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Houma Thibodaux News

Sunday, September 22, 2024

Nicholls Releases Hurricane Ida Documentary Trailer

THIBODAUX, La. – Nicholls is set to release a Hurricane Ida  documentary covering the storm, its damage and Nicholls’ response, and  in commemoration of Ida’s one-year anniversary, the trailer for the  documentary is now available for viewing.

As the fifth-largest storm ever to hit the United States with max  wind speeds of 150 mph, the Category 4 hurricane made landfall on the  16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, bringing devastating winds and  storm surge to the Bayou Region. Ida is the second most-damaging  hurricane to hit Louisiana since Katrina in 2005.

The storm made landfall twice on Aug 29 with the first touchdown  about 70 miles from campus in Port Fourchon and the second about 35  miles away in south Lafourche Parish. Port Fourchon recorded winds of  228 mph and a storm surge of more than 12 feet on one of their docked  ships.

Although campus received moderate damage, about two-thirds of the  Nicholls community reported their homes damaged, while one in five said  their homes were destroyed or uninhabitable. In the wake of the storm,  more than half of our students reported their families lost access to  reliable income.

With about 90 percent of the university’s students being from  Louisiana and more than half of the student body living in Terrebonne  and Lafourche Parishes, most of their family homes were affected.

Through multiple university surveys, it was recorded that over 1,400  students’ major struggles were food insecurity, shelter, gasoline and  money. Some students had to drop out of school to rebuild their homes  and care for their families.

The Nicholls Campus Emergency and Hurricane Relief Fund was available  to assist students, faculty and staff in need. Nicholls was able to  invite students who lost their homes to the storm to move into campus  residence halls and access meal plans at no cost. About 180 moved on  campus.

In an effort to preserve and protect the coast from future storms,  Nicholls is set to open its Coastal Center, with groundbreaking slated  for early 2023. The $21 million project will be located on the Nicholls  campus at the corner of Colonel Drive and Ardoyne Drive, across from  Calecas Hall.

The collaborative space will allow for scientists from all over the  state and beyond, including those from CPRA, the Water Institute of the  Gulf and Nicholls biological sciences and geomatics departments, to  collaborate and advance research to repair and rebuild the state’s  receding coastline.

The Coastal Center will work directly with the Bayou Region Incubator  to help create jobs and small businesses specific to the Bayou  community and the Nicholls Farm as a way to test the real-world  application of the center’s coastal research.

The Terrebonne Basin has the highest rate of coastal land loss in the  state with more than 30,000 acres of wetlands lost since 1932.  Louisiana loses a football field of coastal islands and wetlands every  100 minutes and has experienced more coastal land loss than any other  state in the nation since 1930 with more than 1,800 square miles turned  to open water.

To learn more about the Nicholls State University Coastal Center, please visit https://www.nicholls.edu/coastal-center/news/. To watch Nicholls’ Ida documentary trailer, please visit https://youtu.be/6NnGmcRxMQg.  

Original source can be found here.

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