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As a new Mississippi River bridge moves forward, rare cypress forest could be in danger

Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:09 am
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
25123 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:09 am
quote:

Laura Comeaux’s rubber boots squelched in the mire as she trekked through her family land, 128 acres of intermittently flooding forest situated on a sharp bend in the Mississippi River.

Morning light cut a path through the tree canopy of towering bald cypresses, Nuttall's oaks and red maples and dappled the forest floor. Twittering birds eyed the movement below from high up in the branches.

A little more than three years ago, before the announcement that this land was in the path of a potential site for a new, $2 billion Mississippi River bridge south of Baton Rouge, a day like this would have felt different to Comeaux. It would have been free from the visions of destruction that, these days, accompany every trip into the Plaquemine Point woods.

“It’s like an endless worry,” Comeaux said. “It’s been three years this month that we were invited to the town hall meeting.”

It was that public meeting in 2022 that would turn Comeaux into an environmentalist and protester of what the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development calls "Option E-11-IV" — one of three potential corridors for a new Mississippi River bridge connecting La. 1 and La. 30.

Residents on both sides of the river are desperate for an additional bridge in the Baton Rouge area, where over 100,000 drivers cross the I-10 Horace Wilkinson Bridge each day, and traffic can back up for hours after an accident.

Yet that demand is in tension with the reality that one bridge placement would likely bisect and partially destroy Plaquemine Point, a river swamp in Iberville Parish that experts have named as one of the last old-growth, naturally regenerating cypress forests in Louisiana.


quote:

DOTD has maintained that all three placement options carry environmental and economic consequences.

Alternatives would disrupt existing infrastructure and pipelines owned by Shintech, a leading global producer of polyvinyl chloride — and a major employer in Iberville and West Baton Rouge Parish, employing about 700 direct employees and 800 nested contractors at its Plaquemine and Addis sites.


quote:

“At the end of the day, there are going to be impacts — adverse impacts — to somebody from the delivery of this project,” DOTD Secretary Joe Donahue said. “I think that the Comeauxs have done a great job of making their concerns known, of promoting the benefits of Plaquemine Point. Where that ends up shaking out in the impacts to the other alternatives is yet to be determined.”


LINK

Guess I’ll just have to keep taking the loop.
Posted by Mushroom1968
Member since Jun 2023
3788 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:16 am to
Good for her, hopefully she continues standing her ground
Posted by slidingstop
Member since Jan 2025
689 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:20 am to
quote:

hopefully she continues standing her ground



They can pave over her with asphalt too as long as they get another crossing built.
Posted by Proximo
Member since Aug 2011
20194 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:21 am to
quote:

rubber boots squelched in the mire as she trekked

Oh frick off

Build the bridge
Posted by Mushroom1968
Member since Jun 2023
3788 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:23 am to
quote:

They can pave over her with asphalt too as long as they get another crossing built.


Sounds like people need to fork money out and buy the land from her, then allow the bridge to be built. Or get over it and accept it’s her land
Posted by Shexter
Prairieville
Member since Feb 2014
17072 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:24 am to
quote:

as she trekked through her family land, 128 acres

quote:

three years ago
quote:

Plaquemine Point, a river swamp in Iberville Parish that experts have named as one of the last old-growth, naturally regenerating cypress forests in Louisiana.


Sounds like she's had 3 years to turn this into a tourist attraction.
Fail on her part.

She'll be dead by the time the studies are all completed.

This post was edited on 5/30/25 at 9:55 am
Posted by doubleb
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2006
40357 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:25 am to
quote:

Sounds like people need to fork money out and buy the land from her, then allow the bridge to be built. Or get over it and accept it’s her land


I don’t believe they were going to take her land.

Posted by 777Tiger
Member since Mar 2011
83846 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:25 am to
quote:

people need to fork money out and buy the land from her


oh she gone get paid, and by the people, I assume you mean the tax payers?
Posted by deltadummy
Member since Mar 2025
414 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:26 am to
Which proposed route do you prefer?
Posted by Salviati
Member since Apr 2006
6794 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:27 am to
quote:

Sounds like people need to fork money out and buy the land from her, then allow the bridge to be built. Or get over it and accept it’s her land
If they want to build the bridge there, they will take her land, and she will get appraisers' FMV for it.
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
25123 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:27 am to
quote:

oh she gone get paid


She sure will.
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
25123 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:28 am to
quote:

Which proposed route do you prefer?


Not having to drive in or through Baton Rouge during the workweek.
Posted by Mushroom1968
Member since Jun 2023
3788 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:28 am to
quote:

oh she gone get paid, and by the people, I assume you mean the tax payers?


Is she going to get paid enough? What’s enough to lose old growth forests? My dad had to fight and hold on to 100 acres in northwest Louisiana and thankfully we still have it. He and my siblings and I had a lot of money thrown at us, nope, land meant too much and was more important than the money. I don’t blame her for not wanting it cut down.
Posted by Shorts Guy
BR
Member since Dec 2023
251 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:29 am to
She needs to look up eminent domain. Whine all she wants…but if that’s the path they want, that’s the path they’re going to get. She can either accept the $$ or spend all her just compensation paying off legal fees.
This post was edited on 5/30/25 at 9:32 am
Posted by 308
the backwoods of Mississippi
Member since Sep 2020
2660 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:29 am to
quote:

Good for her, hopefully she continues standing her ground.


x100000%.
Posted by whoa
New Orleans
Member since Sep 2017
5426 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:30 am to
I’m sure it’s all about the cypress forest & not losing out on the Leblanc land that was passed down to her

NIMBY’s are the reason we’re 40 years behind a new bridge.
Posted by deltadummy
Member since Mar 2025
414 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:32 am to


I mean, I get it. I've driven through BR back/forth 200 times or so, and that's enough for me. Eminent domain issues suck cause someone's losing land, and unless you've lost property/land or been threatened with losing property/land, you don't understand how grievous it feels, so it's easy to say "the hell with her, build the bridge". People don't care about eminent domain (not directed at you) till it's their own property/land, then it's personal. But BR needs another crossing, for sure.
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
25123 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:38 am to
I can remember the fighting in Lafayette over the Camellia bridge. Eventually eminent domain won out, and it sure made getting around Lafayette alot better, but folks lost homes than they have been in for decades with no desire to leave.
Posted by WaydownSouth
Stratton Oakmont
Member since Nov 2018
9694 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:39 am to
Good news for her, it will take 50 years for it to be built at the rate in which road work gets done in Louisiana
Posted by Jake88
Member since Apr 2005
75356 posts
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:40 am to
She probably hadn't walked that land in decades until this became an issue.

quote:

 My dad had to fight and hold on to 100 acres in northwest Louisiana and thankfully we still have it
What was the proposed project and what do you do on the land now?
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