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News / Nation & World

Funding will help finish Houston-area flood projects

$5 billion awarded to Texas; some money set aside for studies

By JUAN A. LOZANO, Associated Press
Published: July 9, 2018, 10:15pm

HOUSTON — Officials in the Texas county hardest hit by Hurricane Harvey said Monday that $5 billion in federal funding that’s been awarded to Texas in the wake of last year’s deadly storm will finally help them finish major flood control projects, some of which have been under construction for years.

Harris County, where Houston is located, is getting about $500 million to finish the widening and other modifications of four watersheds.

The federal government is also providing nearly $14 million to pay for several studies that will look at ways of making the Houston-area more flood resilient, including one that will review the possibility of building a third reservoir in the area.

Local officials say the funding is critical to supporting flood-control efforts after Harvey.

The hurricane and the devastating rain that followed last summer caused an estimated $125 billion in damage statewide and flooded thousands of homes in the Houston area.

“It takes money. We all have to recognize that. There’s no flood-control fairy that’s going to come down and build these projects,” Harris County Judge Ed Emmett said.

U.S. Rep John Culberson, R-Houston, said the new funding will be enough to “not only to finish every federally authorized flood control project in Harris County but finish them at full federal expense.”

Harris County is also working to persuade voters to approve a $2.5 billion bond package in August that would pay for a variety of other flood-control measures, including home buyouts and building additional stormwater detention basins.

About $3.9 billion of the funding that the federal government awarded to Texas last week will be used to improve a system of levees and seawalls in the southeast Texas cities of Freeport and Port Arthur and build 27 miles of new levees and flood walls in Orange County. This project has been in the works since 2004.

The levee improvements would reduce flood risk for both residents and commercial structures and industry , including refineries located in this part of the state, said Sharon Tirpak, deputy chief of project management for the Galveston District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

“What’s important to remember is that (with) any of these projects we can’t stop flooding, but now at least we have the funding to begin work with our local and state partners to help reduce the flood risk,” Tirpak said.

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