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New Bill Requires Army Corps To Consider Green Infrastructure

Sediment pours out of a pipeline as part of Louisiana's Caminada Headland restoration project near Port Fourchon. A new federal bill will require the Corps to consider similar "green" projects when building infrastructure.
CPRA
Sediment pours out of a pipeline as part of Louisiana's Caminada Headland restoration project near Port Fourchon. A new federal bill will require the Corps to consider similar "green" projects when building infrastructure.

On Wednesday, congress passedAmerica's Water Infrastructure Act of 2018, which could encourage the Army Corps of Engineers to build more green infrastructure.

Infrastructure bills are fairly routine. Generally passed every couple years, they often approve lists of projects for things like river dredging or levees -- projects that the Corps builds.

New this year: a section that requires the Corps to consider “natural or nature-based” projects as alternatives if it wants to build something.

“So rather than building a seawall,” says Julie Hill-Gabriel, Vice President of Water Conservation at the National Audubon Society, “you’re thinking about restoring a coastal wetland or moving sediment from one place to another, that would more replicate a more natural defense.”

Hill Gabriel says the bill “is really moving things in the right direction.”

The bill also recommends studying the idea of moving the Corps out of the Department of Defense, and into a different federal department -- something Congressman Garret Graves, who represents Louisiana’s 6th Congressional District, has been pushing for.

The bill now heads to President Trump’s desk for final approval.

Support for the Coastal Desk comes from the Walton Family Foundation, the Greater New Orleans Foundation, the Foundation for Louisiana, and local listeners.

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Travis Lux primarily contributes science and health stories to Louisiana's Lab. He studied anthropology and sociology at Rhodes College in Memphis, TN, and picked up his first microphone at the Transom Story Workshop in Woods Hole, MA. In his spare time he loves to cook -- especially soups and casseroles.
Travis Lux
Travis is WWNO's coastal reporter.