Land buyout plan shocks Hancock
Theresa Thomas Ray of Waveland expresses her doubts about the Army Corps of Engineers ability to protect the Mississippi Coast during a citizens meeting. "If the Army Corps does anything like what they did in New Orleans, we don't need them here," said Ray.
photo by AMANDA McCOY/SUN HERALD
Public meeting draws hundreds
By J.R. WELSH
baybureau@aol.com
More photos: Hancock County Corps meeting (Sept. 18)
BAY ST. LOUIS -- Hancock County was still reeling Tuesday from revelations that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is proposing to buy hundreds of acres from private owners to wipe clean flood-prone land in Bay St. Louis.
The plan is part of the Mississippi Coastal Improvements Program, which has been in the working stages for months but only became common knowledge this week. The issue boiled over Monday at a public meeting held by the corps and the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources that was attended by well over 250 people.
Citizen reaction developed immediately. One activist group, Coastal Community Watch, is soliciting questions from citizens for submission to the corps, and is asking the government to provide written answers on a Web site.
Another group created a Web site called savebaywaveland.com, and officials are working on a resolution formally opposing a mandatory buyout and asking that any properties purchased be bought under strict conditions governing future use.
A buyout would be the first step in the 30-year, Coastwide program. In Hancock County, it includes a possible levee, a 40-foot-high seawall around Old Town Bay St. Louis and flood gates at the mouth of the Bay of St. Louis. Targeted areas include Shoreline Park and much of Cedar Point in Bay St. Louis. Hollywood Casino is included.
DMR Executive Director Bill Walker spoke and moderated the meeting at Bay Middle School and caught the wrath of residents opposed to a buyout.
Suspicion were strong Tuesday that buyouts would remain voluntary. "I still believe they'll get to the point where it's going to be mandatory if they start building levees," said Hancock supervisors President Rocky Pullman.
Some also were angry because the plan has barely been publicized, although Walker said it "is a partnership that has been developed over the last two years" by his agency and the corps. Walker said meetings were publicized and held but did not elaborate.
The Sun Herald confirmed Tuesday that corps officials met with Hancock County supervisors and other officials and briefed them on the program in August. The meeting was held in executive session.
[A.M. in the Morning! Note: "Executive session" means that the public officials cannot disclose--even to their staff members--the contents of the meeting.]
Bay St. Louis City Council President Jim Thriffiley was critical, saying it was not good business. "I think any compulsive buyout is dead and over," he said.
Thriffiley said a joint resolution by the City Council, the Chamber of Commerce, the Waveland Board of Aldermen and supervisors will oppose mandatory buyouts and request that properties purchased be bought under the Stafford Act.
That would allow the government to buy property where a home was destroyed by the hurricane, at a price based on both the current value of the land and the value of the home before the storm.
In addition, the land could never be sold by the government and would be used only for public purposes.
Monday night, residents were opposed to even a voluntary buyout. They said such a plan would weaken the community, leave some people living in isolated areas and destroy small businesses if enough homeowners sell.
Then there was the matter of governmental distrust.
"How can the people of Mississippi trust the Corps of Engineers after what they did to New Orleans?" one woman said.
Another said: "You come in here and scare people to death with a plan that's not even thought out. You're not offering these people anything but terror. We already know what terror is."
On the Web
Information on the Mississippi Coastal Improvements Program can be found at:
• coastalcommunity watch.blogspot.com
• savebaywaveland.com
• mscip.usace.army.mil
• hancockchamber.org
Sun Herald original story published here on September 18, 2007.
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