FREEPORT, Texas -- The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Galveston District and the Velasco Drainage District signed a Project Partnership Agreement (PPA) March 16, 2021, to construct the Freeport and Vicinity Coastal Storm Risk Management Project (CSRM) element of the Sabine Pass to Galveston Bay Authorized Project.
The Southwestern Division established the $5.2B CSRM program, funded by the Congressionally approved 2018 Bipartisan Budget Act, to reduce the risk of flooding impacts from severe storms. Through the CSRM program, SWD is investigating, engineering and constructing 40 projects across Oklahoma, Arkansas and Texas that will provide critical, enhanced flood risk resiliency to the region.
The Freeport Project, which is estimated to cost $704 million, will raise parts of the existing earthen levee system and construct or reconstruct portions of the existing floodwall, improving approximately 43 percent of the existing 43-mile long system. This is the first of three planned construction projects for the area and is expected to begin in the summer of 2022.
The existing Freeport and Vicinity, Texas Hurricane Flood Protection Project (HFPP) was authorized by the Flood Control Act of 1962, Public Law 87-874. Construction began in March 1966 and was completed in April 1982. The system protects Freeport region from coastal storm surge events coming from the Gulf of Mexico. It also protects from flooding from the Sabine River. The recommended Freeport and Vicinity CSRM Project would raise approximately 13.1 miles of existing levee system, construct approximately 5.5 miles of floodwall, and install navigable gates in the Dow Barge Canal to reduce surge penetration in that area.
“The Army Corps of Engineers has been here with local communities since 1880, particularly the Galveston District,” said Col. Timothy R. Vail, commander at the USACE Galveston District. “The era of 1880 was really about building infrastructure for generations to come, and since the 1970s we have been generally maintaining that infrastructure. Today we are in a new era, where we are building out the next generation of infrastructure. I want to thank the entire Velasco Drainage District for getting us to this point. It’s tremendous.”
“The partnership with the Velasco Drainage District is a critical link in the Coastal Storm Risk Management system that not only holds the Sabine Pass to Galveston Bay Authorized Project together, it bridges the gap for the upcoming Coastal Texas CSRM Study that proposes additional changes to boost and protect the nation’s economy and citizens alike,” said Byron Williams, Deputy District Engineer, Programs and Project Management.
“We look forward with working with the Corp of Engineers in improving our levee system,” said Chris Gallion, Velasco Drainage District Superintendent.
For more news and information, visit our website at www.swg.usace.army.mil, find us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GalvestonDistrict or on Twitter @USACEGALVESTON.