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Recovery
- Sea Grant Education wrote
a summary narrative for a proposed NOAA Community Based Restoration
project which would provide start up money for two hurricane-impacted
schools; the Christian Brothers School in New Orleans City Park and
the St. Bernard Unified School. The funding would be used to develop
green houses on their campuses for service learning, horticulture,
Coastal Roots and restoration efforts.
- Louisiana Sea Grant’s
oyster hatchery on Grand Isle has been instrumental in the development
of new science and has been an important component in Gulf Oyster
Industry Program (GOIP) research. However, it was obliterated by Hurricane
Katrina. LSG research professor John Supan is working with federal
and state officials, as well as industry proponents, to reconstruct
the hatchery.
- Marine Extension agent
Mark Schexnayder offered his assistance in relocating the displaced
17th Street commercial fishing fleet after they needed to move out
of a temporary harbor at the Bonnabel Boat launch. No property could
be found on the south shore, so the fleet settled at the undeveloped
Bucktown Marina site.
- LSG Extension Agent Rusty
Gaude' coordinated with the parish governments of St. Bernard and
Plaquemines and the USCG to establish a list of eligible and approved
waterways to be cleared by USCG contractors. The waterways were commercially
utilized by the fishing community and were known to have several submerged
obstructions.
- The Louisiana Restoration
Science Community prepared a position paper which recommended to the
Governor’s Advisory Commission on Coastal Restoration and Conservation
that existing freshwater diversion structures be used during Spring
2006 to assist with mitigation of future hurricane damage to local
marshes. Sea Grant wetlands and coastal resources professor Rex Caffey
is the lead author of the paper.
- Marine Extension agent
Thomas Hymel took the initiative to create storm surge models. These
models have resulted in an educational opportunity to show residents
how much damage could have occurred if the storm surge from Hurricane
Rita was greater and what might happen in future storms. Because of
these models, coastal parish residents and leaders are taking the
potential dangers more seriously.
- Volunteers in
Calcasieu and Cameron parishes assisted in the Marine Debris Marking
and Mapping Project on Calcasieu Lake, Moss Lake and West Cove. Hurricane
Rita scattered residential, industrial and vegetative debris throughout
the estuary system, creating a hazard for recreational and commercial
boaters, as well as their vessels and gear. In an attempt to make
the lake safer, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) Office of Coast Survey, Louisiana Sea Grant, Coastal Conservation
Association (CCA), Lake Charles Power Squadron, LSU AgCenter, Louisiana
Department of Wildlife and Fisheries and the Lake Charles Pilots partnered
with volunteers in the summer of 2006 to locate, mark and map as much
of this marine debris as possible. (Summer 2006)
- More than 500
local leaders, business owners and citizens participated in programs
about how the next hurricane storm surge could affect Iberia, Vermilion
and St. Mary parishes. Talks and exhibits concerning hurricane vulnerability,
flood zones, storm surge models and how the surge from Hurricane Rita
washed over each parish – prepared by Louisiana Sea Grant, the
Louisiana State University AgCenter, LSU Hurricane Center and LSU
Department of Geography and Anthropology – were presented this
summer in community libraries, as well as to local officials and civic
organizations. The exhibits, organized by LSG Marine Extension agent
Thomas Hymel, remained on display in the libraries through the end
of September 2006. (Summer 2006)
- The Second Presidents’
Forum on Meeting Coastal Challenges: Planning for Safer Growth in
Coastal Louisiana drew more than 150 scientists, researchers, state
and local policy makers, as well as concerned community leaders to
LSU. Organized by LSG Legal and held March 23, 2006, on the LSU campus,
Forum presenters from across the nation discussed redevelopment issues
Louisiana faces in the wakes of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. An additional
70 people participated in the Forum via a live Webcast, which is archived
online at http://www.laseagrant.org/forum/03-23-2006.htm.
(Spring 2006)
- LSG Legal developed
a series of information sheets and narrated PowerPoint presentations
to help those affected by hurricanes Katrina and Rita navigate Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) programs and related legal issues
during the rebuilding process. The information sheets are available
at parish offices throughout south Louisiana and also online with
the presentations at www.laseagrant.org
and www.lsu.edu/sglegal.
The information sheets answer questions about where and how to rebuild,
Louisiana’s building codes, the National Flood Insurance Program
and other reconstruction matters. (Spring 2006)
- LSG’s ongoing
assessment of damages to the state’s fisheries by Hurricanes
Katrina and Rita are helping fishermen, state and local government
in their federal aid requests. Rex Caffey, a resource economist with
Louisiana Sea Grant, and LSG fisheries economist Hamady Diop partnered
on the project. Assessments will continue for some time because of
the widespread devastation from both storms. As of early summer 2006,
the state was still estimating damages to be between $270 million
and $580 million for commercial fisheries alone. Using the Caffey
and Diop assessments, the Louisiana Fishing Community Recovery Coalition
(LFCRC), of which Louisiana Sea Grant is a founding partner, developed
aid requests and determined financial assistance allocation formulas.
Their work also was used in a $50 million Community Development Block
Grant (CDBG) application, and in an additional $150 million federal
aid request. (2005-2006)
- A documentary
chronicling the response of LSG Marine Extension agents to Hurricanes
Katrina and Rita has been completed and is available for online viewing
by visiting www.laseagrant.org.
Sister Storms: A Louisiana Sea Grant Response explores the
professional and personal challenges three extension agents faced
immediately following the storms and continue to face during the rebuilding
process. Sister Storms also is available on DVD.
- Marine Extension
agent Mark Schexnayder, along with other Sea Grant personnel, assisted
New Orleans Mosquito Control (NOMC) in acquiring several truckloads
of mosquitofish (Gambusia affinis). With more than 6,000
abandoned swimming pools following Hurricane Katrina, NOMC needed
a way to control the flying insects during the summer of 2006. The
agency’s plan was to stock abandoned pools with the mosquito-eating
fish. (Summer 2006)
- Posters focused
on LSG’s hurricane recovery Web site and LSG Legal’s FEMA
regulations fact sheets were displayed at the International City Management
Association (ICMA) conference in New Orleans May 15-17, 2006. (Spring
2006)
- LSG Marine Extension
personnel, recognizing the economic importance of quickly returning
commercial fishing boats to the water and clearing waterways of damaged
vessels, responded to a call from their counterparts in the northwest
United States offering aid. Through the combined efforts of the Washington,
Alaska and Louisiana Sea Grant programs, along with the Pacific Coast
Congress of Harbormasters, a surplus Marine Travelift was located
in the City and Port of Valdez, Alaska, and its donation was solicited
for the vessel recovery effort. LSG administration and Plaquemines
Parish government endorsed this effort by submitting letters of support
to the Valdez City Council, which approved the donation at its Dec.
5, 2005, meeting. The lift was delivered to the Plaquemines Parish
in February, 2006. (Winter 2005)
- Marine Extension
agent Mark Schexnayder was named special assistant in charge of Hurricane
Katrina recovery for the Louisiana State University Agricultural Center,
reporting directly to the AgCenter’s chancellor. As such, Schexnayder
established a working group/task force to address constituents’
needs in the five-parish area impacted by the storm. Marine Extension
agents Kevin Savoie and Mark Shirley are members of the Hurricane
Rita recovery working group/task force. (Fall 2005)
- Using satellite
images and Geographical Information Systems, LSG Marine Extension
agent Thomas Hymel developed Hurricane Rita storm surge maps for St.
Mary, Iberia and Vermilion parishes. The objective was to delineate
total acreage in those parishes inundated by brackish surge water
from the storm. Coastal communities in these parishes are interested
in the information as it relates to agriculture, building codes, rebuilding
efforts, insurance and financing. Hymel is using the data as an educational
opportunity to show residents how much damage could have occurred
if the storm surge was greater and what might happen in future storms.
(Fall 2005)
- LSG Marine Extension
agents worked closely with many owners and operators of seafood-related
businesses damaged by Hurricane Katrina. Among them was Theresa Nguyen,
owner of Theresa’s Seafood (a processor/wholesale operation)
in St. Bernard Parish. Agent Rusty Gaude’ helped Nguyen determine
what steps she needs to take to get her business operational again.
Winds and storm surge ravaged her building, blowing out walls, and
several commercial fishing vessels block access to her dock. Power
to Nguyen’s business, which had been designated as a critical
facility by FEMA, had been out for several months. Shrimp valued at
about $300,000 before the storm rotted in her freezers. He continues
to work with local, state and federal officials to have other infrastructure
restored to the facility. (2005-2006)
- Continuing to
address the needs of south Louisiana residents in the wake of the
storm, LSG Legal organized a seminar on reducing risks from coastal
hazards on Oct. 17, 2005. Dennis Hwang, an internationally recognized
coastal zone management expert and attorney from Hawaii, was the featured
seminar presenter. The half-day program, attended by more than 70
people, complemented the Presidents’ Forum on Meeting Coastal
Challenges series (http://www.laseagrant.org/forum/index.html),
which is co-hosted by LSG, and provided the groundwork for more in-depth
discussion covered at the March 2006 forum. (Fall 2005)
- Twenty-five LSU
landscape architecture seniors focused their efforts during fall 2005
on a redevelopment plan and design for New Orleans. LSG provided funding
support for the project. Safe and sustainable growth concepts that
explore a more disaster-prepared community were a principal aspect
of the students’ urban design plans, along with alternative
transportation concepts. The designs provide a range of economic development
alternatives, with the goal of returning evacuated residents to livable,
attractive neighborhoods. The students produced two- and three-dimensional
plans and supporting materials that demonstrate a number of alternatives
for rebuilding a safer, more engaging and vibrant New Orleans. In
the spring of 2006, the students shifted their focus to the Lake Charles
area, which was hit by Hurricane Rita, and developed similar plans.
(2005-2006)
- In winter 2005,
students from Ohio State University visited the New Orleans area to
help with clean-up and recovery efforts. LSG Marine Extension agent
Mark Schexnayder organized the volunteers, who arrived in groups of
30. The project was so successful that it continued with OSU students
throughout the summer of 2006. (2005-2006)
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or suggestions, please contact the Web Coordinator.
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