CBS/AP/ May 14, 2011, 4:44 PM

Massive intentional flooding in Louisiana begins

Only one of the 125, 10-ton steel floodgates on the 4,000-foot long Morganza Spillway in Louisiana was opened Saturday to prevent worse flooding downstream in New Orleans; a cautious first step to give everyone and everything a chance to flee.

"We'll open one bay today. We'll open one or two tomorrow and then we'll open gates based upon the river conditions as they exist," said Col. Ed Fleming, New Orleans district commander of the Army Corps of Engineers.

As the gate was raised, the river poured out like a waterfall, at times spraying 6 feet into the air. Fish jumped or were hurled through the white froth and within 30 minutes, 100 acres of what was dry land was under about a foot of water.

CBS News correspondent Dean Reynolds reports that the Mississippi is cresting now near Helena, Arkansas, over 250 miles north of the Morganza Spillway, so officials in Louisiana know they are in for a period of acute anxiety as they try to manipulate the third longest river in the world.

"This is certainly going to be a marathon and not a sprint as we go through this tremendous, huge amount of water as it comes down," said Gen. Michael Walsh with the Army Corps.

The situation is increasingly urgent, as the amount of stress on the entire flood-prevention system rises.

Louisiana attempts to prevent another Katrina
Video: How spillways protect cities
Photos: Mississippi flooding

Saturday's spillway maneuver is designed to ease the stress by diverting some of the Mississippi's flow away from the cities with their riverside industries and onto less populated rural areas. The choice of city over country was made last month when the Corps blew up a levee and flooded Missouri farms to save the city of Cairo, Illinois.

In Louisiana now, 3 million acres - 3,000 square miles - will be flooded. It is a tide toward that is supposed to move well west of Baton Rouge and New Orleans.

By Sunday, the Army Corps predicts the water will be about 25 miles south and a foot or more deep. By Monday, it will be 50 miles south. By Tuesday, the inexorable wave should reach Morgan City, a town of 11,000, where flood preparations have been under way all week.

All told, up to 25,000 people in the new flood zone will be affected, including farmer Ted Glaser.

"It's gonna be a hit. We're gonna change some lifestyles," Glaser said.

What's more, this is Cajun country - a unique slice of Americana with a storied culture to go along with its soybeans and cornfields. Much of it is going under for weeks, or even months.

"We're using every flood control tool we have in the system,'' Army Corps of Engineers Maj. Gen. Michael Walsh said Saturday from the dry side of the spillway, before the bay was opened. The podium Walsh was standing at was expected to be under several feet of water Sunday.

The overall spillway operation could last several weeks.

The Morganza Spillway is part of a system of locks and levees built following the great flood of 1927 that killed hundreds. When it opened, it was the first time three flood-control systems have been unlocked at the same time along the Mississippi River.

By opening the floodgates on this spillway, the hope is to lessen pressure on the floodwalls down to the Gulf of Mexico and prevent a catastrophe. Officials say the move will ease pressure on levees protecting New Orleans, Baton Rouge, and oil refineries and chemical plants downstream.

They haven't opened the spillway at Morganza, La., since 1973, but with the river still rising, they have to do it again.

"Protecting lives is the No. 1 priority," Army Corps of Engineers Maj. Gen. Michael Walsh said at a news conference aboard a vessel on the river at Vicksburg before the spillway was opened.

Portable dams are also being placed on top of the levees in Baton Rouge, said Reynolds.

It is hoped that maneuvering the spillway will keep the river navigable; the last thing anyone wants is to close the river to barge traffic.

Engineers feared that weeks of pressure on the levees could cause them to fail, swamping New Orleans under as much as 20 feet of water in a disaster that would have been much worse than Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

The Corps employed a similar cities-first strategy earlier this month when it blew up the levee near Cairo, Illinois, inundating an estimated 200 square miles of farmland and damaging or destroying about 100 homes, with damage that will probably exceed $100 million.

This intentional flood is more controlled, however, and residents are warned by the Corps each year in written letters, reminding them of the possibility of opening the spillway.

The spillway can have a flow rate of 1.5 million cubic feet per second. Just north of the spillway at Red River Landing, the river had reached that flow rate, according to the National Weather Service.

To put things in perspective, corps engineer Jerry Smith crunched some numbers and found that the amount of water flowing past Vicksburg, Mississippi, would fill the Superdome, where the National Football League's New Orleans Saints play, in 50 seconds.

This is the second spillway to be opened in Louisiana. About a week ago, the corps used cranes to remove some of the Bonnet Carre's wooden barriers, sending water into the massive Lake Pontchatrian and eventually the Gulf of Mexico.

That spillway, which the corps built about 30 miles upriver from New Orleans in response to the flood of 1927, was last opened in 2008. May 9 marked the 10th time it has been opened since the structure was completed in 1931. The spillways could be opened for weeks, or perhaps less, if the river flow starts to subside.

In Vicksburg, Miss., Warren County Sheriff Martin Pace said at least five neighborhoods have taken on water.

"We're patrolling subdivisions by boat," Pace said Friday.

U.S. Highway 61, a major north-south route has been cut off by water, affecting thousands of people, Pace said.

Meanwhile, farmers along the lower Mississippi had been expecting a big year with crop prices skyrocketing, but now many are facing ruin, with floodwaters swallowing up corn, cotton, rice and soybean fields.

In far northeastern Louisiana, where Tap Parker and about 50 other farmers filled and stacked massive sandbags along an old levee to no avail. The Mississippi flowed over the top and nearly 19 square miles of soybeans and corn, known in the industry as "green gold," was lost.

"This was supposed to be our good year. We had a chance to really catch up. Now we're scrambling to break even," said Parker, who has been farming since 1985.

More than 1,500 square miles of farmland in Arkansas, which produces about half of the nation's rice, have been swamped over the past few weeks. More than 2,100 square miles could flood in Mississippi.

When the water level goes down -- and that could take many weeks in some places -- farmers can expect to find the soil washed away or their fields covered with sand. Some will probably replant on the soggy soil, but they will be behind their normal growing schedule, which could hurt yields.

Many farmers have crop insurance, but it won't be enough to cover their losses. And it won't even come close to what they could have expected with a bumper crop.

Karsten Simrall, who lives in Redwood, Mississippi, has farmed the low-lying fields for five generations and has been fighting floods for years, but it's never been this bad.

"How the hell do you recoup all these losses?" he said. "You just wait. It's in God's hands."

The river's rise may also force the closing of the river to shipping, from Baton Rouge to the mouth of the Mississippi, as early as next week. That would cause grain barges from the heartland to stack up along with other commodities.

If the portion is closed, the U.S. economy could lose hundreds of millions of dollars a day. In 2008, a 100-mile stretch of the river was closed for six days after a tugboat collided with a tanker, spilling about 500,000 gallons of fuel. The Port of New Orleans estimated the shutdown cost the economy up to $275 million a day.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
  • Dean Reynolds

    Dean Reynolds is a CBS News National Correspondent based in Chicago.

10 Comments Add a Comment
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SecureHome says:
We would like to offer the people in the affected region the guide "Filing A Claim" for free on our website. After using the guide, people have recovered up to 50% more from their insurance than they would have without it.

Blaise Hancock
VP Marketing & Product development, Secure Home Group
securehomegroup.com
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mb91764 says:
This is a stupid point but here I go.To save New York city lets say from a virus attack.They have to kill everbody else that live in the State of New York.Do you think our goverment would do it?Yes, to save a bunch of rich bankers and people who think everone else are "hicks',you better believe it.
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tmittelstaed says:
Congress will vote the farmers extra money and a year later most of them will have torn down their flooded farmhouses and dropped new prefabs on the foundations, and be better off. And as for the river dropping sand, *** is that? The reason the soil along the Mississippi river is so fertile is that the rivers floods drop loads of silt down, it's been going on for the last million years. Most of LA was carried down the river. The farmers will end up with even better soil and bumper crop yields.
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dennisall77 says:
How's that global warming denial working out for all you right wingnuts? Sorta expensive, huh? But at least all those energy corp CEO's are still making their millions. Money sure can put out some convincing dysinformatoin, huh?
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maakahill replies:
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Only one spreading disinformation is yo sorry a$$. What about 1927 flood, you liberal nut job! I guess that was global cooling, when the Old River reach it's peak with no spill ways. Want you go hug dat tree, u al gore loving mother father.. Headed down to Bourbon street.. Laissez Les Bon Temps Roulez
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clanthar says:
Everybody is reporting this story wrong including you. The Corps is happy to go along with the misrepresentation because they think it's better in the public eye to see this as saving lives in Baton Rouge and New Orleans, but that's not what opening Morganza is about.

Morganza was created as a safety valve to take pressure off Old River Control. It was used once before in 1973 for that very reason. The Corps nearly lost Old River in '73 and likely would have if not for Morganza. In some of these stories you'll see reported that the Corps has a value of 1.5 million cu fps at Red River landing established as the trigger for opening Morganza. Red River landing is Old River Control. That trigger value is the max saftey pressure level for Old River Control. Morganza is being opened to relieve pressure on Old River Control NOT to save lives down river. New Orleans doesn't need Morganza -- Bonnet Carre protects New Orleans. Fact is if the Corps had to deliberately flood New Orleans to save Old River they'd do it and New Orleans would volunteer.

Unfortunately all of you news agencys that are happy to incompetently report superficial stories with little or no research, have now created a false tension between the populations of the urban areas and the poor cajuns in the flood basin who are going to lose their farm acerage and "camps." Comments to the stories are now seething with racism (victimized white cajun farmers versus undeserving black poor in New Orleans), and none of this is real. Interviews of the soon-to-be flooded victims focus on this tension; "How do feel about sacrificing everything to save the people of New Orleans?" The people in the flood basin now think they're being asked to sacrifice for the sake of the big cities. The media is misinforming everyone!

Morganza is being opened to relieve pressure on Old River Control. The Corps doesn't want too much attention devoted to Old River Control (national security -- I'm serious), so they're just shaking their heads and repeating "saving live."

Fact is everybody in southern LA has a vested interest in making sure Old River Control comes through this flood intact. Old River Control is the linchpin on which all of southern LA hangs and if that pin is pulled New Orleans will indeed be lost and the entire face of southern LA will be utterly transformed. There's the story to tell.
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CBTrawbits replies:
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Good comment. The real story is not the Corps "saving New Orleans" (don't get me started); it's much more interesting and not at all about New Orleans. Everybody who loves Southeast LA, whether you're attached to the music of New Orleans or catching sac au lait off your bateau down in St. Martin Parish should take a look at
http://www.americaswetlandresources.com/background_facts/detailedstory/LouisianaRiverControl.html
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zzacrat says:
They wait an wait an wait, then open up flood gates to flood everything. They knew about this surge of water for months, why haven't they started this dumping of water weeks ago. I have drove truck all over that part of the world. They have Sugar Canes fields, Catfish farms, Rice fields that could be diked for these floods that always comes. All that would need to be payed out is a year of crops that gets flooded. After these floods, the land now is better that anytime in the past for growing crops like Sugar, Rice, even fish!
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Vernique2 says:
Governor says now is the time for people to execute their plan. Vote for conservative candidates and the middle class is on its own. Only help for corporations and wealthy. Remember this in the next election.
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Htos1 says:
Too bad we can't bring the water to Texas and Florida for our fires.
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