Levees Pay for Themselves

Levees.org commissioned study disproves suggestions that improving the levee system is a poor investment of federal funds.
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U.S. Counties with levees (click to enlarge).

The non-partisan group Levees.org has released data that squarely addresses the question of whether metro New Orleans should be rebuilt.

The new data is important because after the Army Corps of Engineers' levees failed during Katrina, the survivors were marginalized and labeled irresponsible for depending on levees.

Many suggested that improving the levee system was a poor investment of federal funds and would encourage living in dangerous areas.

For these reasons, Levees.org commissioned a geographer to analyze data that we recently attained from FEMA in a request under the Freedom of Information Act.

The results are rather fascinating.

As reported by Mark Schleifstein in the New Orleans Times Picayune, the data and robust analysis shows that all across the nation, total productivity and personal incomes are greater and poverty is less in the counties with levees.

While those levees don't necessarily protect all the people living in the 881 counties that have them, a study for Levees.org by geographer Ezra Boyd concludes that the levees more than pay for themselves when their cost is compared to the investment they protect.

While the study does not answer all questions for all states for all people, it shows that much more scrutiny should take place before declaring that Greater New Orleans should be forgotten.

Sandy Rosenthal is the founder and director of Levees.Org, a grassroots organization who seeks to inform all that New Orleans was destroyed primarily by bad engineering and not bad weather. She may be reached via email at Sandy@levees.org.

Graphic provided courtesy of Levees.org.

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