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Lesson learned
Three adjacent projects raise Mississippi River levee after
close call
By Sam Barnes
The rumble of equipment can be heard day and night along
a 10-mi. stretch of levee bordering the Mississippi River
north of Tallulah.
Advance Construction Services Inc. of Brewton, Ala., is
working nearly 24 hours a day on two adjacent levee sections
to reinforce the levee system against future flooding. W.
G. Yates & Sons Inc. of Jackson, Miss., was beginning
the third and northernmost section this fall. All the projects
total nearly $20 million.
David Townsend, construction representative with the U.
S. Army Corps of Engineers' Vidalia office, said a flood in
the 1970s prompted the corps' long-term investment in the
levee-raising initiative.
"The river came very close to topping the levee system,
which would have been catastrophic for this area," Townsend
said. The corps subsequently began plans to raise the levee
through out the area.
Dean Boling, jobsite superintendent with Advance, said the
company is working two crews, with the day crew working the
longest levee section to the north.
Boling, who supervises the day crew, said approaching the
project in such a fashion has enabled the contractor to use
the same equipment for both jobs, which "cuts the amount
of machinery out here in half" and "saves significantly
on the cost of performing the two projects."
Still, an impressive fleet of equipment is rumbling across
the cropland that borders the new levee system. Three excavators
dig nearby pits that supply dirt for the levee raising, while
11 dump trucks transport the material from the pits to the
levee in a continuous procession. Five bulldozers help distribute
the dirt once it's placed on top of the levee.
Boling said the success of the operation hinges on the uninterrupted
hauling of nearly 4 million cu. yds. of dirt from the three
pits, which are less than a mile from the levee sites. The
pits were determined to offer the highest-quality soil after
soil boring.
"The water table is extremely shallow here, so we had
to get a little creative," he added. "We have to
dig a ditch around the pit deeper than the pit itself so the
water has someplace to drain. We keep it pumped down to that
level." The method doesn't keep the soil dry but does
keep the hole from filling up with groundwater.
But the method didn't prove impenetrable when cold fronts
packed with heavy rains began sweeping through the area in
late September.
"We've got a pond out in the middle of one of them,"
Boling said, adding that working in southeast Texas along
the Sabine River has prepared him for working under such conditions.
He said the soil was purchased from a local landowner.
After an excavator loads the dirt onto a dump truck, the
truck transports the material to the levee, which was stripped
of grass.
"We also disk the existing soil before placing the
new soil," he said. "It makes the dirt bond together
by giving it a rough surface to grab onto."
The corps' Townsend said raising the levee would ultimately
result in the widening of the levee base to maintain the same
slope. In some locations the new levee pushes out by as much
as an additional 140 ft.
"In a few locations, we're having to push the levee
into water," Townsend added. "There's a few pits
out there that were dug years ago to create the existing levee.
They're now small ponds full of water."
To help the new lifts of soil adhere to the existing levee,
the crew is "benching" the slopes by cutting stair
steps into the soil with bulldozers.
"That way, it keeps it from being a slick surface,"
Boling added. "Every time we put down a lift of dirt,
we cut into it by about 1 ft." As many as 20, 1-ft. lifts
are needed in some locations.
Each lift is dumped, spread by bulldozers and compacted
with a tractor and dirt-filled pan.
The contractor must adhere to strict 90 percent compaction
requirements and an average of 34.8 percent soil moisture
(plus or minus 6 percent). By achieving the desired compaction
and moisture specifications, the new lifts can compact properly.
Ladner Testing of Jackson, Miss., and the Corps of Engineers
test the soil with nuclear gauges to determine compaction
and moisture levels. Achieving the desired moisture level
has been especially difficult when digging from water-saturated
pits.
"We usually have to dry it to get it where it needs
to be," Boling said. While making the soil wetter by
distributing water from a truck is relatively simple, drying
it is the greater task.
"We put the dozers out there to till it up to let the
sun dry it out," he added. "We have to be careful
not to dry it out too much."
Melvin Boutwell, Advance Construction's night shift (6 p.m.
to 5 a.m.) project manager, said working by moonlight has
required more time and energy.
"We have seven or eight portable light towers in all
of our work areas (around the dirt pits and laydown areas),
and of course all of our equipment has lights," Boutwell
added. "We have to move the towers around as we work
our way down the levee."
Just the fact that the towers have to be maneuvered throughout
such a large, sometimes muddy area can create time-consuming
problems, he said.
Townsend said the Advance projects should be completed by
fall 2005 and will conclude with the "grassing"
of the entire site.
"We expect another project to be let in the next couple
of months that will take the levee to the Interstate-20 bridge
(to the south)," he added.
The W. G. Yates project, which connects to the northernmost
Advance section, was just starting in the fall and will follow
the same process.
Yates' work will require a sizeable fleet of equipment to
raise the levee.
Useful Information
For more information about U. S. Army Corps of Engineers
- Vicksburg District projects, go to: http://www.mvk.usace.army.mil/
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