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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - CNN - 20110515:05:32:00

recent tornado and flooding. dangerous flooding along the mississippi river today led to the opening of a spillway in morgan morganza, louisiana, a move not seen since the early 1970s. army corps of engineers says more gates will be opened and will probably stay open for weeks. it is a desperate action to reduce the river level now threatening the cities of baton rouge and new orleans. i want to bring in retired general russel honore and torp marc davis, director of the tulane institute of water record law and policy. thanks to both of you for joining us. mark, a lot of people are upset about the flooding of the at cha fa l chafalaya but what choice did the corps have? they didn t have a choice. the choice was made shortly after the 1927 flood. in many ways people have to understand this system is

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - CNN - 20110515:05:33:00

working the way it was intended to work. in 1927 we displaced more than 600,000 people, and this is a whole system, not just morganza or bonnie carey, it s the entire levee system with its control structures that have been put in place. there are some hard choices that have been made in the process and not everybody bears the same burden. right now it s working the way it was designed to work which after katrina it s nice to see a levee system do that. well said. general honore, the morganza can handle up to 36,000 cubic feet of water per second and the bonnie kar i can handle up to 250,000 cubic feet of water per second. is it enough? based on current projections. things can change. if we have a failure, if there s something we don t catch, the levee guys are doing a good job recounting those levees. if we have a break, for instance, history has shown we ve had seven or eight breaks between baton rouge and morganza in the last 100 years.

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - CNN - 20110515:05:35:00

so what we actually need is to get the river back into that landscape in a controlled way but where it can actually nourish the marshes and swamps that protect new orleans and so many other things from things like hurricane katrina. so, we have to realize that this river is a part of this coast, and, you know, that it s a tool as well as a source of trouble. general, i m going to bring you back in again. this flooding event might last into the summer you said. i got to ask you can the levees hold that long? well, a lot of investment has been made into the levees with the riffraff, with concrete being poured against them in the most dangerous areas. we are going to be at risk. and the corps is working hard to minimize that risk by keeping the pressure using morganza and

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - CNN - 20110515:08:36:00

can give you 100% surety we won t have a failure. why? because there s things happening underneath that water that you can t see and underneath that levy. even though we have the strongest leees we ever had, there s a possibility we could have a failure. there is a possibility. i got to ask you this just on a personal note. i m being honest here. when you said port allen. my mom is in port allen. she lives there. is there a possibility of flood or breach there? the breach, the most probable place based on history is between port allen and the little town of morganza. there have been eight or nine breaks in the levee there in the last 100 years. that is the most vulnerable area right now. south of baton rouge, that would be around saint gabriel is the most vulnerable areas. and we need to continue to watch

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - CNN - 20110515:05:01:00

photos michael jackson wanted to have destroyed. good evening everyone. i m don lemon. the news starts right now. the legendary mississippi river is rewriting history tonight. for the first time in nearly 40 years the morganza spillways a opened today to divert the swollen river into the atchafalaya basin. it s a pressure valve to relieve the threat of flooding in beige and new orleans, but it means tiny communities could be under many feet of water and force thousands of people from their homes. this is what it looked like back in 1973. the one and only time this spillway had to be opened. the fact this spillway has not been opened in four decades underscores how serious this situation has become. for the next hour we ll be joined by general rousel honore, a high drydrologist and key correspondents. we want to get to ed lavandera

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