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Bobby Jindal's Louisiana Sand Barriers Criticized As Huge Waste Of BP Money By Gulf Oil Spill Presidential Commission

CAIN BURDEAU and HARRY R. WEBER   12/16/10 09:38 PM ET   AP

Gulf Oil Spill

NEW ORLEANS — The big set of sand barriers erected by Louisiana's governor to protect the coastline at the height of the Gulf oil spill was criticized by a presidential commission Thursday as a colossal, $200 million waste of BP's money so far.

Precious little oil ever washed up on the berms, according to the commission – a finding corroborated by a log of oil sightings and other government documents obtained by The Associated Press through a public records request.

Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal ordered the berms built over the objections of scientists and federal agencies – and secured money from BP to do it – out of frustration over what he saw as inaction by the Obama administration. During the crisis, Jindal boasted that the sand walls were stopping oil from coming ashore, and the idea proved popular in Louisiana.

In its stinging report, however, the commission, appointed by President Barack Obama to investigate the spill, called the project "underwhelmingly effective, overwhelmingly expensive." Still, the panel did concede that the sand might ultimately prove helpful in Louisiana's long-term effort to restore its badly eroded coastline.

Jindal disputed the commission's findings on the berms.

"This report is partisan revisionist history at taxpayer expense," the governor said in a statement. "The report's assertion that the berms did not pass the commission's 'cost benefit analysis' is insulting to the thousands of people whose way of life depends on the health of our working coast."

A BP spokeswoman said the company had no comment.

Over the summer, the state received grudging government approval to build 36 miles of berms, and it has erected roughly 14 miles so far. An estimated 19 million cubic yards of sand has been moved to make the barriers, which rise six feet above sea level and are around 300 feet wide at their base.

BP originally committed $360 million to the project. Of that, $195 million has been spent so far.

Garret Graves, who has been helping coordinate the project for the governor, said the state will press on with the project, but will make the sand barriers deeper instead of extending them lengthwise. He said that will allow them to serve a dual purpose: protecting the shoreline from oil and restoring the coast.

Jindal, a first-term Republican governor and former congressman who has been mentioned as possible presidential hopeful in 2012, has pronounced the sand barriers a "great success."

"We disagree," the commission said in its report. "From a long-term coastal restoration perspective, the berms may indeed be a 'significant step forward,' as Gov. Jindal has claimed, but they were not successful for oil spill response."

The government has said that much of the crude that spewed from BP's well following the April 20 rig explosion was skimmed, burned, collected or dispersed. E-mails, internal reports and a log of oil sightings obtained by AP confirm that very little of the estimated 200 million gallons that gushed from the bottom of the sea has been seen on or recovered from the berms.

In its report, the commission said the National Incident Command – the task force headed for much of the crisis by retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen – was initially skeptical of the plan, but allowed "political considerations" and influence from the White House to affect its posture toward the project.

Rob Young, a coastal scientist at Western Carolina University, said the $360 million could have been better spent on removing oil and restoring damaged lands than on a "back-of-the-napkin kind of project" that so far has amounted to nothing more than drawing a "pencil line of sand."

But Billy Nungesser, president of oil-soaked Plaquemines Parish, said the berm project was absolutely the right decision at the right time.

"It's easier to throw rocks now," he said. "If they let us armor those islands, it will be the start of the coastal restoration that will protect the marshlands that have been so badly damaged."

Pearson Cross, a political science professor at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, said the episode will be a "bit of a blow" to Jindal politically, but shouldn't be too much of a problem if the governor continues to hammer home his argument that the state was taking action when Washington wasn't.

"Half the people will believe him," Cross said.

___

Associated Press Writer Dina Cappiello contributed to this report from Washington.

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NEW ORLEANS — The big set of sand barriers erected by Louisiana's governor to protect the coastline at the height of the Gulf oil spill was criticized by a presidential commission Thursday as a ...
NEW ORLEANS — The big set of sand barriers erected by Louisiana's governor to protect the coastline at the height of the Gulf oil spill was criticized by a presidential commission Thursday as a ...
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
12:56 PM on 12/21/2010
People of Louisiana: Jindal got money from BP for his useless berms. What did you get from BP? Are your heath care costs covered? Did BP reimburse you for your economic losses? Just remember: Jindal got his money for his useless berms from BP. What did you get?

It is good that BP paid for something. Just too bad it wasn't for the common good.
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rustysc
One of the many "little People"
04:54 PM on 12/20/2010
Jindal is a waste of money.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Left on Red
Micro Bio 201 T-Th 1 - 2:30 Lab W 1-5 Dr. Price
08:45 PM on 12/19/2010
Most efforts to "stabilize" the shoreline with pumped in sand are a colossal waste of money and effort.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Derek Spisak
10:56 AM on 12/19/2010
My take away from the report was that because the berms didn't cover enough area in time, they were not effective.

I distinctly remember the Federal Government stalling this effort. Ironically I would place the blame squarely upon them for the berms being called "too little, too late".
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MilesLong
Livin' the Dream
09:23 PM on 12/19/2010
Of course you would, even though experts stated that the entire plan was ineffectual. (laughing)

Miles "Too Little, Too Late On The Thinking There, Sport" Long
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Derek Spisak
09:23 PM on 12/20/2010
I would throw my lot with Billy Nungessor. He knows the ground truth and said they where the absolute right choice.

Your insults show your true intent.

Thank you for showing your true colors, sport.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
eyelashviper
In wilderness is the preservation of the world
12:20 PM on 12/18/2010
Jindal's sand pile hysteria was purely political posturing, and a great waste of money and energy.
Scientists, engineers and others said it could not work, and even a kid who has built moats around sand castles on the beach would understand the folly of it all.
But again, this Goper is all about flailing at Obama, the Federal Government, whining and screeching, and attracting media attention via hissy fits.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Derek Spisak
10:58 AM on 12/19/2010
Unfortunately the Presidents men only responded to media "hissy fits". For 9 days, everything was ok and BP was handling it.

The federal government absolutely refused to see the problem for its size, scope, and severity.

Additionally the report stated it was too little, too late.
11:25 AM on 12/18/2010
"called the project "underwhelmingly effective, overwhelmingly expensive."

What was the commission trying to do when it made this statement? Nothing to do with rubbishing a Republican Governor to placate a Democratic President?

The underwhelming thing here is that the Administration could not predict that the oil would not foul the lengths of the coast that these berms were installed to protect against fouling. Their effectiveness was NEVER tested.

The Oil spill was, and is, a continuing disaster. The handling of it by this Administration continues to under-inspire this taxpayer.
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krummlaw
09:42 AM on 12/18/2010
I'm a progressive, proud to be one, and not a Bobby Jindal fan but. . .

whether or not a lot of oil ended on the berms is irrelevant. . .

This was the biggest oil catastrophe in the history of the United States and months elapsed before getting it under control. . .

It was dumb luck that more oil didn't hit the berms. No big tropical storms or hurricanes.

The berms were, indeed, an extra precaution.

What would you have rather he'd done? Stand by, pray to God for no storms?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joffan
Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so.
11:41 PM on 12/18/2010
This is pretty close to the mark. In responding effectively to a crisis, like this one, a lot of the responses are actually going to be "wasted" because you don't know in advance what will work and what will be needed. And if something is NOT done which, as it transpires, COULD have helped, people will be upset.

Of course Jindal made political hay out of them too, and overstated their importance while rubbishing the effort of the Federal government. So I don't have any special sympathy for Jindal. But the berms themselves seem to have been a reasonable if longish shot at mitigating possible problems.
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11:41 PM on 12/20/2010
The berms are ridiculous and not only a tragic waste of resources. They will possible starve the areas behind them of nutrients and fresh water, killing the reeds that sustain the natural barrier Islands. The oil companies have been trying to get these built for decades, they want the area cleared and this is the way to do it. Watch over the next decade, this was not political hay, but a cynical plot to bypass federal statutes. Let's face it, the electorate of louisiana will not be happy till the sea is black, the rivers poisoned and the land burnt.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
01:00 PM on 12/21/2010
It was known before hand that this measure wouldn't work. Let's look at who profited from the building of these berms. That's where we should place the emphasis of our questioning. Good that BP paid for something. Just too bad it wasn't on the people whose lives were threatened, whose health has been adversely affected, whose livelihoods are lost. BP likes to spend money on tangible goods, but not the people it harmed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MyResponsibility
Action over hope
09:41 PM on 12/17/2010
You've got to hand it to progressives. They're consistent.  Given the progressives misunderstanding of what insurance is, of course they believe that this project was a waste of money. 

Insurance is a form of risk management primarily used to hedge against the risk of a contingent loss. Insurance is defined as the equitable transfer of the risk of a loss, from one entity to another, in exchange for a premium, and can be thought of as a guaranteed and known small loss to prevent a large, possibly devastating loss.  ...There are two elements that must be at least estimable, if not formally calculable: the probability of loss, and the attendant cost. ...The essential risk is often aggregation. If the same event can cause losses to numerous policyholders ... the ability of that insurer to issue policies becomes constrained.


This berm project was an insurance policy.  They did not know if the oil would hit shore, they new that the risk to the region if the oil did hit shore would be devastating.  Spending $200mm on this policy was a worthwhile private expense (BP paid for it, not the government). 

Insurance is one of the only products consumers purchase hoping to never have to use it.  That the oil didn't make it to the built berms, let alone the shore, is meaningless.  It was insurance, it was "just in case." 
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MilesLong
Livin' the Dream
09:25 PM on 12/19/2010
So was the plan to nuke the ocean floor, insurance just in case the flow could not be staunched by conventional means. (laughing)

Miles "The Operation Was A Success, But The Patient Died" Long
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MyResponsibility
Action over hope
10:20 PM on 12/19/2010
Nope.  That would not be insurance.  That would have been a direct attempt to stop the flow.  The berms were not an attempt to cap the well, they were put in place to reduce the risk of the flowing oil  from hitting the fragile shoreline.
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doctorj2u
06:28 PM on 12/17/2010
The only reason for this post is for the politicos to jump on the "enemy". It is just like watching the baboons throw poop at the zoo. LOL!
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fromdnorth
OK I checked my micro-bio (didn't know I had one
05:06 PM on 12/17/2010
"Jindal, a first-term Republican governor and former congressman" doesn't really describe him...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cali4BHO
News and Politics Junkie
02:40 PM on 12/17/2010
SMDH
01:21 PM on 12/17/2010
he's a scholar of idiocracy and I blame my fellow louisiana natives for voting him in, and they can be blamed for most likely voting him in a 2nd term when the times comes.
01:00 PM on 12/17/2010
Now that the berms are in I suspect they will be very cost effective if ever another spill occurs.
12:50 PM on 12/17/2010
I'm no fan of Jindal, but he has clearly won this PR battle.

He tried to do something, it might've worked, it cost BP money.

"Wasting BP's money" is practically a workable campaign slogan.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Bike Commuter
No More Hurting People
01:05 PM on 12/17/2010
Seems like a stalemate to me. Trying makes him look good, but it was also grandstanding. Wasting that much money for little or no gain is not fiscally conservative. However, since it is BP's money he wasted, it isn't as big of a deal.
 
Getting BP to pay for a project that might help the loss of wetlands gives him a little bit of an advantage though.
05:37 PM on 12/17/2010
It's hard to see how this'll play when he makes his next presidential bid, but back home in LA, my family is all about him. They're sort of center-right hillbillies and he certainly stood next to the right people when the cameras were flashing to impress them.

My take on it is that Obama was perceived as doing nothing while BJ was perceived as doing something. That the failure wasted BP's money is probably a non-issue to his constituents and probably a measure of success to some.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CajunSpectre
My Micro-bio is empty!
12:28 PM on 12/17/2010
This report doesn't even take into account the destruction of the delicate sea floor that the sand used to build berms was dredged from or the oyster beds that the berms sit on that were obliterated by this insane act. Jindal and Nungesser couldn't be bothered with the repeated warnings from the scientists that this project was a bad idea. This is just another case where the politicians know better than the scientific experts.
11:15 AM on 12/18/2010
Delicate seafloor. Which mother nature constantly moves about and will move it from the berms.

Offshore oyster reefs Please show me one in the Gulf. Oysters grow insides the bays in the estuaries.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CajunSpectre
My Micro-bio is empty!
01:01 PM on 12/18/2010
Read my comment, I wrote oyster beds not reefs.