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Reading this only strengthens my belief that perhaps it's not such a good idea to spend so much federal money rebuilding the city...
Everyone has known New Orleans is a sinking city. Now new research suggests parts of the city are sinking even faster than many scientists imagined — more than an inch a year.Worse yet, according to the story, "[t]he federal government, especially the Army Corps of Engineers, hasn't taken the dramatic sinking into account in rebuilding plans."That may explain some of the levee failures during Hurricane Katrina and it raises more worries about the future.
The research, reported in the journal Nature, is based on new satellite radar data for the three years before Katrina struck in 2005. The data show that some areas are sinking four or five times faster than the rest of the city. And that, experts say, can be deadly.
"My concern is the very low-lying areas," said lead author Tim Dixon, a University of Miami geophysicist. "I think those areas are death traps. I don't think those areas should be rebuilt."
The blame for this phenomenon, called subsidence, includes overdevelopment, drainage and natural seismic shifts.
Posted by Matt at June 1, 2006 06:51 AM

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Well, it gives the ACoE an easy "out" when the levees break again. A lot of New Orleanians don't trust the repairs. The ACoE are making plenty of reassuring claims but the proof will be when the next major hurricane strikes New Orleans.
I totally agree, lets save our cash, man, we can rebuild on higher ground, i mean besides, New Orleans is going to be gentrified anyways, it will be turned into a new Las Vegas, complete with "genuine" jazz artists located conveniently next to the mardi-gras slots, neon everything, and anything even resembling black culture will be co-opted and made hollow by carpet-bagging, sweaty white guys who wouldnt know a bayou from a donut if a gator bit them in the keester...so i say, save the money, and use it to help the displaced people start a new life, since most of them aren't concerned with coming back anyways
Burn it down. Fill it in. Start over somewhere else.