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    National Guard sandbags levee, protects highway/Citizen-Soldiers, Airmen work side-by-side in Plaquemines Parish

    National Guard sandbags levee, protects highway

    Photo By Sgt. Michael Owens | Plaquemines Parish Land superintendent Blair G. Rittiner and Louisiana Air National...... read more read more

    MYRTLE GROVE, LOUISIANA, UNITED STATES

    09.13.2008

    Story by Sgt. Michael Owens 

    Louisiana National Guard

    By Sgt. Michael L. Owens
    241st Mobile Public Affairs Detachment

    MYRTLE GROVE, La. – On the seventh anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on America, Soldiers and Airmen of the Louisiana National Guard assisted Plaquemines Parish by sandbagging a levee that protects Highway 23, the main artery for entering and exiting Plaquemines Parish, as a precaution against Hurricane Ike's storm surge.

    The levee, which was overtopped and breached when Hurricane Gustav passed through the area, had suffered damaging erosion caused by heavy rainfall throughout the year.

    "There are eight dips and low spots in the levee that were caused from erosion," said Blair G. Rittiner, Plaquemines Parish land superintendent. "If these holes are not filled or repaired, it may cause the levee to breach again. Basically, we are putting band-aids on the levee."

    Although Louisiana is not expecting a direct hit from Hurricane Ike, Plaquemines Parish is expecting at least a four foot storm surge e as it passes through the Gulf of Mexico.

    "The levees are about three feet high," explained Spc. John M. Clement, G Company, 1-141st Field Artillery Battalion, 256th Infantry Brigade Combat Team. "We are putting lots of sandbags here that will eventually raise the height to about four feet."

    Plaquemines Parish dips deep into south Louisiana and has the most combined land and water area in the state. The parish suffered minor flooding after a portion of its levee breached as a result of rising water from Hurricane Gustav. Unlike the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, there were no reports of homes flooding in the parish due to Gustav.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 09.13.2008
    Date Posted: 09.13.2008 16:01
    Story ID: 23605
    Location: MYRTLE GROVE, LOUISIANA, US

    Web Views: 161
    Downloads: 147

    PUBLIC DOMAIN