• Rough River preliminary dam investigation begins

    Louisville, KY -- The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Louisville District has begun preliminary
  • Duck Creek levee project: Next construction phase begins in Cincinnati

    The Army Corps of Engineers and contractor T.J.C. Engineering have begun construction of Phase 4B
  • Volunteer at Rough River Lake wins Take Pride service award

    Jimmy Rodgers, a volunteer at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Rough River Lake, received the Take
  • Small Business Workshop attendees discuss information at booth.

    The 2007 Small Business Workshop hosted by the Kentuckiana Post Society of Military Engineers (SAME)
  • Graffs and Pessaro receive Commander’s Awards

    ERDC-TEC physical scientists Linda Graff, Fred Pessaro and Brian Graff recently received the Commander’s Award for Civilian Service.
  • Corps waives day use fees on Veterans Day

    WASHINGTON, D.C – The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will waive day use fees for veterans, active,
  • Towers needed to move Shreve

    Louisville, Ky. -- The Army Corps of Engineers Louisville District is looking for a few good towing
  • USACE lecturers Izady and McGuinn to conduct seminar on Islam

    Dr. Michael Izady and Dr. Bradford McGuinn, guest lecturers with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Dynamics of International Terrorism Global Issues Program I Seminars, will conduct the advanced seminar “Islam and Insurgency,” Oct. 30 to Nov. 2, at 8 a.m., at the Humphrey’s Engineer Center (Kingman Building in the McKenzie Hearing Room), Telegraph and Leaf Roads, Alexandria, Va. The event is hosted by the Engineer Research and Development Centers’ Topographic Engineering Center (ERDC-TEC) in Alexandria.
  • Ragon to chair USSD Committee on Public Awareness

    Rebecca Ragon, a technical editor at the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center’s (ERDC) Topographic Engineering Center (TEC) Alexandria, Va., was recently selected as chair of the Committee on Public Awareness for the U.S. Society on Dams (USSD).
  • New technology improves river management

    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and The Nature Conservancy have joined forces to develop the Hydrologic Engineering Center’s Regime Prescription Tool, software to help teams reach agreements on managing the flow regime of a river. The idea for this software was conceived during a Sustainable Rivers Project workshop, where scientists worked together to formulate a set of ecosystem flow recommendations needed to sustain or restore ecosystems connected to the river.