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Home > Communications > Newsroom > 2008

NEWSROOM

When the Next Storm Surge Hits Terrebonne Parish
August 1, 2008

How the next hurricane storm surge could affect Terrebonne Parish will be the focus of an exhibit and public talk.

The Next Storm Surge will be held:

  • Aug. 21 at 6:30 p.m.; Terrebonne Parish Public Library, 151 Civic Center Blvd., Houma

Experts from the Louisiana State University Agricultural Center and Louisiana Sea Grant will discuss hurricane vulnerability, flood zones, storm surge models, hazard mitigation and how the surge from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita washed over coastal parishes. The presentation and exhibits will include “what if” scenarios for Terrebonne Parish, including results of computer surge models of a storm similar to Hurricane Rita making landfall close to the parish. The LSU AgCenter disaster recovery and mitigation group also will provide information on rebuilding and repairing homes to make them more resistant to flood, wind and rain.

Using satellite images and geographical information systems (GIS), Louisiana Sea Grant Marine Extension agent Thomas Hymel, who will be one of the presenters, developed Hurricane Rita storm surge maps to help the agriculture industry assess damages and to lobby for state and federal assistance. The maps caught the interest of the insurance industry, homeowners and schoolchildren, and Hymel decided to use the data as an educational tool to show residents how much damage could have occurred if the storm surge was greater, occurred in parishes unaffected by the storms, and what could happen in future storms. From that concept, the public meetings and library exhibits evolved.

“We recognized the importance of creating the maps to help in making decisions about crops, flood insurance, housing and rebuilding,” Hymel said.

Since its establishment in 1968, Louisiana Sea Grant has worked to promote stewardship of the state’s coastal resources through a combination of research, education and outreach programs critical to the cultural, economic and environmental health of Louisiana’s coastal zone. Louisiana Sea Grant, based at Louisiana State University, is part of the National Sea Grant Program, a network of 32 programs in each of the U.S. coastal and Great Lakes states and Puerto Rico.

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