Louisiana
Supporters and critics debate largest Louisiana coastal project’s $2.3 billion cost
NEW ORLEANS (WVUE) -On a windy November afternoon, a ship experience alongside the east financial institution of Plaquemines Parish reveals a spot the place levees now not confine the Mississippi River.
Alisha Renfro, a coastal scientist with the Nationwide Wildlife Federation sees Neptune Move as a residing laboratory, a real-life instance of how nature meant the river to work.
“Many times, what we will see alongside the Louisiana coast, locations the place the river runs into these shallow water areas are literally gaining land versus virtually everyplace else in Louisiana the place we’re shedding land,” Renfro stated.
This new channel that the river has gouged into the marsh additionally ignites an issue.
The U.S. Military Corps of Engineers, fearing the move will have an effect on navigation in the primary physique of the river, plans to dam many of the circulate with a rock barrier throughout the move.
The Corps is at the moment soliciting public touch upon its plan, which a spokesperson says would return the water circulate down the channel to ranges recorded earlier than the 2019 high-water occasion within the Mississisppi.
Coastal Activists see Neptune Move as an argument for the Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion Mission, a a lot bigger, man-made channel on the opposite facet of the river.
The state has utilized for a federal allow for the diversion, which might be constructed within the Ironton and Mrytle Grove space about 20 miles south of Belle Chasse.
At peak occasions, the diversion would channel as much as 75,000 cubic toes per second of river water and sediment into Barataria Bay, or almost an Olympic-size pool each second.
“That’s what’s so vital about these restoration tasks is to offer that variety of habitat,” stated Erik Johnson, director of chook conservation for the Nationwide Audubon Society.
An Environmental Impression Assertion from the Corps estimates the diversion would construct 21 sq. miles of land over 50 years.
Critics level to dredging tasks corresponding to Spanish Move close to Venice, the place a large dredge offshore delivered 1,600 acres of latest land by pipe in roughly one 12 months.
“What can be water someday would have bulldozers on it the following day,” stated Mitch Jurisich, who chairs the Louisiana Oyster Job Power.
The EIS warns of great, unfavourable penalties to oyster grounds within the Bay.
Critics argue for what they see as instantaneous land, constructed to the next elevation than emergent marsh.
In Neptune Move, Johnson stated the free-flowing river is “creating each,” a mixture of marsh grasses that present necessary habitat for geese and different species, and better areas lined with rapidly-growing willow bushes.
“I feel two-and-a-quarter billion can construct us a whole lot of land with pumping and dredging,” counters Jurisich, who questions the venture’s rising value.
CPRA places the whole value, together with design, engineering, building, and mitigation, at $2.3 billion.
That compares to an estimate of $1.4 billion as not too long ago as 2017.
“I consider it’s the lifeline to South Louisiana and it’s value each penny,” stated Chip Kline, Chairman of the Louisiana Coastal Safety and Restoration Authority.
Critics level out different prices are tougher to quantify, such because the hurt recent water would trigger to a whole bunch of bottlenose dolphins in Barataria Bay.
Mitigation prices, which might complete $380 million, together with every little thing from paying for refrigeration for industrial fishers pressured to journey farther for his or her catch to the seeding new oyster grounds.
“It’ll destroy fishing, the tourism trade,” stated Lt. Governor Billy Nungesser, the highest-ranking state official to name for the state to kill the entire thought.
“I can’t perceive how anyone thinks creating land over 50 years at sea degree provides you any flood safety,” Nungesser stated.
Though dredging really makes up a bigger portion of the state’s 50-year Coastal Grasp Plan, CPRA leaders level out these tasks are designed to final 20-30 years.
Dredging, they are saying, does nothing to alter the forces that value Louisiana an estimated 2,000 sq. miles of land since 1932.
“After awhile, as you stroll away from that restoration venture, it begins to settle, it begins to compact, the ocean rises and also you’ve misplaced that after 20 years,” Johnson stated.
Kline views dredging as a short-term answer to a long-term drawback.
“The definition, as we are saying, of madness is doing the identical factor time and again and anticipating a unique end result,” Kline stated. “So, we’ve to alter issues.”
Subsequent month, in a pivotal second, the Corps will resolve whether or not to grant the required allow because it methods the positives and negatives of the state’s most bold plan to reclaim a few of its misplaced land.
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Louisiana
Miss Louisiana 2024 heads to Miss America 2025
MONROE, La. (KNOE) – Miss Louisiana flew out from the Monroe Regional Airport to the Miss America competition in Orlando, Florida on Friday, Dec. 27.
Louisiana Tech University student and Texas native, Olivia Grace George will be competing against 50 other titleholders for the Miss America crown.
Before competing for Miss Louisiana in June 2024, she was 2023’s Miss Louisiana Watermelon Festival.
George said this coming week will be busy and fun-filled with lots of events on the schedule.
“I’m excited for the competition, but I’m just excited for the overall journey ahead,” said George.
During the Miss America competition, George will be performing a jazz dance routine for her talent.
George’s community service initiative is called “Education is Key – Knowledge Empowers Youth”.
“I hope to share with students the importance of education and how our education is a key that can unlock many wonderful doors,” said George.
George said she hopes to learn from the experience of Miss America.
“I hope to bring back that love and that gratitude and appreciation, and share it with the state of Louisiana and continue to support and love the state of Louisiana to the best of my ability,” said George.
George said no matter the outcome of the competition, she is grateful for the experience.
“Ever since I was a little girl, I’ve always wanted to go to Miss America, and so now that it’s actually happening, it’s just so surreal and incredible,” said George.
The Miss America preliminary competition takes place on Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025 at 7 p.m.
The finals portion of the competition will air on Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025 at 7 p.m.
Click here for more information on where to access the live stream.
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Louisiana
Bird flu virus likely mutated within a Louisiana patient, CDC says
A genetic analysis suggests the bird flu virus mutated inside a Louisiana patient who contracted the nation’s first severe case of the illness, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said this week.
Scientists believe the mutations may allow the virus to better bind to receptors in the upper airways of humans — something they say is concerning but not a cause for alarm.
Michael Osterholm, a University of Minnesota infectious disease researcher, likened this binding interaction to a lock and key. To enter a cell, the virus needs to have a key that turns the lock, and this finding means the virus may be changing to have a key that might work.
“Is this an indication that we may be closer to seeing a readily transmitted virus between people? No,” Osterholm said. “Right now, this is a key that sits in the lock, but it doesn’t open the door.”
The virus has been causing sporadic, mostly mild illnesses in people in the U.S., and nearly all of those infected worked on dairy or poultry farms.
The Louisiana patient was hospitalized in critical condition with severe respiratory symptoms from bird flu after coming in contact with sick and dead birds in a backyard flock. The person, who has not been identified, is older than 65 and has underlying medical problems, officials said earlier this month.
The CDC stressed there has been no known transmission of the virus from the Louisiana patient to anyone else. The agency said its findings about the mutations were “concerning,” but the risk to the general public from the outbreak “has not changed and remains low.”
Still, Osterholm said, scientists should continue to follow what’s happening with mutations carefully.
“There will be additional influenza pandemics and they could be much worse than we saw with COVID,” he said. “We know that the pandemic clock is ticking. We just don’t know what time it is.”
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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
Louisiana
‘Jesus was an immigrant,’ Louisiana activists say amid international immigration led population increase
NEW ORLEANS (WVUE) – New census numbers show international immigration was a major driving factor of population growth across the United States, contributing to Louisiana’s first population increase in years.
Nationally, immigration accounted for 84% of the nation’s population growth between last July and this July.
In Louisiana, the population grew by just under 10,000. The numbers reveal that about 23,000 more people moved into Louisiana from other countries than people from Louisiana to other countries.
Louisiana lost a net of 17,000 people to other American states.
On the day after Christmas, immigration activists gathered at the steps of City Hall to send a message to Louisiana leaders.
Rachel Taber with Unión Migrante served as an interpreter for Alfredo Salacar of Mexico.
“For all of the anti-immigrant politicians that are supposedly Christian, we want to remind them that Jesus himself was an immigrant,” Salacar said.
Immigration activists said Jesus didn’t come from the White House, a palace or a mansion along St. Charles Avenue; he was born in a stable as his migrant parents who were forced to flee wandered a foreign country.
Taber said many undocumented families who’ve settled in New Orleans had to flee political tyranny, violence and poverty.
“Louisiana is an incredible place everyone wants to visit because of our rich gumbo of people who made a life here: Cajuns, Sicilians, Germans, Irish, Spanish Islenos, Jewish people, resilient Africans and Indigenous people who kept their culture alive despite so much injustice. This recent wave from Central and Latin America is just the newest flavor to add to the family recipe,” Taber said.
Unión Migrante is fighting against racial profiling and the separation of families.
“That’s not a good use of our resources. We want to see families remaining together,” Taber said.
During Thursday (Dec. 26) night’s Christmas Posada and vigil, the local immigration activist group called on Louisiana leaders to take a more pro-immigration stance. At the Hispanic cultural celebration, they also demanded the federal oversight of the New Orleans Police Department continue.
“We’re not criminals. We are an asset,” said Yareli Andino. “If just one opportunity would be given, I think a lot of things could change.”
This holiday season, they are asking people to open their hearts and homes.
“We contribute, we work, we’re here. We rebuild this community after every hurricane comes and destroys it. We work in your hotels. We work in your homes. I personally work in construction, and I’ve been in the homes of many of these same elected officials,” said Salacar. “We know that threats are coming our way… We have a human right to migrate and it’s disgusting to see politicians not only making money off of immigrants but turning us into a political pawn for their own ambition.”
Taber said, “Taylor Swift weekend, the Super Bowl, and Mardi Gras would not be possible” without immigrants.
Members of Unión Migrante said Jesus’ life is an example of empathy, compassion, peace and humility, displaying a deep love towards our neighbors and those most vulnerable.
In a statement, Sgt. Kate Stegall said, “The Louisiana State Police regularly partners with local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies to enforce laws throughout Louisiana. Additionally, LSP Troopers are assigned to federal task forces, where they focus on enforcing federal laws. In these collaborative efforts, Troopers uphold a high standard of professionalism and ensure respectful and effective interactions.”
In a ride-along earlier this month, ICE told Fox 8 these alleged raids and indiscriminate sweeps couldn’t be further from the truth.
ICE representatives said the federal agency is prioritizing criminals and those who pose a threat to national security.
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