A TEST RUN

How Smart Technology is Going to Change Your Driving Experience
September 5, 2018
A CHANGE IN LEADERSHIP
September 6, 2018
How Smart Technology is Going to Change Your Driving Experience
September 5, 2018
A CHANGE IN LEADERSHIP
September 6, 2018

Tropical Storm Gordon’s approach toward the Louisiana coast – although taken quite seriously by local officials – did not appear to significantly raise hackles.


With good advance notice from federal weather officials while Gordon was still in its infancy above northeastern Cuba, officials expressed confidence that local responses and equipment were ready for any challenges ahead, beginning Saturday and then throughout the day Sunday and Monday.

All sandbag stations for self-service and one for elder and disabled residents were operational just after Noon Monday, well ahead of a 5 p.m. deadline imposed by Parish President Gordon Dove.

Floodgate systems administered by the Terrebonne Levee and Conservation District also appeared to be working in good order, said levee district director Reggie Dupre.


“It’s not going to go above a tropical storm status,” Dupre said Monday afternoon. “But I think he level of protection we have now, certainly we can withstand everything up until it would go beyond, even more than that so we are in very good shape.”

With twelve navigable floodgates and other structures built through joint efforts between the levee district and Terrebonne Parish, Dupre said “drills” like the coming of Gordon “make our jobs easier in the long run.”

Preparation for less-cataclysmic events helps to create situations where people and systems are tested, he explained.


All floodgates except the Houma Navigation Canal’s Bubba Dove gate were closed

by Monday afternoon. Dupre noted that closures were attended to even with the limited staff available on a holiday weekend.

Closing the Bubba Dove takes extra time, Dupre aaid because the HNC ia a federal waterway and as such a lot of networking Is required in advance of action.


“We do more of a formalized procedure*” Dupre said “We have a conference call an what we are doing to make it ready, and we have to send out 24-hour notices. The analogy would be a small municipal police department shutting down a major interstate highway. You have to look at the conditions to see if it is warranted;”

A change in the path of Gordon – once a Bubba Dove do-sure was in effect-could result in a reversal so that marine traffic can resume bade to normal more quickly.

A free web-based application, for monitoring of floodgate openings and closures is getting a good response, Dupre said, and more than 1500 people have registered on the site.


Info and instructions are available at http://www.ticd.org/niobila/

“It’s working well/’ Dupre said. “Every time we have these little events we have more people registered. They can see what flood levels are. how high the water gets, and what we are looking at coming in at low tide.’

A low tide arrival of any issues connected to Gordon. Dupre said, was likely to cut down on difficulties encounteredlocally. But that far ahead of the storm’s final course. Dupre and other leaders well-schooled in the fickle nature of hurricanes, predictions could still he written off as mere speculation.


Sandbags were issued locally as Tropical Storm Gordon approached and some locals needed the caution Visit Houmatimes.com for update on Gordon as he approaches.

COURTESY PHOTO