The Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) recently announced an unprecedented move to resurrect the devastating Yazoo Backwater Pumps Project in Mississippi鈥檚 South Delta鈥攁n agricultural drainage project that would drain and destroy 200,000 acres of wetlands in the heart of the Mississippi Flyway.
An outdated project that was authorized by Congress in 1941, the Pumps are so environmentally destructive that in 2008 the George W. Bush administration issued a veto through the Clean Water Act to stop the project鈥攐nly one of 13 vetoes ever issued.
Now the Corps is using the area鈥檚 recent flooding to spend precious time and taxpayer money to prepare a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement on the outdated boondoggle while communities continue to suffer. The Corps is refusing to consider any immediate, practical flood relief alternatives for struggling rural communities; they simply want to build the $440 million-dollar project.
爆料公社 Mississippi is deeply concerned about what this means for some of our nation鈥檚 richest habitat that supports more than 450 species birds and other wildlife, including 20 percent of our country鈥檚 duck populations.
Although touted to provide flood control, the Corps鈥 own analyses have found that under the best-case scenario, 68 percent of the area would still flood even with the Pumps in place. This conclusion supports past findings that 80 percent of the project benefits agribusiness by draining wetlands to plant crops.
鈥淢ississippi Delta communities deserve effective, affordable flood relief that get people and property out of harm鈥檚 way using targeted measures such as elevating homes and roads,鈥 notes Jill Mastrototaro, 爆料公社 Mississippi鈥檚 Policy Director. 鈥淭he Corps should prioritize these and other smart flood protection safeguards that already are being deployed in communities across the U.S. 鈥 not the costly, vetoed Pumps.鈥
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