Lake Lanier drying up?
On Oct 29, 8:04 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
...
wrote:
On Oct 29, 5:00 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote:
"Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote in
messagenews:I_ednaaXNKvCWbjanZ2dnUVZ_j2dnZ2d@comca st.com...
JohnH wrote:
I now think that Bassy *was* referring to the Marine Corps. He seems
to know very little about the US Army Corps of Engineers, of which I
was a member for 24 years.
I have no idea about the engineering specs and manual that Bassy was
talking about, but it seems to me that the jobs the C.O.E's tackle
would
require them to be very creative and to think outside the box.
I do think he was correct about the water management issues, based upon
what I have read about the Corps priority lists and down stream
commitments.
Did you notice I change the Corps to COE, so I would not make the Fax
Paux
of calling them Corp
The COE would follow the rules. And codes are rules. Thinking outside
the
box would leave them liable for immense damage judgements if their was a
failure in a project. Whether the failure was from the compromised code
or
not. Just the fact that the codes were not followed would be the deep
pocket entrance.- Hide quoted text -
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You can follow all of the rules, and still be able to use your
engineering judgement, and still comply with all applicable codes.
What is different with the Corps, is that if it isn't written
somewhere, you can't do it. What you don't understand (and probably
never will) is just that. An engineer can follow all applicable codes
and regulations, but still use his judgement for engineering. Not with
the corps. If it's not written, it ain't gonna happen.
Military mindset. Crawl into the box and pull the lid down tight.
Fortunately, we do have some officers in the military who see the fallacy
in that sort of behavior and break free.
Not a military mindset. A legal mindset. Weird interpretation of the code
and a natural disaster hits and a dam fails. The COE will be liable for a
lot more dollars. Costing us the taxpayers a lot more dollars. Just like
here in California, the developer got the state to rule the levees were 200
year storm safe in hte Sacramento area and now if there is a levee break,
the state is on the hook for replacement of all homes that are built in the
flood plain.- Hide quoted text -
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From your above paragraph, as usual, you don't have a damned clue what
you're talking about. Did you read my example to JohnH? THAT is just
plain stupid.
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