Water is pushed over the flood wall into the upper 9th Ward from

A weakened Hurricane Gustav slammed into the heart of
Louisiana’s fishing and oil industry Monday, avoiding a direct hit
on flood-prone New Orleans and boosting hope that the city would
avoid catastrophic flooding.
A weakened Hurricane Gustav slammed into the heart of Louisiana’s fishing and oil industry Monday, avoiding a direct hit on flood-prone New Orleans and boosting hope that the city would avoid catastrophic flooding.

Wind-driven water was sloshing over the top of the Industrial Canal’s floodwall, but city officials and the Army Corps of Engineers said they expected the levees, still only partially rebuilt after Hurricane Katrina, would hold. The canal broke during hurricanes Betsy and Katrina, flooding St. Bernard Parish and the Lower 9th Ward.

“We are seeing some overtopping waves,” said Col. Jeff Bedey, commander of the Army Corps of Engineers’ hurricane protection office. “We are cautiously optimistic and confident that we won’t see catastrophic wall failure.”

Of more immediate concern to authorities was a barge that broke loose from its moorings and crashed into two anchors scrapped ships. The was no damage to the canal.

The National Hurricane Center in Miami said Gustav hit around 10:30 a.m. EDT Monday near the Cocodrie, a low-lying community in Louisiana’s Cajun country about 72 miles southwest of New Orleans. Forecasters once feared a storm that chased nearly 2 million from the coast would arrive as a devastating Category 4 with much more powerful winds.

While New Orleans avoided a direct hit, the storm could be devastating where it did strike. For most of the past half century, the bayou communities that thrived in the Barataria basin have watched their land literally disappear. A combination of factors – oil drilling, hurricanes, river levees, damming of rivers ≠ have destroyed marshes and swamps that once flourished in this river delta.

Entire towns in the basin of the Mississippi delta have disappeared because of land loss. The rates of loss are among the highest in the world; erosion has left it with virtually no natural buffer.

The nation was nervously watching to see how New Orleans would weather Gustav three years after Katrina flooded 80 percent of the city. Roughly 1,600 people were killed across the unprepared Gulf Coast. Federal, state and local officials took a never-again stance after the storm, and set to work planning and upgrading infrastructure in the below sea-level city.

“There’s no indication of any walls in distress,” said Robert Turner, the regional levee director for the Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority-East. “No trenches are being cut that will destabilize the walls. No indication of walls deflecting or anything being washed out. No evidence of major seepage.”

For all their seeming similarities, Hurricanes Gustav and Katrina were different in one critical respect: Katrina smashed the Gulf Coast with an epic storm surge that topped 27 feet, a far higher wall of water than Gustav hauled ashore.

“We don’t expect the loss of life, certainly, that we saw in Katrina,” Federal Emergency Management Agency Deputy Director Harvey E. Johnson told The Associated Press. “But we are expecting a lot of homes to be damaged, a lot of infrastructure to be flooded, and damaged severely.”

Katrina was a bigger storm when it made landfall in August 2005, and it made a direct hit on the Mississippi coast. Gustav skirted along Louisiana’s shoreline at “a more gentle angle,” said National Weather Service storm surge specialist Will Shaffer.

Initial reports indicated storm surge of about 8 feet above normal tides, but forecasts indicated up to 14 feet in surge was possible.

“Right now, we feel we’re not going to have a true inundation,” said Karen Durham-Aguilera, director of the $15 billion project to rebuild the U.S. Army Corps of Engineer’s levee and floodwalls in the New Orleans-area.

Still, Mayor Ray Nagin urged everyone to “resist the temptation to say we’re out of the woods.” He said Gustav’s heavy rainfall could still flood the saucer-shaped city over the next 24 hours as tropical storm-force winds blast through the city. Winds were about 36 mph near City Hall Monday morning, with higher gusts.

Nagin’s emergency preparedness director, Lt. Col. Jerry Sneed, said it’s possible residents could return 24 hours after tropical-force winds die down. The city would first need to assess damage and determine if any neighborhoods were unsafe. A city-wide curfew would run through at least through the end of Monday.

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