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A shrinking strip of New Orleans marsh helps protect 1.5 million people. Louisiana wants to save it

There鈥檚 an increasingly narrow strip of New Orleans marshland that hardly anyone lives on, but without it, hundreds of thousands of people will face far greater risks from storms and floods.

The area, commonly called the New Orleans Land Bridge, stretches from New Orleans East to St. Tammany Parish and separates Lake Pontchartrain from the Gulf of Mexico. Like much of 尝辞耻颈蝉颈补苍补鈥檚 coast, it鈥檚 disappearing at a rapid rate.

The on-again, off-again effort to restore the land bridge could get a jump-start next year with a aimed at reviving a large patch of marsh that protects the mouth of Lake Pontchartrain, a shallow estuary whose waters swelled with storm surge during Hurricane Katrina, contributing to catastrophic flooding.

鈥淭his land bridge is one of the most critical natural barriers protecting the city of New Orleans,鈥 said April Newman, a project manager for the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority. 鈥淲ithout it, the New Orleans levee system would be much more vulnerable to overtopping or breaching.鈥

More than 1.5 million people who live around Lake Pontchartrain and the adjacent Lake Maurepas, including residents in Baton Rouge, Metairie, LaPlace, Mandeville and Slidell, receive protection from the land bridge. Failing to restore it could mean its loss within 50 years, said Kristi Trail, executive director of the Pontchartrain Conservancy.

鈥淢aybe that鈥檚 not in my lifetime, but it鈥檚 definitely in my children鈥檚 lifetime,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 pretty wild to think about.鈥

The land bridge includes the Interstate 10 bridge between New Orleans and Slidell, several fishing camps, and the Bayou Sauvage Urban National Wildlife Refuge, the largest national wildlife refuge that鈥檚 completely within a city. The area hosts a variety of fish, crab, birds and other wildlife.

Louisiana is losing the equivalent of , according to the U.S. Geological Survey. It鈥檚 a complex problem, but key factors include erosion from storms and oil canals, subsidence, sea-level rise, and levees, which cut wetlands off from land-restoring river sediments.

The last New Orleans Land Bridge project, completed last year, of marsh along Chef Menteur Highway south of Fort Pike, a crumbling, 200-year-old fortification that bears the scars of several hurricanes.

Last week, a state and federal panel announced plans to restore 1,320 acres of land bridge marsh along the Rigolets, a narrow channel linking Lake Pontchartrain to the Gulf. The project, slated to start next summer, would rebuild land with about 5 million cubic yards of sediment dredged from the Lake St. Catherine lagoon. The restored area would be reinforced with plastic fabric 鈥渕attresses鈥 filled with crushed limestone, an increasingly common tool in Louisiana coastal restoration projects that helps stabilize shorelines and blunt wave erosion while allowing water to pass through.

The final phase, set for completion in mid-2029, calls for planting native grasses and , a plant with thick roots that anchor the soil and tall stalks that comb out river sediment, accumulating it to form new marshland.

The project鈥檚 $101 million budget would come from a fund created with nearly $9 billion BP paid in penalties and settlements after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil disaster. The fund is overseen by the Louisiana Trustee Implementation Group, a panel that includes the state鈥檚 coastal authority, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and other state and federal agencies.

尝辞耻颈蝉颈补苍补鈥檚 calls for investing more than $1.1 billion in New Orleans Land Bridge restoration projects. That amount of money would revive about 29,000 acres, according to the plan.

While the latest project doesn鈥檛 come close to what鈥檚 needed, it鈥檚 a step in the right direction, Trail said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 happening in pieces, parts and phases, but it鈥檚 really important to do,鈥 she said.

The state plans to spend during the 2027 fiscal year. Excluded from next year鈥檚 plans are two long-awaited Mississippi River sediment diversion projects. The diversions, which would have cost nearly $5 billion over several years, were over concerns about rising costs and potential harm to oyster and shrimp fisheries.

Trail said the New Orleans Land Bridge project won鈥檛 be funded with money freed up by scrapping the diversions. But with billions of dollars now potentially available, the coastal authority plans to focus on similar land-bridge restoration projects and barrier-island rebuilds elsewhere along the coast.

鈥淲e鈥檙e losing land bridges just like we鈥檙e losing land all along our coast,鈥 Trail said. 鈥淭his one is particularly important because it does a daily job of protecting (New Orleans) from waves that can flood our lakefront. And when we get hurricanes, it鈥檚 one of our first lines of defense.鈥

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This story was originally published by and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.

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