Office of Conservation Proposes Rules for Groundwater Evaluation and Remediation at Exploration and Production Sites

By Len Kilgore and Esteban Herrera

In the January 20, 2010 Louisiana Register, the Office of Conservation, Louisiana Department of Natural Resources issued a Notice of Intent to amend Statewide Order 29-B to incorporate new rules for the evaluation and remediation of groundwater conditions at exploration and production sites.

The proposed rules can be found at this link.   As part of the proposal, Conservation has published a draft manual entitled “Exploration and Production Waste Site Evaluation and Remediation Procedures Manual” or “SERP Manual.”   A copy of the SERP Manual can be found here

Conservation will accept comments on the proposal through March 8, 2010.   A public hearing on the proposal is scheduled for March 1, 2010, at 9:00 a.m. (CST).   Anyone with interests involving energy exploration and production sites should carefully review the proposal.

Posted In Coastal/Wetlands Issues , Corps of Engineers , Energy , Environmental Litigation and Regulation , Legacy Oil Field Sites , Louisiana In General
Permalink

Corps Recommends Closing MR-GO

by Erich P. Rapp

The New Orleans Times Picayune posted a story to their web site on July 3, 2007 at 7:45 PM stating that the Corps of Engineers has formally recommended to Congress that the Mississippi River - Gulf Outlet ("MR-GO") be closed. MR-GO is a 60 mile long shipping channel running from the Louisiana coast to the Industrial Canal in New Orleans. Construction on MR-GO started in 1958 and was completed in 1968. The canal was designed to be 36 feet deep and 500 feet wide.

>> Continue Reading Posted In Coastal/Wetlands Issues , Corps of Engineers , Hurricane Katrina , New Orleans/Louisiana Recovery
Permalink

Corps of Engineers Increases French Quarter Flood Risk

by Erich P. Rapp

Throughout the Corps of Engineers’ history of building public works projects, they have sought to protect or enhance property values and economic interests of various groups. Often fixing one problem causes another. Sometimes those new problems are later referred to as “unintended consequences.”  Many times those supposed “unintended consequences” are known in advance. Nevertheless, these economic shifts often occur without warning or compensation to the people imperiled or damaged. This is the power and burden that goes with building large public works projects. It also presents the legal question of when should a property owner whose interests are imperiled or damaged by public works projects be compensated for such an economic shift.

>> Continue Reading Posted In Corps of Engineers , Hurricane Katrina , New Orleans/Louisiana Recovery
Permalink

Corps of Engineers Releases 100 Year Flood Maps for New Orleans Metro Area

by Erich P. Rapp

Corps of Engineers Releases 100 Year Flood Maps for New Orleans Metro Area

On Wednesday June 20, 2007, the Army Corps of Engineers released its long anticipated 100 year flood maps for various parts of the New Orleans metro area. While the maps depict some improvement over the flood risk that existed before Hurricane Katrina, the risk of catastrophic flooding in the New Orleans metro area remains.

http://blog.nola.com/updates/2007/06/risk.html

http://blog.nola.com/graphics/2007/06/the_risk_of_hurricane_flooding.html

Posted In Corps of Engineers , Hurricane Katrina , Louisiana In General , New Orleans/Louisiana Recovery
Permalink

United States District Court Dismisses Katrina-Related Federal Tort Claims Act Lawsuit

by Erich P. Rapp

On May 30, 2007, United States District Judge Stanwood R Duval dismissed a class action lawsuit by residents of South Louisiana claiming damages from Hurricane Katrina. The court ruled that the plaintiffs had failed to exhaust their administrative remedies with the federal government before filing their Federal Tort Claims Act suit. The lawsuit accused the federal government of negligently designing, constructing, maintaining, inspecting and operating the area's entire navigable waterway system, including the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet, the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway, the Industrial Canal, the London Avenue Canal and the 17th Street Canal.

The court was also critical of the plaintiff's laundry list use of a multitude of federal statutes to support their claims. The judge further suggested that the plaintiffs claims bordered on being sanctionable under Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

The opinion is Berthelot et al. v. BOH Bros. Construction Co. et al., No. 05-CV-04182, 2007 WL 1239132 (E.D. La. 4/27/07).  

Posted In Corps of Engineers , Hurricane Katrina , Louisiana In General , New Orleans/Louisiana Recovery
Permalink

Legislature Adopts Master Plan for Coastal Restoration and Hurricane Protection

by Erich P. Rapp

On June 1, 2007, the Louisiana Legislature unanimously passed the state's first comprehensive master plan for coastal restoration and hurricane protection. In response, the governor has asked the legislature to commit $200 million of the state's surplus to the coastal fund and allow for the securitization of the tobacco settlement funds, of which 20% is constitutionally dedicated to the coastal fund. The new master plan is entitled, "Integrated Ecosystem Restoration and Hurricane Protection: Louisiana's Comprehensive Plan for a Sustainable Coast." 

>> Continue Reading Posted In Coastal/Wetlands Issues , Corps of Engineers , Louisiana In General
Permalink

Three Reports Due This Summer From Army Corps of Engineers

by Erich P. Rapp

The new chief of the Army Corps of Engineers, Lt. General Robert Van Antwerp, told a New Orleans audience on Thursday May 31, 2007 that three important reports would be released by the Corps this summer. The first report due in June is a comprehensive study of the vulnerability of low lying areas of coastal Louisiana to future hurricanes. This report will show residents of the low lying area how their homes will do during about 150 hypothetical storms.

>> Continue Reading Posted In Coastal/Wetlands Issues , Corps of Engineers , New Orleans/Louisiana Recovery
Permalink