A massive coastal restoration project is in peril amid claims Louisiana
concealed a critical report
[May 05, 2025] By
JACK BROOK and JIM MUSTIAN
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — An ambitious project to restore a rapidly
vanishing stretch of Louisiana coast that was devastated by the 2010
Gulf oil spill has been thrown deeper into disarray amid claims by Gov.
Jeff Landry that his predecessor concealed an unfavorable study that it
was feared could imperil the $3 billion effort.
It's a controversy that was even predicted by the previous
administration as it grappled with how to handle conflicting
environmental analyses for the project, according to a confidential memo
obtained by The Associated Press.
The nine-page document, prepared by five attorneys working for then-Gov.
John Bel Edwards' administration, sheds new light on a study Landry says
was improperly withheld from the public and the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers as it was approving a permit for the Mid-Barataria Sediment
Diversion.
The stakes were so high the attorneys even weighed whether state
officials could face federal charges for withholding from the Corps a
report that the diversion would generate significantly less land than
another modeling projection used in a federal review.
Prosecution seemed “extremely unlikely,” the lawyers wrote to the heads
of the Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority, which oversees the
diversion project, but they added that “the severe consequences and
criminalization of the action warranted mention.”
The attorneys also warned that the Corps might suspend or revoke the
permit if it discovered the study after the fact, the 2022 memo shows,
foreshadowing actions taken last month when the Corps cited
“deliberately withheld” information among its reasons for suspending its
permit for the project. The move halts construction despite more than
half a billion dollars already spent.

“They hid the bad stuff and only showed the (Corps) the version they
liked,” Landry wrote in a post on X. “Science is easy when you just
delete the inconvenient parts!”
Edwards denied his administration withheld information from the Corps
and said “Gov. Landry’s accusations are demonstrably false.”
“When all the facts are presented, the public will see that his
administration has played political games and botched this important
project,” Edwards said in a statement to AP.
Landry countered in his own statement that “the facts speak for
themselves.”
Amid the finger-pointing, conservation proponents have called the report
in question a red herring that Landry is using to tank the project. The
diversion, funded mostly from a settlement arising from BP’s 2010
Deepwater Horizon oil spill, is the largest of its kind in Louisiana’s
history.
Confidential memo warns of legal consequences
The Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion would puncture levees in southeast
Louisiana, diverting some of the river’s sediment-rich flow to restore
wetlands. The long-delayed project was intended to mitigate a
disappearing coastline caused by a range of factors such as climate
change-induced sea-level rise and the river’s vast levee system. Ground
was broken in 2023, but state and federal litigation has stalled it.
Opponents have blasted its ballooning cost and crippling effects on the
local fishing and oyster industries. Landry has said the project would
“break” Louisiana’s culture of shrimp and oyster harvesting, likening it
to government efforts a century ago to punish schoolchildren for
speaking Cajun French.
Earlier this year, Landry's administration approached the Corps with a
list of concerns about the project, including a 2022 study it said “does
not appear to have been disclosed to the public nor considered by all
necessary persons within the Corps.”
Officials working for the state at the time defended their handling of
the report in question, saying it had been focused on analyzing
maintenance and operational costs related to the diversion and was not
intended to be part of the federal environmental impact statement
process.
The report, prepared by AECOM Technical Services and a subcontractor,
produced “inconsistent” results such as a significantly lower projected
land creation — as few as 7 square miles (18 square kilometers) compared
to the 21 square miles (54 square kilometers) estimated under the
primary model, according to the confidential memo.

[to top of second column] |

The nearly $3 billion Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion project along
the Mississippi River, intended to stave off coastal land loss in
southeastern Louisiana, is seen during a flyover with the
environmental coalition group Restore the Mississippi River Delta,
Aug. 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Jack Brook)
 Officials familiar with the study
said its lower projection resulted from not properly accounting for
sea level rise and underestimating the river's flow. The memo also
pointed to the need for “significant dredging” to maintain the
diversion channel, which Landry's administration now says will cost
tens of millions of dollars.
In the memo, the attorneys outlined a series of “reputational
concerns” about withholding the study and warned it would be more
difficult to keep “controlling the narrative” if the Louisiana
Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority “is on the defensive.”
An informal discussion
The memo noted the Corps and other federal agencies could delay the
project for years if they attempted to integrate the modeling
results into their environmental impact analysis. Failing to
formally disclose the modeling results to federal agencies like the
Corps, the attorneys warned, also would leave the project vulnerable
to litigation.
They suggested the Edwards administration “informally discuss” the
issue with federal agencies and then strategize the best way to
“formally” enter it into the public record for the agencies to
review.
The report's findings eventually were verbally communicated to at
least one Corps official, who indicated it was insignificant,
according to multiple former Coastal Protection and Restoration
Authority officials familiar with the exchange. But the complete
analysis itself was not submitted into the public record, nor was
the official's response at the time, they said.
The former state officials weren't authorized to discuss internal
deliberations and spoke to the AP on the condition of anonymity.
Col. Cullen Jones, head of the Corps’ New Orleans District, told
Landry’s administration last month that the Corps recently conducted
a “technical review” of the modeling analysis in question and
concluded it “would not affect” the permit.
But Jones said the Corps suspended the project’s permit in part
because “the State deliberately withheld information … that the
State knew it should provide.”
What does this mean for the future of the project?
The Corps also pointed to actions taken by Landry’s administration,
including a 90-day work stoppage announced last month amid plans to
study an alternative “smaller diversion” and claims the state can't
afford the project.

It’s unclear how Landry intends to respond to the permit’s
suspension. The state has until Monday to take action to dispute the
permit suspension. At that point, the Corps could revoke or modify
the permit as it sees fit.
Louisiana’s coastal agency earmarked about $573 million in its 2025
budget for the project, an amount now being reviewed by the
legislature. Last fall, federal agencies tasked with managing
Deepwater Horizon settlement money warned that if Louisiana backs
out of or alters the Mid-Barataria diversion, money allocated for it
would need to be returned.
Lauren Bourg, director of the National Audubon Society’s Mississippi
River Delta program, told lawmakers that ending or altering the
project “sends the message that any infrastructure project in this
state may be undone by a few stakeholders who engage in politics
with the right people, distorting the scientific and engineering
principles upon which all of these projects are grounded.”
But many in southeast Louisiana’s fishing industry applauded the
move to halt the project.
“If all this water comes down, it’s going to kill everything,” said
Mitch Jurisich, chairman of the Louisiana Oyster Task Force.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |