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Senate Hearing Focuses on Repairing Levees in New Orleans
Troy, N.Y. — It is clear that there were multiple causes for
the levee failures in New Orleans, but researchers need to
gather more data to better understand what they were and how to
rebuild properly after the devastation caused by Hurricane
Katrina, according to testimony today before the U.S. Senate
Committee on Environment and Public Works. Tom Zimmie,
professor and acting chair of civil and environmental
engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, offered his
perspective on the degree to which the preliminary findings on
the failure of the Gulf Coast levees are being incorporated
into the restoration of hurricane protection.
“There is not one simple answer as to why the levees
failed,” Zimmie said in a prepared statement. “Field
observations indicated various causes: overtopping of the
levees, erosion, failure in foundation soils underlying the
levees, seepage through the soils under the levees causing
piping failures, and this is not a complete list.”
Zimmie spent a week in New Orleans as part of an expert team
investigating levee failures in the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina. The team, which was funded by a special exploratory
grant from the National Science Foundation, released their
preliminary report Nov. 2 in a presentation to the Senate
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
Others at today’s Environment and Public Works hearing
echoed Zimmie’s comments, noting that until all the physical
evidence has been collected and analyzed, engineers will not
have a complete picture of what happened.
“Hopefully the results of our study will lead to a clear
appreciation of what happened in Katrina, and that the lessons
learned from this event will lead to improved protection in the
future, not just in the New Orleans area, but throughout the
nation and around the world,” Zimmie told the committee. “The
emphasis today is New Orleans, but we really have thousands of
miles of levees in the United States.”
Regarding the preliminary report, questions from the
committee focused on the peat layer found under some levee
sections in New Orleans. It has been suggested that a soft,
spongy layer of swamp peat underneath the 17th Street Canal
floodwall caused this wall to breach, and that this same peat
layer runs under other levee sections. Zimmie noted that it is
too soon to draw final conclusions about the nature of the peat
layer and its implications for the levee failures.
“How widespread is it? We can’t really answer that question
at this point,” Zimmie responded. “That’s a big concern. The
other parts of the levee system haven’t been tested. It’s like
a chain; you have one weak link in the chain and the whole
chain has failed. So now you have another link further down.
You fix one link and then the next link fails.”
“Peat is very common in the New Orleans area. I don’t think
there’s any question about that. . . . It’s a swampy area, so
of course there’s peat,” Zimmie continued. “So the question is,
how much soil sampling do you do? I don’t think we know the
answer at this point in the game. . . . I think with the
investigation — securing soil samples, getting more information
to do a proper design — then we should be able to answer
that.”
Zimmie was joined at the hearing by several other panelists:
Dan Hitchings, director of Task Force HOPE for the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers; Sherwood Gagliano, president of Coastal
Environments, Inc.; Larry Roth, deputy executive director of
the American Society of Civil Engineers; Joseph Suhayda,
emeritus professor of engineering at Louisiana State
University; and Robert Verchick, a professor at Loyola
University Law School in New Orleans.
Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) is chair of the Committee on
Environment and Public Works, and Sen. James Jeffords (I-Vt.)
is the ranking minority. Other committee members in attendance
were Sen. David Vitter (R-La.), Sen. Christopher Bond (R-Mo.),
Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.), and Sen.
Thomas Carper (D-Del.).
For a copy of Zimmie’s prepared statement visit:
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1196
An archived webcast of the hearing can be viewed at:
http://epw.senate.gov/epwmultimedia/epwmultimedia.htm
Information about the levee assessment team’s preliminary
report can be found here:
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1148
To learn more about Zimmie’s research in New Orleans and at
Rensselaer visit:
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1093
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Published
November 17,
2005 |
Contact: Jason Gorss
Phone: (518) 276-6098
E-mail: gorssj@rpi.edu |
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