Lousiana Submits Oil Spill Penalty Money Requests

State officials are submitting four projects and one program to the Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Council and hope at least a few will rise to the top to receive funding from a part of the BP oil spill penalty money.

As part of the RESTORE Act, the council has control over a part of the funding that will come from penalties and fines resulting from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster. About $150 million to $240 million will be available in this first round, and each of the 10 council members, including Louisiana, gets to submit five projects for consideration, said Kyle Graham, director of the state Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority.

The four projects Louisiana has submitted are asking for funding to do engineering and design, planning and other preconstruction needs, he said.

Those four projects are:

The fifth request is for $16.1 million to fund a lower Mississippi River Management program to develop and update plans on how the lower river is managed for coastal restoration as well as navigation and flood control.