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DESIGNED TO PROMOTE ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS

Great care is given to the creation and implementation of borrow area and berm design. Traditional borrow areas are located on the riverside of the levee adjacent to the construction. The Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS) resulted in an alternative that uses open land with suitable material located in the batture (area between the levee and the river) if available within a reasonable distance. In the past, borrow areas were rectangular shaped pits that held water. Today, the Corps of Engineers, working with the Levee Board and the landowner, will often design two types of borrow areas:

1. Aquatic Borrow Areas. This borrow area is irregularly shaped with smooth side slopes, varying depths and islands with trees left undisturbed in the middle. This type design promotes aquatic, fisheries and waterfowl benefits.

 

2. Reforested Borrow Areas. This borrow area is graded to drain and is planted in trees restoring bottomland hardwoods and terrestrial wildlife habitat. Schematic: Corps Reforested Borrow Area Schematic Photo: Completed Reforested Borrow Area (?)

 

INNOVATIVE "AVOID & MINIMIZE" DEISGN TECHNIQUES

To minimize impact on surrounding land and habitat, seepage berms are located adjacent to the landside slope of the levee to reduce the hydraulic pressure of water passing through the sand layers under the levee. If seep water is allowed to exit the ground with high velocities, it will displace material, causing cavities and voids to form under the levee, which can cause a levee failure (crevasse). Seepage berms are very wide, thus requiring a tremendous amount of borrow material. To reduce the amount of borrow, the Corps of Engineers has developed several innovative "avoid & minimize" design techniques. These designs help avoid and minimize damage to the environment (trees, wildlife and right-of-way acquisitions).

1. Relief Wells: Where conditions exist, such as limited landside right-of-way (r.o.w.) and lack of traditional riverside borrow area, the Corps will evaluate the installation of relief wells instead of constructing berms. Relief wells allow for the orderly discharge of seep water through a controlled mechanism without the displacement of material from under the levee. Relief wells are installed adjacent to the landside toe of the levee, thereby reducing r.o.w. acquisitions required by traditional berms, as well as the borrow areas required for the material.

2. Dredged Berms. In areas with existing berms that have suitable material with the Mississippi River being close enough to provide an economical source of sand, the Corps is excavating these berms and using the material to raise the levee. Dikes are constructed around the limits of the berms to retain the water, while sand from the Mississippi River is pumped in using a hydraulic dredge. Once the sand is up to grade, the dike material is used to cover the sand berm to provide suitable material to grow the grass cover.

Traditional borrow levee enlargements cost between $1 million and $2 million per mile while the environmentally friendly dredge jobs cost about $3 million per mile. Based upon current funding levels, the MR&T Project is scheduled for completion in 2031.

As of 2001, the Mississippi Levee Board currently has 18.1 miles of deficient levee enlargement and berms under contract (7.6 miles traditional and 10.5 miles dredge). By 2003, another 17.3 miles of our deficient levee will be under contract (8.5 miles traditional and 8.8 miles dredge). These projects will enlarge the most seriously deficient levees to protect the citizens who live behind the levee.

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