40 Gulf Coast Resources Guide Maritime Reporter & Engineering News
people. There were more than 900 navi-
gational devices in the Gulf Intracoastal
alone, Master Chief Coffman said, but
the day before they'd worked 208. They
were getting there.
"The thing we always try to impress
upon folks," said Roger Parsons,
Director, Office of Coast Survey, "is that
our assets are deployed during non-
emergencies, teams are pre-staged. We
had 22 NOAA vessels ready to go, with
fathometers and sidescan sonar to deter-
mine what's sunk in the water, or where
it's silted-in." Said Howard Danley,
Chief of the Navigation Services
Division, "In Alexandria, we had two
phone conversations daily, conducted
with the Captain of the Port of New
Orleans and all Federal players, to keep
positive on what assets were available,
what their capabilities were, what results
of previous days results. I thought the
coordination was outstanding."
It was the Industrial Canal, toward the
east end of New Orleans, connecting the
Intracoastal, the Mississippi, and Lake
Pontchartrain, where immediate atten-
tion had been required. Katrina's storm
surge had tossed massive structures
around — towboats, barges, drydocks
— like bathtub toys. Before bargeloads
of rocks could be brought to the lake to
patch-up the levee, the way had to be
cleared. Bisso Marine was near at hand.
With commercial navigation on the
verge of recovery, attention in that third
week was turning to local conditions --
things off the national highway, but
requiring prompt attention. "We have
two heavy lifters," said the Navy's Capt.
Wilkins, "Donjon Marine, and they've
subcontracted T&T.
Other ASA members have contracted
privately for removing large barges from
levees, raising the larger vessels and the
like, and the smaller commercial and
recreational vessels can be assisted by
local sources."
The costs would be charged to the
insurers, or to the otherwise responsible
parties " the salvage operation will not
come out of the taxpayer's pocket."
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"We have been contracted to the U.S.
Navy for salvage and related services in
the southern Atlantic zone; which
includes the Gulf," said John Witte Jr.
of Donjon Marine, "a contract we've
won every five years since 1979. But in
an event as all-encompassing as this,
nobody's ever had the training."
Witte describes a triad set-up by
FEMA, the Corps of Engineers, and the
Coast Guard, to identify and fund wreck
removal. The Navy was brought in to
work as a conduit for technical expert-
ise. "We joined the effort on the
Saturday after the storm," said Witte, "to
support the Navy with salvage assis-
tance and our employees. We also sup-
plied a commercial mechanism to pro-
vide all the services that are needed,"
which by the third week of October
included subcontracting to local opera-
tors.
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