The pre-Katrina Orleans Levee District (OLD), governed by the Orleans Levee Board (OLB), owned considerable assets, mainly real estate, a peculiarity that stems from its history. The Orleans Levee District was created by the
Louisiana legislature in 1890 for the purpose of protecting the low-lying city of New Orleans from floods. At that time, communities along the
Mississippi River were largely in charge of creating their own levees to protect themselves, as no unified levee system existed. Most neighboring
parishes had (and some still have) similar parochial levee boards. In the early twentieth century, the OLD reclaimed a portion of
Lake Pontchartrain, a 24-mile wide lake north of New Orleans. The OLD developed the land and sold it to raise money to build and improve levees. Starting in the 1920s, the Board undertook a massive flood-protection initiative involving the construction of a stepped
seawall several hundred feet north of a portion of the existing south shore of
Lake Pontchartrain. The intervening area was filled to several feet above sea level and was to serve as a "super levee" protecting the city from the Lake's
storm surge. The
Lake Vista,
Lake Oaks,
Lake Terrace,
East and West Lakeshore subdivisions and other property between
Allen Toussaint Blvd and Lake Pontchartrain are all examples of the OLB's developed properties. In 1924, the state legislature authorized the OLB to acquire 33,000 acres (130 km2) of land on the east bank of the Mississippi River about south of New Orleans in order to build the
Bohemia Spillway between the River and the
Gulf of Mexico. (
1924 La. Acts 99). Approximately half of this land was public property transferred from the state; the other half was either expropriated, or purchased under threat of expropriation, from private owners according to a legal finding. (
1928 La. Acts 246; 1942 La. Acts 311). In the aftermath of the
Great Mississippi Flood of 1927, the
U.S. Congress gave the
United States Army Corps of Engineers supervision and control over the design and construction of flood-control infrastructure throughout the
Mississippi River Valley. In 1934,
New Orleans Lakefront Airport opened on land
dredged from
Lake Pontchartrain by the Levee Board, part of a larger "lakefill" land-reclamation project initiated to construct a super levee for the protection of the northern perimeter of the city. The airport was originally named "Shushan Airport" after Orleans Levee Board president Abraham Lazar Shushan; it was renamed "New Orleans Airport" after Shushan's indictment for corruption in the
Louisiana Scandals of the late 1930s.
Governor Jimmie Davis, in his second term from 1960 to 1964, named the New Orleans attorney
Gerald J. Gallinghouse as the president of the levee board. In that capacity, Gallinghouse delivered more than 300 speeches warning of the need to be prepared for weather disasters, another of which was on its way,
Hurricane Betsy. After extensive flooding during Hurricane Betsy in 1965,
Congress ordered the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers henceforth to design and build flood protection in the
Lake Pontchartrain and Vicinity Hurricane Protection Project. The OLB became the local sponsor, and its duties regarding flood protection were now limited to collecting 30% cost-share for project design and construction and maintaining the completed structures. Despite Congress's mandate that the Corps now had the authority to design/build flood protection, the OLB still retained extensive assets which had to be managed. ==Hurricane Katrina==