i was told so i'm telling youthey held a big meeting
i didn't go but i been reading
all about it, of course it's only hearsay
some against some are for
while the mayor he hems and haws
and the corps of engineers have their wayfolks round here got the fear of god
everybody say lawdy lawd
there's only one thing we fear more
that's the corps of engineerssee the canal it must expand
it's about supply and demand
but it sounds like slight of hand to me
there just ain't that many ships
since the oil boom left it's slick
and the port of new orleans begging on her kneesthey're gonna tear down the old bridge
it'll do a lot of damage
but it's all for the greater good
part of a twelve year plan
hell i'll be an old man
before the dust settles in our neighborhoodfolks round here got the fear of god...
now i would like an explanation
of this word "mitigation"
right now the way that it seems
you put a man from his home
then buy him a ticket to the super dome
it's like beating your kid then buying him
an ice cream
i ain't a kid and i don't eat ice cream, much©2000 Mike West
Lawdy lawd indeed. Read the Grunwald piece.
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This is a quote from Spike Lee, who has an upcoming documentary on Katrina. Looks like he lays the blame at the feet of the Army Corps of Engineers too:
http://www.hbo.com/docs/programs/whentheleveesbroke/interview.html
I bet his movie will be good. I'm surprised it's only going to play on HBO...
My understanding of the NOLA troubles was that the Army Corps of Engineers (ACE) actually told their political masters to strengthen the levees and stop building in places that could not be protected from storm surge. Unfortunately, those politi-critters and the spineless upper echelons of the ACE choose money and political fortune over the safety of the city & people of NOLA.