The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency have reached a preferred approach to solve persistent flooding in the Yazoo Backwater Area, officials announcement Thursday.

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The Army Corps and EPA announcement marks the first concrete results following months of collaboration among an interagency group of government agencies on the Yazoo Backwater Area, officials said.

The Army Corps and EPA scheduled community engagement sessions May 4-5 to begin sharing details of the “Yazoo Backwater Area Water Management Plan,” with the first in Onward and additional sessions Thursday and Friday in Vicksburg, the Army Corps said in a press statement.

According to the press release, the recommended preferred approach to water management in the Yazoo Backwater Area will include the installation and operation of pumping stations.

Backwater flooding covers stretches of farm lands near Yazoo City, Miss., Sunday, March 17, 2019, as seen in this aerial photograph. Various communities in the Mississippi Delta are combatting both Mississippi River flooding and backwater flooding that are affecting homes, businesses and farm lands.

The stations will be designed to operate at a greater overall capacity than previous proposals in order to reduce the risk of flooding for almost all residences, the statement reads. For homes that remain at risk of flooding, the federal government would provide support for voluntary buyouts or help to elevate homes and build ring levees.



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