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Tabasco maker scraps museum to build levee
15 Dec 2006 01:03:02 GMT
Source: Reuters

NEW ORLEANS, Dec 14 (Reuters) - The maker of the world famous Tabasco hot pepper sauce has scrapped plans for a museum to pay for a more urgent need: the building of a levee to protect itself from another hurricane.

McIlhenny Co. will shore up its Avery Island facility in Louisiana, 15 months after Hurricane Rita's tidal surge came within inches of flooding the plant and halting production of Tabasco, The Times-Picayune newspaper reported on Thursday.

The plant, which sits over 9 feet (3 meters) above sea level and 13 miles (21 km) from the Gulf of Mexico, will be protected by a 17-foot (5.2-metre) levee that will cost $4.5 million.

"We've got to protect the nation from bland food," company vice president Tony Simmons said.
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John Tesvich (standing) speaks to a presenter during a public meeting for Plaquemines Parish by the Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority of Louisiana, Integrated Planning Team, in Belle Chasse, Louisiana December 12, 2006. With the erosion of wetlands and barrier islands over the years, there was little to stop Hurricane Katrina before it hit with brute force. And because wind and flooding damage was so extensive, destroying much of New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast, money for rebuilding has been slow to come. Picture taken December 12, 2006. To match feature NEWORLEANS/BAYOU.