From Delta Dispatches <[email protected]>
Subject 2022: A Big Year for Coastal Restoration!
Date January 27, 2022 6:16 PM
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2022: A Big Year for Coastal Restoration!

Take advantage of the Louisiana's wetlands with these summer family activities

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Hey there, and happy summer! What better time to be taking advantage of Louisiana’s natural beauty and recreational resources than full bloom, sun shine of summer? My name is Victoria Bourque, Special Projects Coordinator for Restore or Retreat
[link removed], and as a coastal advocate in both my personal and professional lives, my passion for Louisiana’s coast, plus the communities and culture it supports, runs deep.

After a year like 2020, many people have a reinvigorated desire to be outdoors, enjoying our coastal wetlands with a new sense of care and passion. Louisiana wetlands can be recreationally utilized in a multitude of ways throughout all seasons; however, the summer season brings an immensely larger flow of people to the coast, in addition to 2.3 million Louisiana residents who live there. Restore or Retreat and Restore the Mississippi River Delta Coalition are always looking forward to meeting new friends, while visiting with old friends, to engage and inform all in efforts to enjoy and save our coast… especially in the summer!

Thanks!
- Victoria Bourque
Special Projects Coordinator
Restore or Retreat

Hurricane Season

One critical piece of summer that we can’t forget, especially in Louisiana, is preparation. While we are hopeful that our preparations do not have to be put into play, having a plan in the start and throughout hurricane season is crucial. Our state’s coastal agency, CPRA, continues to have a heavy focus on strengthening our first line of defense, barrier islands, in addition to many other supportive and protective restoration projections but we must do our part in preparations, as well. Last year, Restore the Mississippi River Delta Coalition put together a comprehensive hurricane season digital care package, stocked with great resources! Check out the hurricane season care package here
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[link removed] hosted by Restore or Retreat, COAST program partners, and officials from the Governor’s Office of Emergency Preparedness on the must-have plans as Louisiana residents during hurricane season, and additional shared resources.

If you are curious of the flood risk in your current home location, check out CPRA’s Master Plan Data Viewer
[link removed]. Learn more about coastal flood risks to Louisiana communities now and in the future, as well as how to make your home, business, and community safer and more resilient. This viewer displays the results from CPRA’s 2017 Coastal Master Plan and provides resources to reduce risk, as well as the state’s proposed restoration, structural protection, and nonstructural risk reduction projects.

Summer Kid & Family Activities

Talking about all of the issues surrounding hurricane season can be a hefty topic for anyone to handle, let alone when you’re trying to explain it to kids. Check out this coloring book
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Aside from hurricane season, let’s immerse ourselves in the beauty that Louisiana has to offer by learning some familiar, and maybe surprising, key features that makes our state a place to treasure… and restore! Restore or Retreat’s Activity Booklet
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A Coastal Crisis & Our Steps Toward Solutions

It is no secret; coastal Louisiana is at stake. This video
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[link removed] to read a letter supporting the project signed by a group of more than 55 natural and physical scientists, engineers and social scientists with a combined 1,300 years of research and technical experience related to Louisiana’s coast – that’s a lot of expertise! Check out this article
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Volunteer Opportunity

The Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana has several upcoming volunteer opportunities in their Plaquemines Reef project as part of the Oyster Shell Recycling Program. For this Plaquemines Reef project, volunteers will load bagged oyster shells onto trailers, trucks, and boats at the Buras Boat Harbor site to facilitate on the water deployment by Grand Bayou community members. The Plaquemines Reef will protect a sensitive heritage site from further erosion. Click here
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