Corps repairing levee it blew up in southeast Missouri

? Southeast Missouri farmers were elated over news that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers would quickly repair the Birds Point levee that was intentionally breached in early May to relieve flooding upriver.

“They’re doing backflips as we speak,” Mississippi County Presiding Commissioner Carlin Bennett said about the news. “It’s a temporary levee, it’s not a permanent fix. But we’re so glad that something is finally going to be done.”

Gov. Jay Nixon announced Wednesday that the corps was mobilizing the Memphis District to rebuild the three breach points in the levee to 51 feet, which is nearly a foot lower than it was when the corps blew parts of it up. Bennett said the lower level is enough to offer farmers flood protection as they go back to work in their fields.

“If the area were to flood again, it would put a lot of people out of business,” he told the Southeast Missourian.

The corps said work on the levee began Thursday afternoon and that crews would stabilize the three intentionally breached sections of the levee and also repair areas affected by water running over them.

“The main purpose of this construction work is to establish a safe road for official use only over the areas of the frontline levee that were impacted by the operation of the floodway,” Jim Pogue, the corps’ Memphis district spokesman, said in a news release. He said those repairs would be a base for future permanent repairs.

The levee was breached to relieve pressure on the floodwall in Cairo, Ill., sparing the town but inundating about 130,000 acres of Missouri farmland.

Nixon said the decision to rebuild by Maj. Gen. Michael Walsh, commander of the corps’ Mississippi Valley Division — and the man who ordered the levee to be breached — was “absolutely critical” for the farmers in the area who needed protection to get new crops in during the current growing season.