September-October 2007

Gulf Coast Comeback

Post-Katrina, Mississippi identifies the development of water and wastewater systems as critical to achieving the state’s housing and economic development goals.

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By Penelope B. Grenoble

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In this year’s July/August issue of Water Efficiency, we examined challenges associated with development along the nation’s coasts, which in some areas is outstripping existing infrastructure to the point of causing habitat loss and degradation of coastal water resources. Based in part on a report from the National Oceanic Service of the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), this initial article identified the need for organized planning in coastal areas, particularly in regard to long-term water, wastewater, and stormwater management. As of 2003, 153 million Americans called the coast home, 33 million more than in 1980. Fifty-three percent of us are settled on only 17% of the nation’s land; of our 25 most populated counties, 23 are on a coastal range. The trend toward waterfront living is expected to continue with the addition of another 7 million newcomers by 2008, and 12 million more by 2015. The issue, say the NOAA researchers, is density: too many people living in too confined a space.

With an eye toward evaluating the type of coordinated long-term planning the NOAA report says is necessary to safeguard our coasts, we visited the post–Hurricane Katrina redevelopment effort under way along Mississippi’s Gulf Coast. Katrina destroyed 70,000 homes, dislocated 125,000 residents, and destroyed or damaged the state’s highways and water and wastewater infrastructure. Although battered by wind and Katrina’s storm surge, Mississippi residents are committed not only to rebuilding but also to aggressively pursuing the growth spurt Mississippi was enjoying before the hurricane struck.

The Mississippi Governor’s Commission on Recovery, Rebuilding, and Renewal identified housing and economic development as the state’s redevelopment priorities and water and wastewater capacity as critical to achieving those goals. With the mandate from the governor, the Gulf Region Water and Wastewater Plan identified 300 water and wastewater projects in a short four months and from these selected 62 for funding. Wastewater projects received priority over water supply projects at a ratio of 2:1, and although the original goal had been to consider an integrated approach to water, wastewater, and stormwater management, the magnitude of the demand for water delivery and wastewater treatment was such that only two stormwater projects were recommended for funding. (Both are demonstration projects that explore innovative ways of handling discharge from beach outfalls.)

Visual: provided by NOAA
Bay St. Louis, MS, a coastal community forever changed

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Is such an effort reproducible elsewhere? “We were building the prototype as we were flying it,” says Carol Mann of Mann & Associates LLC in Jackson, MS, which handled the public outreach for the infrastructure planning process. One factor Mann acknowledges as critical to the success of the Mississippi project was the magnitude of the disaster, which was critical in focusing stakeholders throughout the planning process—and to the ability to obtain consensus.

Hurricane Katrina made landfall on the Mississippi Gulf Coast on August 29, 2005, as a Category 3 storm, resulting in what has been subsequently characterized as the most destructive and costly natural disaster in US history. Estimates are that 51% of existing homes were damaged, approximately 20,000 businesses destroyed, and public buildings such as libraries, courthouses, police stations, and community centers damaged, some severely. Although most of the coast was buffeted by winds of over 100 mph and experienced torrential rainfall, the majority of the damage was caused by the hurricane’s storm surge. Next Page >

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