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Remember the Darlington Reservoir?

Posted on 11/25/19 at 1:02 pm
Posted by Tchefuncte Tiger
Bat'n Rudge
Member since Oct 2004
62635 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 1:02 pm
It's back on the table after grassroots efforts killed it years ago. Why should folks who are high-and-dry (and have owned possibly-seized land for generations) have their land stolen to protect folks who choose to build in flood zones?

LINK

Posted by LSURussian
Member since Feb 2005
133563 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 1:04 pm to
quote:

the $2.3 billion project
It will never happen.
Posted by Tchefuncte Tiger
Bat'n Rudge
Member since Oct 2004
62635 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 1:08 pm to
quote:

It will never happen.


...and you know that by "$2.3 billion" they actually mean "$6.9 billion."
Posted by Cosmo
glassman's guest house
Member since Oct 2003
129251 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 1:09 pm to
quote:

It will never happen.


It will if enough politicians can pocket some money out of it.
Posted by Tchefuncte Tiger
Bat'n Rudge
Member since Oct 2004
62635 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 1:13 pm to
I think it would be cheaper to buy-out everybody along Bayou Manchac and use the stream for what it actually is, a natural diversion canal for both the Mississippi and Amite Rivers.

quote:

It will if enough politicians can pocket some money out of it.


Edwin Edwards boasted in the last go around that he wanted to give his friends a "heads up" so they could go and buy up all the land around the proposed lake to either resell to the state for a park or to developers for recreational use. This didn't go over very well with the locals.
This post was edited on 11/25/19 at 1:16 pm
Posted by doubleb
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2006
41759 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 1:35 pm to
quote:

I think it would be cheaper to buy-out everybody along Bayou Manchac and use the stream for what it actually is, a natural diversion canal for both the Mississippi and Amite Rivers.


Everything south of Highland Road and that natural ridge in EBR would flood during flood events on the Mississippi River.
Posted by Bard
Definitely NOT an admin
Member since Oct 2008
57894 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 2:12 pm to
It wouldn't have done much (if anything) to help us out in 2016.

Put that money towards finishing the diversion canal faster, drilling some fricking drain holes along the I12 dam, putting a levee up along the Amite and Comite rivers and some backflow preventers on the city and parish drainage systems.
Posted by kingbob
Sorrento, LA
Member since Nov 2010
69303 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 2:44 pm to
I can understand hating the opportunity for crazy corruption in who ends up with land along the shore, but from an infrastructure standpoint, it’s a really great project which, in concert with the comite diversion, could help add some serious flexibility to the regional drainage system.
Posted by Tchefuncte Tiger
Bat'n Rudge
Member since Oct 2004
62635 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 2:50 pm to
quote:

Everything south of Highland Road and that natural ridge in EBR would flood during flood events on the Mississippi River.


Which is exactly why I wouldn't look at houses on the west side of Highland Road.
Posted by Tchefuncte Tiger
Bat'n Rudge
Member since Oct 2004
62635 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 2:51 pm to
...or we could tell people don't build where it floods but if you do, build on piers.
Posted by offshoretiger
baton rouge
Member since Dec 2009
39 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 3:04 pm to
It would be a lot cheaper and easier to just dredge the bayou and Mississippi river. You can push all of the settlement down river and use it to help with rebuilding the coast.
Posted by kingbob
Sorrento, LA
Member since Nov 2010
69303 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 3:17 pm to
Most of the 80k homes that flooded in 2016 had never flooded before.
Posted by SantaFe
Baton Rouge
Member since Apr 2019
7610 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 3:32 pm to
Their land will not be stolen, they would be paid fair market value for it. Flooding in this multi-parish area is a serious issue and the posters who make light of it should be ashamed. We will have another historic flood event and we should prepare quickly for it. In my opinion we are working much to slow as we seem to have leaders who are not aware that water runs downhill. The Darlington area has a sparse population as compared to EBR, Livingston, and Ascension parishes. Compare today's multi-parish growth to what we once had in 1970 and you will realize that we are quite fortunate that we have not had a historic flood event like once every 3 years.
Posted by doubleb
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2006
41759 posts
Posted on 11/25/19 at 5:08 pm to
quote:

...or we could tell people don't build where it floods but if you do, build on piers


It's a little too late for that.

Millions of people have already built where it floods.
It started when NO was founded and only got worse.

It's too late to put all those homes on piers and to do away with the levee system.
Posted by Tchefuncte Tiger
Bat'n Rudge
Member since Oct 2004
62635 posts
Posted on 11/26/19 at 6:07 am to
quote:

Most of the 80k homes that flooded in 2016 had never flooded before.


Because developers have trucked in thousands of yards of dirt to fill holes to build new subdivisions. The water that used to go in those holes has to go somewhere. Houses in Pollard Estates (that have been around for 50-plus years and never flooded) flooded in 2016 because of development along Quail Drive, an area that used to go under water every time there was a heavy rain.
Posted by NikolaiJakov
Moscow
Member since Mar 2014
2803 posts
Posted on 11/26/19 at 6:12 am to
quote:

Millions of people have already built where it floods.


Maybe our politicians are the product of our citizenry.

For thousands of years, human civilization has been smart enough to live on the high ground. Leave it to Louisiana to ignore wisdom gained from many generations of trial and error.
Posted by aTmTexas Dillo
East Texas Lake
Member since Sep 2018
22538 posts
Posted on 11/26/19 at 6:41 am to
quote:

Remember the Darlington Reservoir?


Build it. We need to build big things in this country.

Stock it with Florida Bass.
This post was edited on 11/26/19 at 6:42 am
Posted by RCDfan1950
United States
Member since Feb 2007
38640 posts
Posted on 11/26/19 at 6:47 am to
quote:

Because developers have trucked in thousands of yards of dirt to fill holes to build new subdivisions. The water that used to go in those holes has to go somewhere. Houses in Pollard Estates (that have been around for 50-plus years and never flooded) flooded in 2016 because of development along Quail Drive, an area that used to go under water every time there was a heavy rain.


"Development" may have hurt from the I-12 'levee' down, T...but I live 20 miles north, and not on the hills but in a bottom, and that 30 inches of rain running off the hills is what got me. 30 inches, in the span of a day...and it's trouble.
Posted by johnnyrocket
Ghetto once known as Baton Rouge
Member since Apr 2013
9790 posts
Posted on 11/26/19 at 7:44 am to
Anyone over 30 yrs old be dead and gone before they even start this project.

Look how long we been paying taxes on Comite diversion canal.
Posted by BugAC
St. George
Member since Oct 2007
56903 posts
Posted on 11/26/19 at 7:45 am to
quote:

Why should folks who are high-and-dry (and have owned possibly-seized land for generations) have their land stolen to protect folks who choose to build in flood zones?


You're asking why efforts should be made for the capital of the state to not flood? Perplexing indeed.
This post was edited on 11/26/19 at 7:46 am
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