ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Army Corps of Engineers on Friday began a $1 billion project, the West Closure Structure, to close off navigation and drainage canals that feed into the West Bank.HARVEY, La. (AP) | Mindful that the suburban West Bank of New Orleans has regained its pre-Hurricane Katrina population and is primed for growth, the Army Corps of Engineers is launching a $1 billion effort to keep the next storm at bay.
The new flood protection is already having a potentially dangerous consequence, though: It's encouraging more people to move into another bowl-shaped area that experts consider perhaps the city's most vulnerable flank.
While New Orleans' population plummeted by 300,000 after Katrina, residents quickly returned to the West Bank of the Mississippi River, many under the mistaken impression that the area was safer.
The fact that the West Bank didn't flood was mainly chance, however. Engineers say the area's 250,000 residents are exposed to surge from a storm coming in at just the right angle, in part because of navigation and drainage canals that feed in.
So the corps broke ground last week on the West Closure Structure, a floodgate and pump system designed to close off those canals and bolster the area's levees.
"The levees are a big deal. They've got to get them done," said Rosemary Veitel, owner of a clothing boutique at the Fountain Park Centre, a new commercial development with fake swans, spewing fountains and Roman statues more at home in Phoenix or Las Vegas than on the edge of the Louisiana swamp.
Local officials see the West Closure Structure as the key to luring more business owners such as Miss Veitel.
"This is the yellow brick road to progress," Aaron Broussard, the Jefferson Parish president, declared Friday at the groundbreaking ceremony for the structure.
As the name implies, the West Bank is west of the Mississippi River and the French Quarter, in a place tourists pass through only if they're on their way to swamp tours. So far, it has been spared catastrophic flooding. Katrina passed to the east in August 2005, and the West Bank was one of the only dry places in the city after levees failed on the East Bank, the main part of the metro area.
But after Katrina, hurricanes Rita and Gustav pushed water levels dangerously high in canals on the West Bank.

By Kara Rowland - The Washington Times
Obama was excoriated for continuing the Bush administration's strictest national security policies, including indefinite detention, military commissions and a "targeted kill" program that authorizes the government to take out suspected terrorists anywhere. Published 8:56 p.m. July 29, 2010

By Sean Lengell - The Washington Times
The House ethics committee officially lodged charges against Rep. Charles B. Rangel, including that he used his office to raise $8 million for a college public policy center named after him and didn't file taxes while he was Congress' chief tax writer. Published 8:56 p.m. July 29, 2010
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