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Mississippi River Floods 2011: Coast Guard Reopens Part Of Swollen River

Mississippi River Floods

HOLBROOK MOHR and ALAN SAYRE   05/17/11 09:41 PM ET   AP

JACKSON, Miss. — The Coast Guard reopened the swollen Mississippi River north of New Orleans on Tuesday, allowing cargo vessels on the nation's busiest waterway to pass slowly, one at a time in the latest effort to reduce pressure from rising floodwaters.

A 15-mile stretch at Natchez, Miss., was closed entirely earlier in the day, blocking vessels heading toward the Gulf of Mexico and others trying to return north after dropping off their freight. Had the channel remained closed, it could've brought traffic to a standstill up and down the river, which moves about 500 million tons of cargo each year.

That sort of interruption could've cost the U.S. economy hundreds of millions of dollars for every day of idled barges carrying coal, timber, iron, steel and more than half of America's grain exports.

Coast Guard officials said wakes generated by passing barge traffic could increase the strain on levees designed to hold back the river. Authorities were also concerned that barges could not operate safely in the flooded river, which has risen to the level of some docks and submerged others.

"We're closely monitoring traffic along the river and all vessels must stay to the center of the river," Coast Guard Cmdr. Mark Moland said.

In Vidalia, La., across the river from Natchez, Carla Jenkins was near tears as she watched the first tows and barge move north after the reopening.

"The water from the wakes just keeps coming into our buildings. We're going to have a lot more damage," said Jenkins, who owns Vidalia Dock and Storage

Moland said the Coast Guard tested wake impact before making the decision. The tests indicated sandbagging and other measures to protect most of the area could withstand the wakes if the vessels were ordered to move through the areas at the slowest possible speed.

It's not clear how long barges would only be able to move one at a time through the section. The river is expected to stay high in some places for weeks.

The Coast Guard did not have comprehensive figures on how many vessels were immediately affected, but the agency stopped at least 19 near Natchez.

In past closures, the numbers have grown quickly. In 2008, the agency halted 59 ships within a day of shutting down a stretch of the river near New Orleans because of a barge and tanker collision.

Shipping companies had hoped for a swift reopening.

On a typical day, 600 barges move up and down the river, according to Bob Anderson, spokesman for the Mississippi Valley Division of the Army Corps of Engineers. A single barge can carry as much cargo as 70 tractor-trailers or 17 rail cars.

"When it shuts, there's really no alternative," said Jim Reed, president of the Illinois Corn Growers Association.

The Coast Guard's traffic-management division hoped to prevent barges from piling up on either side of the closed zone by requiring them to be at least 1,200 feet apart.

Also Tuesday, at least 10 freight terminals along the lower Mississippi between Baton Rouge and New Orleans suspended operations because of high water. Vessels scheduled to use the terminals will either have to wait out the high water or divert elsewhere. Delaying a vessel by even a single day often costs $20,000 to $40,000, port officials said.

Throughout the spring, the Mississippi is a highway for barges laden with corn, soybeans and other crops headed from the Midwest to ports near New Orleans, where they get loaded onto massive grain carriers for export around the world.

The closure helped push corn, wheat and soybean prices higher Tuesday.

Traders were already nervous about tight supplies of all three crops. Farmers are behind on their planting because of cold, wet weather. At the same time, global supplies have been depleted by rising demand from ethanol makers and livestock producers.

The price of corn jumped 22.75 cents to $7.20 a bushel, while soybeans rose 14.5 cents, to $13.41 a bushel. Wheat rose 27.5 cents to settle at $7.64 a bushel.

While prices might spike in the short-term, flooding and port closures along the Mississippi River probably will not affect crop prices for long, said John Sanow, an analyst with DTN Telvent.

Traders are more worried that flooded acreage won't be replanted with corn, he said.

If the closure had persisted, the crop exports most likely to be affected are corn and soybeans, said Jason Ward, analyst with Northstar Commodity in Minneapolis.

The Port of South Louisiana, the largest in terms of tonnage in the United States, handles 54 percent of the nation's annual grain exports. It handles about 60,000 barges a year, along with 4,500 to 5,000 deep-draft vessels that carry grain and other bulk cargo such as steel.

The Mississippi also conveys most of New England's home heating oil and gasoline, along with 20 percent of America's coal, according to the American Waterways Operators, the trade group of the barge operators.

The closure was the third in a series of recent moves designed to protect homes and businesses behind levees and floodwalls along the river.

Over the weekend, the Army Corps opened the Morganza Spillway, choosing to flood rural areas with fewer homes to protect Baton Rouge and New Orleans. Another spillway near New Orleans was opened earlier, but it did not threaten homes.

The river is expected to crest Saturday in Natchez at 63 feet, down a half-foot than earlier predictions. But that level is still nearly five feet above a record set in 1937. It could take weeks for the water to recede.

Natchez Mayor Jake Middleton said if the city's levees were damaged, it could endanger hospitals, a convention center and historic buildings both in Natchez and across the river in Louisiana.

The floodwaters have displaced more than 4,800 people in Mississippi, including 80-year-old Leslie J. Sherwin, who was pushed out of his house in Tunica County three weeks ago and into a shelter.

"The road is cutoff. The house is flooded, and I can't even go home," Sherwin said. "But hey, nothing lasts forever. I've been knocked down many times. I'm just going to do what I've got to do, day by day."

___

Online:

http://www.mvn.usace.army.mil/bcarre/missriver.asp

___

Sayre reported from New Orleans. Associated Press writers Brian Schwaner in New Orleans; Scott Mayerowitz in New York, Christopher Leonard in St. Louis and Sheila Byrd in Jackson contributed to this report.

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JACKSON, Miss. — The Coast Guard reopened the swollen Mississippi River north of New Orleans on Tuesday, allowing cargo vessels on the nation's busiest waterway to pass slowly, one at a time in ...
JACKSON, Miss. — The Coast Guard reopened the swollen Mississippi River north of New Orleans on Tuesday, allowing cargo vessels on the nation's busiest waterway to pass slowly, one at a time in ...
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06:24 AM on 05/19/2011
Th. Te job of improving the bedding of these majestic rivers migh restart the American economy and, save lives and goods. Use some taxing of the extreme rich and the money starts flowing again. The knowledge is available in other coutries that succeeded in strugle with water. "Luctor et Emergo"
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Alicia Westberry
college student & blogger
01:15 AM on 05/19/2011
It's good that cargo vessels are being allowed to get to their destinations safely & that spillways are being opened in appropriate places in an attempt to keep the flooding down in populated areas.
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john c fairfax
Underwater filmmaker and investigative researcher
08:51 PM on 05/18/2011
Look beyond Mississippi River flooding and consider the likely cause of more intense and more frequent tornadoes and rain.
Watch video showing cloud coming off Gulf of Mexico water and leading to formation of a tornado.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/04/28/alabama-tornadoes-2011-video-nasa_n_855009.html?view=print
Look into ocean dead zones and understand unprecedented algae proliferated by unprecedented sewage nutrient pollution is absorbing most available oxygen, causing dead zones.
Look at how algae is matter and that unprecedented algae matter in the ocean is absorbing increased warmth. Especially understand that green ocean micro algae absorbs solar warmth en-masse during photosynthesis.
Understand how a small heater can circulate air and warm a room and think how ocean current and convection might circulate warmer water that impacts on atmosphere as warmth rises from surface water.
Look now how nutrient pollution into the Mississippi River and Gulf of Mexico ecosystem is being flushed by floodwater right now and how future nutrient input can be reduced, beginning right now.
Inaction will cost more loss of life and property and lost income from business closed due to floodwater.
Do not be blind to impact and consequences of so much sewage and algae.
Ocean controls weather.
There is need for international resources to manage world ocean ecosystems.
Gulf of Mexico waters include nutrient pollution from numerous countries. Solutions are possible, interesting and challenging.
It can be done.
Solutions would involve new industry and business and employment and economic stimulus
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Mark Brislin
04:48 PM on 05/18/2011
For sure a terrible problem for many people. After the 1937 flood, which has often been referred to here, towns(including my hometown) and cities in Kentucky situated along the Ohio River had a series of levies, dams, and flood walls constructed to prevent this type of disastrous flooding from happening again. Did they not do that along the Mississippi River at that time? I've not heard or read that this flooding is greater than in 1937.
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Bienville
Make levees, not war
07:13 PM on 05/18/2011
An immense and elaborate system of levees, floodwalls, catchments, spillways and floodways has been built along the Mississippi River in anticipation of this event.

Probably more than you'd ever want to know about it is here:
http://www.mvd.usace.army.mil/

There's also several wiki articles, if you'd care to search there.
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Mark Brislin
03:46 PM on 05/19/2011
Thanks...I should have looked it up before I posed the question. :O)
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Henssis1
02:26 PM on 05/18/2011
I feel so bad for these people...I do hope that they get the help that they need to rebuild their lives...We need to take care of our own and not worry about the people in other countries...Keep the money here and help the people here...
11:20 AM on 05/18/2011
The "record" floods, as well as the record wildfires, drought, and tornadoes, are not "Acts of God", as Bible-thumping evangelists would have use believe. They are the by-products of global warming. While pundits over use the word "record" - they forget to mention only one important fact. We are dumping "record" amounts of greenhosue gases into the atmosphere.
The current string of disasters are simply a preview of what's to come. Unless we get serious about reducing our carbon footprint, in the future, the current floods that we are now witnessing will seem like a Tea Party.
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rltballer
why is equality difficult for some to understand?
02:25 PM on 05/18/2011
you mean climate change is real? who would have thought it? ( yes, sarcasm) so sad for the ppl living there.
04:09 PM on 05/18/2011
Due to record snow and rain, these floods were predicted,,,,,,,,,,,,, global warming had nothing to do with it.
10:49 AM on 05/18/2011
I feel sorry for the people in the flood area that will lose their homes but why do people build in these places knowing it can flood ??? many will go right back and build up again
10:15 AM on 05/18/2011
I believe the people of New Orleans and Baton Rouge will help the others along the Mississippi because that's what the people in the South do. I've seen many posts in the past that make general and derogatory statements about the South. However, unlike other parts of the country, especially the North, I find the people of the South to be very giving of their time, money and energy. Hopefully for the people that are displaced and the businesses lost, I hope the government will help them. Since the government has no problems helping other countries when a disaster hits I hope they are just as giving to our citizens.
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JimmyHearts
Top O' the Morn' to ya' *Wink
06:36 AM on 05/18/2011
It looks good that the land where the water is being diverted is absorbing more of it than expected.
- still the few are sacrificing THEIR posessions for the good of the whole ( cities )

My heart goes out to them and all involved . I hope there is no loss of life and that the people will get the help afterwards to get back on their feet as soon as possible.
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trespanieli
06:11 AM on 05/18/2011
This is notmthe brightest thing to do. Anyone who looks at the river here in New Orleans will tell you that the currents and eddies are amazingly treacherous, especially now that the river is so high. There have already been two incidents I can remember where ships or barges have gotten out of control and hit the Greater New Orleans Bridge and the Riverwalk, luckily with minimal damage and no loss of life. And flooding was not an issue. If one barge breaks loose and breaches a levee, will the Coast Guard take responsibility and pay the people who lose their homes and livelihoods?
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fine7760
04:56 AM on 05/18/2011
Get rid of the levees and other structures that limit the natural flow of the Mississippi. Why are we spending billions of dollars in an attempt to control a river. Let it be, TRADE federal land for that that is reclaimed by the river and quite speeding money year after year on a bottomless pit. No one should have bilt on the flood plain in the first place, move them out.
07:53 AM on 05/18/2011
The levees and controls on the Mississippi River are NOT just about towns and residential areas. If you get rid of the levees then the Mississippi River will shift westward into the Atchafalaya, which cannot handle the large oil tankers and cargo ships mentioned in the article. With all of the concern over how a "slow down" in shipping will affect the price of goods in the U.S., just think about how they would be affected by a permanent disruption. And yes, they can dredge and alter the Atchafalaya to handle the shipping. But isn't "man-made alteration" what you are seeking to end? And why destroy the Mississippi River levees only to spend as much or MORE to artificially alter the Atchafalaya to take its place?
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Ryan Tippens
republican.
09:28 AM on 05/18/2011
because the land around the miss is good river bottom land perfect of crops.Communities grow up around farm land and for farmers and families to live with stores and supply houses and and school levees must be built to control the water...thats why.
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fine7760
03:40 PM on 05/18/2011
And what did they do before the levees? Trying to tame a river is like trying to tame a wild beast, it only works sometimes. How are the crops doing today? I'll bet the stores and supply houses are not of much use either. This is an on going disaster, why prolong it any more? If you live in a river plain or below sea level like in New Orleans you don't deserve any help. Your just plain stupid.

What would you say if I attemted to build a house at low tide only to have it flooded when the high tide came in? What they are doing there is the same thing.
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oceanye
defy evil; enhance logic
04:42 AM on 05/18/2011
How can the barges find the center of the river?
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Ryan Tippens
republican.
09:57 AM on 05/18/2011
look at the tree line on both sides.....even in a flood the tree line is there.
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DesperateAmateurs
03:36 AM on 05/18/2011
What are the long term affects of this on our food supply?
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Dan Crabtree
01:27 AM on 05/18/2011
If i were a resident of baton rouge or new orleans I would be on the way to help these people..how-ever i have serious doubts we will see this happen..as it is i will send a donation to the salvation army and encourage all to please do the same.
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Turtlenewz
03:40 AM on 05/18/2011
Why won't the people of Baton Rouge or New Orleans help the victims of the flood ? It is the least they could do for the flooded areas and people since the people of the flooded areas made the sacrifice to keep Baton Rouge and New Orleans from flooding?? It simply would be the christian thing to do ??
07:47 AM on 05/18/2011
Of course the people of Baton Rouge and New Orleans will help those who have flooded. Unfortunately, they can't "be on the way" to the flooded areas right now as Dan Crabtree suggests, because these areas are still in the process of flooding! Many if not most of the residents of those areas are currently staying with relatives who live in non-flooded areas - like Baton Rouge or New Orleans. After the flood, you will see people from BR and NO move in to help. I already know of one local non-profit in New Orleans that is gearing up to assist.
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skatoolaki
Passionate, fiery walking contradiction.
09:40 AM on 05/18/2011
We are...what makes you think we aren't, haven't, or won't?!
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trespanieli
06:05 AM on 05/18/2011
What is your evidence that we are not?