A little bit weird, a little bit political with a lot of humor.
At least one escapee from New Orleans is claiming that case
Published on September 2, 2005 By historyishere In Current Events
I cannot confirm the veracity of this, however, about two hours ago, I read a report from someone who had gotten out of New Orleans a few hours before the official evacuation order had been put out, and he has put forward the following claim:

I just learned a construction barge rebuilding the Hammond Hwy bridge at Bucktown broke loose from the bridge and punched a hole in the New Orleans-side of the levee. It is entirely possible that were it not for this incident, the system in the main part of New Orleans aside from New Orleans East and the Lower Ninth WOULD NOT HAVE FLOODED!

And here is a Google Maps Hybrid version of that Bridge area before the flooding and the CNN map of almost the same area, with the levee breach indicated.

I will admit from all I've read over the years that levees and other such defenses have a tendency to fail catastrophically when they reach their breaking point so a two block breach may be the realistic results of such a normal failure of that system. However, if this failure was facilitated by a collision with the construction barge, then this event takes on a new scope as something which may have been harder to prevent through levee improvement.

I am no Bush apologist, but if the barge theory proves correct, then this failure may have still happened with or without the billion dollar improvement to the system, because I don't know that levees are designed to take a such a hit. Granted, there were two other levee breaks of lesser severity in other parts of the city which indicate the system was still lacking.

At the moment, this may all just be idle speculation, however, it did seem worthy of reporting to the rest of you..

Comments (Page 2)
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on Sep 06, 2005
Barge could have crashed through canal's floodwall

Granted, it isn't about the 17th street levee, but this could be where this all got started, and the basis behind the information I passed on. However, the barges in the area of the 17th Street canal are as of yet unaccounted for according to the story.
on Sep 06, 2005
Granted, it isn't about the 17th street levee, but this could be where this all got started, and the basis behind the information I passed on. However, the barges in the area of the 17th Street canal are as of yet unaccounted for according to the story.


Next we will hear how Bush was controlling the barge by remote control.
on Sep 06, 2005
One thing I heard on the radio today was that the floating gambling casinos slammed into the Mississippi coast, causing quite a bit of destruction. I don't know if that's true. I'll try to find some confirmation.

Man, those barges are big suckers. For a storm to slam them onto shore is an amazing testimony of the strength of a hurricane.
on Sep 08, 2005
The Casino barges "floated" ashore with the storm surge. The storm surge there was somewhere between 20-30 feet, so one could expect them to rise with the surge, break free of their moorings, and go inland as far as where sealevel is less than that of the height of the surge.
on Sep 08, 2005
Engineers suspect that a barge hit that levee as Katrina's ferocious winds rocked the city.

This could mean that the levee system was good enough as long as you move any large object out of the way.

Then again, it still could be possible that even if this didn't happen that the water could have still undermined the leveee and broke, albeit, much later than it originally did.
on Sep 08, 2005
Photos suggest a runaway barge "may" have contributed to the breach in the Industrial Canal - a barge that should have been moored northwest of the breach ended up southeast of the canal breach in a city neighborhood. Whether it just floated over there after the breach or was part of the reason for the breach we don't presently know.

Cheers,
Daiwa
on Sep 09, 2005
I was sort of tenative in my initial reporting of this theory... so I am willing to concede that there are still a lot of things that need to be determined before making a 100% solid claim that the barge smashed that levee.
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