http://www.nola.com/news/gulf-oil-spill/index.ssf/2010/06/state_urges_federal_government.html
A day after being told by the federal government that the state had to halt its construction of an oil protection berm at the northern reaches of the Chandeleur Islands, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and other coastal leaders urged the Obama administration to let work continue as contractors shift their dredging to an alternative site over the next week.
Jindal said the state has agreed to move the dredges a mile farther offshore, but doesn't understand why dredging can't continue until that work is complete.
Officials with the Interior Department in Washington said they have already given the state more than a week to get sand from a more distant borrow site, and that continuing to dredge in the current location could pose long-term risks for the current barrier island system.
After a helicopter tour of the newly created land near the Chandeleur chain, which has been withering away due to a succession of hurricanes over the past decade, Jindal scoffed at the federal government's concerns.
"We've been losing 300 feet every year off these islands. Where has the federal government been?" he asked. "They haven't spent a dollar to protect these islands. We haven't heard from them before today about any concern about these islands or this area. All of a sudden now that we're building new land to protect our coast, they're worried about a hypothetical consequence?"
The state has pushed the plan to add the berms to help fight the encroaching oil from the BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Meixco.
The state's contractros were told by the Army Corps of Engineers to shut down dredging operations Tuesday evening at 6 p.m. Contractors are now working to extend the pipe a mile farther out to the alternative sand borrow site. Once that is done, likely within seven days, the state will be able to proceed with the dredging.
Garret Graves, Jindal's coastal advisor, said the current borrow site is permitted by the Corps and that moving to the more distant borrow sites was a "verbal condition" that the federal government gave after the permit was approved.
Jindal pointed out that the state is willing to backfill the hole they are digging now "within weeks, not months."
The concern with the current borrow site is that sand circulating in the island system could become trapped in the borrow pit, thus accelerating land loss throughout the Chandeleur chain. The federal government believes a site farther offshore would pose less of a risk.
Once again the Feds are preventing us from protecting our own coast. They never gave 2 shits about the miles and miles of wetlands we lose every year and they sure as hell never gave a shit about the Chandeleur Islands which would have completely ceased to exist in the next year or two anyway. They wouldn't give us our fair share of oil royalties so that we could save our own wetlands and they are still fucking us over on the royalties while not lifting a single finger to help protect those islands or any of the other vast stretches of wetlands that have disappeared over the last few decades. Now that we are fighting to save what we have left NOW they are concerned about them? This is some sort of sick joke, it really is. It seems that the Feds are hellbent on doing everything in their power to stop us from helping ourselves.
It has gone way beyond absurd, at this point it must either be intentional or complete negligence/incompetence. How can anyone that knows even a portion of what is really going on down here possibly argue otherwise?
