Thursday, March 4, 2010

Jeudi

Scalise Continues Fight for Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Projects
~Inside Louisiana News


Cruising for the Coast Mar 14th
~A sunset cruise hosted by Ship Island Excursions with great food, and discussion to benefit the Gulf Restoration Network.

Mitigating for MRGO with the Inner Harbor Navigation Canal ~lacoastpost.com

Environmental Effects of Hurricane Ike Evident

Red River Erosion Bad Before Spring Flooding ~Cenlanews.com

Problems in the Missouri River flow downstream

EPA may consider limits on discharges from small commercial vessels
~Mark Schleifstein


Floodwall Replacement, Floodwall Construction along Haynes Blvd from Lake Front Airport to Paris Road ~FedBiz

500-year flood plain plan washes out in Iowa~Whatever support there was for an ambitious plan to base state flood protection policy on the 500-year flood plain has been eroded by concern over the lack of reliable flood plain maps and whether new requirements would stymie economic growth.

Pawlenty asks feds' help as MN cities prepare for flood fight

Disaster Myth grows Diversified
---Chili Vs. Haiti
~Petroleumworld.com

~Editilla Rotellas~As Ms Klein points out in her essay below, the New Disaster Myth is not as much about Spinning the Realities of Disaster, both Natural and Man-Made. The tactic of these Disaster Myth Makers is to simply outright Lie.
Take this one for example, in comparing New Orleans (Man-made Disaster) to Haiti (Natural Disaster):
~[Disaster management scholar Joseph Trainor observed that “…people are not victims of disasters, they are survivors…People are adaptive and altruistic, mass rioting and mass looting are just disaster myths for the most part…] Riiight. I guess
Danzinger Bridge was just a stop on the Yellow Brick Road
and the Tonton Macoutes were just Bad Guys in a movie.

Chile's Socialist Rebar
~Naomi Klein

~More from the Jawbone of the Beast

FBI opens two new investigations into conduct of New Orleans police after Katrina
~Brendan McCarthy


Police station not ‘evicted,’ developer says~The Lens
~"No good deed goes unpunished." That was how real estate developer Pres Kabacoff ended an e-mail sent recently to New Orleans City Councilwoman Cynthia Hedge-Morrell.
The good deed in question was Kabacoff loaning space for a temporary 5th District police headquarters. The punishment, the real estate developer wrote, was the District D councilwoman’s choice of words at a Thursday council meeting.
In approving a new temporary district station, Hedge-Morrell said that Kabacoff “evicted” the precinct.

Fuck Latter & Blum... Fuck them very much ~American Zombie

Did I hear someone say they wanted to read Aaron Broussard’s deposition in the pumps lawsuit? ~slabbed

New Orleans inspector general drafts report on recovery oversight contract
~Michelle Krupa


IG: NOPD chief's lack of cooperation amounts to gross misconduct~Paul Murphy, WWL

Proposal would hit wallets of government employees convicted of work-related felonies~Ed Anderson
~Two Metairie lawmakers have filed proposed changes in the state Constitution that would bar government employees or elected officials from collecting taxpayer-financed retirement benefits if they are convicted of felonies related to their jobs.

Former Employee Suing State Attorney General For Discrimination ~WDSU
~In her federal civil action against the Louisiana Department of Justice, Jennifer Medley is claiming unequal pay for unequal work. Her lawyer, Dale Williams, says because Medley is African American and because she is female, she's been methodically discriminated against. “Some of the implications are, is that if you're a white male in the attorney general's office, you're paid highest. If you're a white female, you come next. If you are a black male, you're next in line. If you are a black female, you're at the bottom,” said Williams.

Louisiana not included in college- graduation alliance
~Alexandria Town Talk


I keep losing friends I never met ~TBogg

The Forest Retreat
H/T~American Zombie

Oh Hell, Here They Come...

Airport renaissance on the lakefront~Rob Masson

More In Spike Lee’s lens
~Leigh Coleman
~“After we finished the first documentary I knew we had to follow up in South Mississippi,” Lee said.“People are still hurting. Making this film takes some detective work, but we are finding out that the people who lived here before Katrina do not want to just disappear from the grid — they want to come home and stay.”
Lee said there is no script; he and his crews go where the interviews lead. “The people in New Orleans are strong but have little or no faith in the Army Corps of Engineers,” Lee said. “South Mississippians are strong, too, but they need to have faith in the local, state and federal government — these folks have to do their job.”

2010 St. Joseph's Parade: Mar 6
~Italian-American parade will begin at Canal Street and Chartres; proceeding down Chartres to St. Peter; left on St. Peter to Royal Street; right at Bienville to Bourbon Street; Another right onto Bourbon Street down to St. Anne. Finally, the parade will turn onto St. Ann and proceed back to Royal Street and take Royal back to Canal.

Katie’s Restaurant Reopens in Mid-City~Ian McNulty, Gambit
H/T~Library Chronicles

Three of four nominees in IACP Cookbook Awards American category are New Orleanians
~Judy Walker


Chef Paul Prudhomme and the Great Cajun Omelet
~Wendy Rodrigue


Louisiana Drumline Camp helps kids develop percussion skills
~Sheila Stroup

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