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KSYL Local News

News For Tuesday 06/18/13


News for Tuesday 061813

By Dave Graichen

 

It's win or go home for LSU Tigers this afternoon as they face North  Carolina in an elimination game in the College World Series. Coach Paul  Mainieri will start sophomore Cody Glenn on the mound. It will be  Glenn's first appearance since May 22nd. Mainieri admits he is concerned  about the long layoff, but believes Glenn can get the job done...You can hear that game this afternoon beginning with the pre-game at 1:30. On 970 KSYL.

 

Gov. Bobby Jindal has launched a statewide tour that will take him to all 64 parishes.  His first stop, in Alexandria yesterday at Central Louisiana Technical Community College, where he signed legislation to provide funding for projects at community and technical colleges across the state. The governor says the tour will include events that will highlight new economic development announcements, education achievements, transportation projects, coastal restoration projects, and legislation passed in the recent legislative session. Kyle Plotkin, Jindal’s communications director, said individual stops will be added as events come up.

 

Governor Jindal signs legislation that provides state funding for  construction projects at community and technical colleges across  Louisiana. L-C-T-C-S President Joe May says the money will go towards  building new workshops and training areas for students in key industries  like nursing, welding, construction and information technology. The bill provides 251-million dollars for 29 projects at Louisiana  Community and Technical Colleges. May says 34-million dollars of that  money is local, private matching funds.

 

The Louisiana National Guard's highest-ranking enlisted man is under investigation  for allegations  of  sexual  harassment  and  sexual assault. Colonel Mike Kazmierzak says the allegations are against Sgt.  Major  Tommy  Caillier,  who after a preliminary investigation,  was been  removed from his  post,  while  a  criminal   investigation  is conducted.  Caillier  is  accused  of  sexually harassing and possibly sexually assaulting a fellow Guard soldier.

 

State Police say a 15-year-old in Evangeline Parish died over  the weekend just hours after he was ejected from  an ATV he was driving.  State police say Matthew Neal of Basile was operating a 4-wheeler that did not have functioning lights when he was hit  from  behind  by a pickup. Both Neal and a 16-year-old passenger, were ejected. The passenger survived, Neal passed died from his injuries. The crash remains under investigation.

 

The  Lafayette Parish Sheriff's office says a 3-year-old boy drowned in a   swimming   pool  Saturday  during  a party at his grandparent’s  home  just outside of Carencro Saturday night.  They  say  deputies responded  to  the  home  to find the child un-responsive and he was later pronounced dead at a  local  hospital. The case is being ruled an accident.

 

The Calcasieu Parish Sheriff's office says a 37-year-old man drowned after he and his one-year-old  baby  fell  into  the  Sabine  River. Spokeswoman  Kim  Myers  says  witnesses  jumped  into the river and rescued the child, but could not save James Mason of  DeQuincy.

 

Congratulations to Rapides Parish judge Harry Randow,  who, along with 6 others, will be inducted July 12 into the Louisiana Justice Hall of Fame. The induction events begin with a reception for the honorees and the public at the Louisiana State Penitentiary Museum at the gates to the prison. A ribbon-cutting ceremony will follow to reveal the exhibit cases that illustrate the lives and accomplishments of the inductees.

Randow has been judge of the 9th Judicial District in Rapides Parish for 16 years

 

A man who is a suspect in the 2008 case of a woman who was raped and murdered in Lake Charles is now on the  FBI's  Ten Most Wanted list. 25-year-old  Jose  Manuel  Garcia  Guevara is wanted  for  allegedly breaking  into  the home of a 26-year-old  woman,  raping  her  then killing her all in front of her 4 year old son on February 19, 2008. The FBI is offering  up to a $100,000 reward for information leading to Guevara's arrest.

 

Police  in Monroe are still seeking a man they say opened fire at a Father's Day barbecue; killing one man and wounding two others. Police say an argument  led  to 29-year-old Eldrick Carter shooting the victims. An arrest warrant for Carter is out, and police ask anyone with knowledge of his whereabouts  to call Monroe  Police

 

The University of Louisiana System rolls out its new online degree  program; aimed at adults who wish to go back and finish their college  degree. U.L. System President Sandra Woodley says their online B.A. in  Organizational Leadership program is a great way to go back - at one's  own pace - and complete a degree program.

 

Livingston Parish School Board  President Malcolm Sibley is facing a charge of hit-and-run after he allegedly  struck  a  pedestrian that died  from  his  injuries on Saturday morning in St. Helena  Parish. State Police Trooper Melissa Matey says Sibley was taken into police custody a few hours after the hit-and-run occurred.

 

 

News For Monday 06/17/13


News for Monday 061713

By Dave Graichen

 

LSU suffers a frustrating loss in its long awaited return to the  College World Series as the Tigers allow two unearned runs in a 2-to-1  defeat to UCLA. LSU spoiled a good outing by starting pitcher Aaron Nola  by committing two critical errors. Coach Paul Mainieri says that was the  difference in the game The loss sends LSU to the loser's bracket where they'll play North  Carolina at two o' clock on Tuesday.

 

A new report ranks Louisiana 2nd-lowest state in the U.S. for its number  of college graduates. The report done by the Lumina Foundation shows only 27.9% of Louisiana adults between 25 & 64  have a college degree.  West Virginia has a slightly lower rate to place  50th among states. In case you are wondering, Massachusetts ranked #1 with 50.8% having college degrees.

 

Controversy erupted Friday afternoon on whether all public school teachers will get pay raises or if those rated as “ineffective” in Louisiana’s new evaluations will be excluded.

State Superintendent of Education John White, in a late afternoon press conference, said the Legislature clearly intended for the increases to apply to teachers generally.

White said while it is up to local school districts to make the final call, he plans to make clear to them next week that lawmakers intended for all teachers to get the increase.

 

Governor Jindal signs a pair of pro-life bills into law. One of the  measures would prohibit a so-called "telemedicine" abortion. That's when a doctor uses Skype or another video service to watch the administration  of a drug that can be used in abortion. The author of the bill Gene Mills says he hasn't heard of telemedicine abortions  occurring in Louisiana and it's not recommended by health professionals. The other pro-life bill signed by the governor increases the penalties  for coerced abortions. That’s when a parent or legal guardian encourages a minor child to have an abortion. The author of that bill,  Denham Springs Representative Valerie Hodges, says  a coerced abortion will fall under the legal definition of child abuse.  The legislation also allows the Department of Children  and Family Services to provide protection for the pregnant teen.

 

A second person has died as a result of Thursday's chemical plant  explosion in Ascension Parish. State Police identify  the victim as 47-year-old Scott Thrower of St. Amant.  29-year-old Zachary Green of Hammond also died in the blast. Green was

hired in October by Williams Companies, which owns the plant.  Plant manager Larry Bayer says the blaze ignited at a propylene  fractionator and propylene and propane were involved in the explosion.

 

Unhappy about an 11th-hour funding addition for Bayou Country Superfest, Lt. Gov. Jay Dardenne wants the governor to remove the money from the state spending plan.

Two state senators declined Thursday and Friday to discuss the additional $200,000 draw on the lieutenant governor’s tourism funds. The amendment crept into the $25 billion state operating budget late in the legislative session. Assuming the governor allows the appropriations to stand, The state operating budget also calls for Dardenne to spend $300,616 on the Independence Bowl, $948,112 on the Essence Festival, $250,000 on the Louisiana Special Olympics and $56,000 on a Creole plantation house. All of which will be out of the control of the Lt. Governor.

 

 

 

 

 

News For Friday 06/14/13


News for Friday 061413

By Dave Graichen

 

A 29-year-old man from Hammond died in yesterday's chemical plant  explosion in Ascension Parish. Zachary Green was one of 600 workers at  the Williams Olefins plant in Geismar, when a huge fireball went up into  the sky at around 8:30 yesterday morning. The department of health and hospitals says another 77 individuals were

 taken to local hospitals and three remain in intensive care. Now that  all of the workers have been accounted for, officials will try to  determine what ignited the blaze. State Police Col. Mike Edmonson says  several experts are assisting in the investigation.

 

Word is from Michael Jenkins the new owner of the Hotel Bentley, the refurbished downtown landmark show be open in December.  Jenkins tol the “Town Talk” earlier this week that “He could have probably opened 3-4 months earlier, but he wanted to go ahead and do the job right the first time. Jenkins saying, It’s going to take longer, but that he thinks it will pay off in the long run.” Under Jenkins’ plans, the original portion of the Bentley will remain a hotel with nearly 100 rooms. The seven-floor tower portion, which was added in the 1930s, is being gutted and converted to condominiums. The entire interview is in today’s “Town Talk”.

 

Speaking of the Town Talk, The company that owns our local newspaper, Gannett, has purchased Belo Broadcasting, the owner of WWL TV in new Orleans and other TV stations across the country. The cost, $1.5 Billion and the assumption of $715 Million in debt.

 

A new poll shows Louisiana voters support passage of a bipartisan  immigration bill currently moving through the U.S. Senate. Sponsored by  the Alliance For Citizenship, the poll was conducted by Burland &  Associates. Pollster James Burland says 70% of those polled say they support the immigration reform  bill, co-authored by the "Gang of Eight"; four House and four Senate  members from both parties.  The bill could come up for a U.S. Senate vote soon. Senator Mary  Landrieu leans toward a "yes" vote, but Senator David Vitter opposes the  bill, because it doesn't prioritize securing the boarder. The bill would however authorize and pay for national guard troops to patrol the border.

 

Dad should do alright this Sunday, Father's Day, as the National Retail  Federation projects spending for Dad should be higher this year. Baton  Rouge retail analyst Jim Rutledge says the average person will spend  just under $120 this year--up from $117 last year.  Total spending for Father's Day nationwide is expected to top $13-billion.

 

Four months after requesting a speedy trial, an attorney for one of two Baton Rouge men accused in the 2007 slaying of two LSU graduate students from India asked a judge Thursday to scrub the scheduled June 24 trial date and set a later one.

State District Judge Chip Moore scheduled a new trial date of Sept. 23 for both men.

The attorney who represents one of accused, told the judge he needs time to investigate forensic evidence that prosecutors recently turned over to the defense.

The judge warned both sides Thursday that the Sept. 23 trial date will not be altered.

 

A 7-mile stretch of the southbound  lanes along the main Plaquemines Parish evacuation route will be closed for most of hurricane season. The  LA Hwy 23 project hopes to raise  that  part  of  the  road  to prevent future flooding.

 

State Police inspectors have given Bossier City's new Margaritaville casino the all-clear to open its doors the the  public.  The  casino hopes  to  have that soft opening this Saturday. A Grand Opening  is planned for July 3rd, with a live performance by Jimmy Buffett.

 

Senator Mary Landrieu's son was arrested in New Orleans  for driving the  wrong  way  in  the  French  Quarter,  hit  &  run, and an open alcoholic   beverage   in  the  car.  21-year-old  Connor  Snellings reportedly hit a pedestrian,  who  wasn't  badly  hurt. In a written statement, Senator Landrieu says she and her husband  are "extremely

disappointed" in their son's "irresponsible actions".

 

Ouachita  Parish  deputies  arrested  Philadelphia  Eagles   all-pro offensive   tackle  Jason  Peters  for  alleged  drag  racing  early Wednesday morning.  Sheriff's spokesman Major Mike Moore says Peters fled when officers tried  to pull him over--reaching speeds of up to 100 miles an hour. He says  Peters  eventually  pulled  over and was booked on two charges. Moore says Peters posted bail and was released. Peters was busted by Shreveport cops back in March of 2011, for  a  loud  music violation and resisting an officer.

 

 

News For Thursday 06/13/13


News for Thursday  061313

By Dave Graichen

 

Real personal income grew 2.1 percent in Louisiana in 2011, slightly behind the national average of 2.7 percent. According to figures released Wednesday by the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis, real personal income in Louisiana was $167.2 billion in 2011, compared with $163.7 billion in 2010. The U.S. total rose from almost $11.1 trillion to nearly $11.4 trillion.

 

Gov. Bobby Jindal is under pressure from the faith community to veto legislation that would set up a legal framework in Louisiana for surrogate births. Among the 433 bills that made it to the governor’s desk in the recent legislative session, the Louisiana Family Forum and the Louisiana Conference of Catholic Bishops targeted just one: Senate Bill 162. (The groups want the governor to stop the legislation from becoming state law. Louisiana Family Forum President Gene Mills say “It threatens the integrity of the traditional family. On the opposite end of the spectrum is state Sen. Gary Smith, D-Norco, who filed SB162 after he and his wife, Katherine, turned to surrogates in Nevada and California to carry their biological children. They used surrogates because of medical problems, and they did not want to grapple with legal complications that could arise in Louisiana.) Jindal must make a decision within the next few weeks. He can sign the bill, veto it or allow it to become law without his signature.

 

Kenner  Police  say  they responded to a report of a vehicle driving recklessly on I-10 early  yesterday  morning and discovered a 10-year-old behind the wheel. Sgt. Brian McGregor  says the child's grandmother, 54-year-old Brenda Byrd, her friend, 48-year-old  Shelia  Joiner and the  child's brother were passengers in the SUV. He says the  adults informed  the  officer  they  needed the child to drive because they were both too drunk to do so. McGregor  says  both  Byrd  and Joiner were arrested.

 

The latest approach to addressing the homeless population in Baton Rouge is to offer them a bus ticket out of the city. The Metro Council approved the mayor’s mid-year budget allocation Wednesday, which among many other funds, included $5,000 for one-way bus tickets for homeless people. Initially, the homeless relocation program was referred to in budget documents as “Clean Sweep,” but it was subsequently renamed “HOPE,” which stands for Homeless Outreach Prevention Efforts.

 

An Army veteran on Wednesday pleaded guilty in federal court to second-degree murder in the 2010 slaying of a soldier at Fort Polk. 28 year old Marcus Carey also pleaded guilty to attempted murder in an attack on a second soldier at the base. The judge set sentencing for Sept. 19.

 

According  to  a  new  study by the American Automobile Association, using voice commands to  text while driving is MORE distracting than talking on your cell phone.  Triple-A  spokesman Don Redman says the study   found   that   speech  to  text  systems   require   greater concentration than talking  on the phone. He says reaction times are slower and brain function is compromised.

 

The L-S-U baseball team leaves this morning for Omaha, the site of the  College World Series. The Tigers play their first round game against  U-C-L-A on Sunday night. Head Coach Paul Mainieri says the team has been scrimmaging to  keep from getting rusty, but the eight-day break between games has helped the Tigers get back to full-strength. The LSU Tigers have won 57 games this season and Mainieri says if they  play like they did since February, they'll have the opportunity to stay  alive a long time during the 12-day tournament.

 

The LHSAA releases its football championship schedule and for the first  time ever there will be nine title games, instead of five, because the  association voted to separate public schools from private schools for  the postseason. The prep classic will begin Thursday December 12th and last until  Saturday 14th in the Mercedes Benz Suuperdome.

 

The East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriff's  office  has charged two women in  the  death  of  a  23-month-old boy. The Two are charged with first degree  murder. Authorities say the child was  taken  to the  hospital June 6th, while  in  the  care  of  the  couple,  with life-threatening  injuries  and died Saturday as the result of blunt force trauma to the head.

 

State  Police say a motorcyclist  was  killed  in  Concordia  Parish Tuesday. They say 33-year-old David Welch of Vidalia lost control of his bike,  ran off the road and overturned several times. He was not wearing his helmet and was pronounced dead at the scene.

 

The AARP Louisiana says thousands of commuters will be impacted and the  regional economy could suffer because of the decision to end the L-A  Swift bus service between New Orleans and Baton Rouge. The AARP's Jason  Tutor says they surveyed over 300 L-A Swift riders and found out 51%  of the riders use the service to get to work. It's estimated over 12-thousand riders use L-A Swift every month.  The service is set to end June 30th, unless the state can find another  750-thousand dollars to attract federal matching dollars, so the  transportation service can continue.

 

State Police is asking for the public's help as they investigate the theft of an ATM  from  the Hammond Office of Motor Vehicles. Trooper Nick Manale says early Tuesday  morning someone drove a vehicle into the front glass wall of the OMV and stole the ATM.

 

 

News For Wednesday 06/12/13


News for Wednesday 061213

By Dave Graichen

 

It appears Ft. Polk is safe for now. A Senate panel on Tuesday approved legislation rejecting the Defense Department’s request to shutter installations and facilities in the United States that are no longer needed as the military branches cut the number of troops in uniform. Last week, The House Armed Services Committee also said no to more base closings, and even took the additional step of adding a provision barring the Pentagon from even planning for another round of cuts. The House and Senate refusals effectively ensure that a final defense policy bill approved by Congress for the 2014 fiscal year won’t give the department permission to close excess bases even as lawmakers clamor for ways to cut the federal deficit.

 

Governor Jindal yesterday signed senate bill 116 that will allow voters in Pineville to go to the polls in October to decide whether or not they what alcohol to be sold in local restaurants. Supporters say restaurants that are interested in Pineville but currently shying away, particularly national chains who say they would come to the city if alcohol sales are allowed. It’s hoped, that, in turn, would attract more development, including hotels, that would open up economic opportunities in the city.

 

The Alexandria City Council adopted resolutions Tuesday confirming two people to city posts who had held the positions on an interim basis. Daniel Williams was confirmed as director of community services. Williams was confirmed by a 4-3 vote, with council members Chuck Fowler, Harry Silver, Lee Rubin and Jim Villard voting yes while Ed Larvadain, Mitzi LaSalle and Jules Green voted no. David Gill was confirmed by unanimous vote as director of public works.

 

Governor  Jindal's  coastal  advisor is critical of BP's decision to end  active  deepwater  horizon oil  spill  operations  in  Florida, Alabama and Mississippi.  Chairman  of  the  Coastal  Protection and Restoration  Authority  Garret  Graves  questions  why BP would  end response   efforts   in  those  states  when  there's  an  estimated one-million barrels of oil still in the Gulf of Mexico. BP says oil response  efforts will continue along 84 shoreline miles in Louisiana.

 

One of the bills passed by the Legislature and sent to Governor Jindal's  desk reforms the state's practices for collecting outstanding debts.  State Treasurer John Kennedy supported the legislation. He says,  currently, the state's many agencies handle their own collections – and  do so poorly. House Bill 629  centralizes all debt owed the state under the Department of  Revenue. Kennedy says it will more effectively collect some of the  nearly $2-billion in outstanding sums owed to the state. Kennedy says the   centralized collection system will be implemented with  the Governor's signature and could produce millions for state coffers  before the year's end.

 

3 death row inmates have filed a lawsuit against the Louisiana State  Penitentiary for what they call appalling conditions under extreme heat  in their cells. The lawsuit is filed on behalf of the inmates by the  Promise of Justice Initiative and deputy director Mercedes Montagnes who says the state of death row at Angola is unacceptable. Montagnes says they are not asking for "comfortable"  conditions on death row---they are asking for humane conditions... in addition to the extreme heat, Montagnes says the inmates say they get dirty water and when they  get ice, it often has bugs in it.

 

Pairings and game times have been announced  for  the  College World Series and the LSU Baseball/UCLA game will be held Sunday  night  at 7pm  on  ESPN2 and ESPN3. The first game on Saturday will be between the  Oregon   State/Kansas   State   Super  Regional  winner  versus Mississippi  State.  The second game on  Saturday  will  be  Indiana against  Louisville.  The  first  game  Sunday  will  be  the  North Carolina/South Carolina  Super Regional winner versus North Carolina State.

 

The woman accused of a Memorial Day weekend drunk driving crash that killed  three  people  has been released from the hospital and taken into custody by St. Charles  Parish  deputies. Jennifer Englade face three counts of vehicular homicide, 3rd degree feticide, 2nd offense DWI and other charges. Investigators believe  she  was legally drunk when she veered across the center line and into the  path  of  small sedan;  killing two adults inside...one of them a pregnant woman.  A passenger in Englade's vehicle was also killed.

 

The US Coast Guard  says one person is dead and another fighting for their life after a boating  accident  in Pilottown Monday. Pilottown is  located  in the very tip of the boot  of  Louisiana  and  rescue swimmers had to  be lowered to the location of the pleasure craft in trouble. The two were  air-lifted to the Medical Center of Louisiana at New Orleans and upon  arrival  one person was pronounced dead and the other in critical condition.

 

U-L Monroe has named three finalists to become the school's new athletic  director. The three finalists are Georgia associate A-D Josh  Brooks, U-C Riverside A-D Brian Wickstrom and Texas-Pan American  athletic director Chris King.  The plan is to have a new A-D in place by August 1st.

 

A New Iberia woman and her  son are accused of burglarizing the same home twice. Morgan City Police  say 47-year-old Tina Collier and her 17-year-old son Brandon allegedly  hit  the  house  on  May 17th and again last Sunday. They've been booked in the parish jail.

 

Bossier City's newest casino resort is growing closer to opening its  doors. Margaritaville spokesperson Christy Wood says State Police Gaming  division officers are visiting this week, to test casino systems, gaming  machines, staff training and compliance with state laws. Wood says the tropically-themed Margaritaville is very much on track for

it's Grand Opening celebration; coming up in early July. Jimmy Buffett is scheduled to perform at the grand opening.

 

 

News For Tuesday 06/11/13


News For Tuesday 061113

By Dave Graichen

 

A 48-year-old priest with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Alexandria was found dead Friday in a room at a local motel. Fr. Jamie Medina-Cruz was a pastor of St. Mary's Assumption Catholic Church in Cottonport and an assistant pastor of St. Joseph Catholic Church in Marksville. Medina-Cruz was placed on administrative leave at St. Mary's on March 12 after being accused of improper conduct with a minor. He was relieved of his duties pending an investigation by the Avoyelles Parish Sheriff’s Office. No charges had been filed. The APD Reports there were no signs of a crime at the scene.

 

More  bad  economic  news for Shreveport.  Barksdale Air Force  Base officials say they have issued almost 14-hundred furlough letters to civilians who work on  the  base.   The  furlough period starts July 8th.  Officials say the cuts are expected to save Barksdale some 1.6 million dollars.  The furloughs for workers will be one day per week

for 11 weeks.

 

The state Board of Regents releases its annual report of teacher  preparation and performance, which shows public school teachers doing  better than expected. Regents spokesperson Dr. Jeanne (GENE) Burns says  the report shows a great many teachers are rating "effective: proficient" or "highly effective" in the new value-added teacher performance  reviews. She says the findings indicate that the redesign of teacher preparation is working. Teacher preparation programs in Louisiana underwent a major redesign  between 2001 and 2010. Burns says the report shows those efforts are bearing fruit

 

The Louisiana Civil Service Commission has cleared the way for the state to lay off nearly 4,000 employees at LSU-affiliated hospitals in Lafayette, Lake Charles, Houma and New Orleans. Commissioner Scott Hughes, who last week voted to deny the layoffs, said Monday that the state Department of Health and Hospitals had supplied sufficient information in the interim to convince him that there would be a savings, although he still has doubts as to whether the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services would approve some of the planned financing. The employees  to receive pink slips at the end of business June 23.

 

The coroner in Orleans  Parish  has  positively ID'ed the body found inside a car in Bayou St. John as that  of  missing  school  teacher Terrilynn  Monette,  who went missing in the early morning hours  of March 2nd, after leaving  a Lakeview neighborhood bar.  Divers found Monette's black Honda Accord  with  her  still  inside  it Saturday. Cause of death is listed as drowning.

 

A big fundraiser takes place today in Washington DC to help Congressman  Bill Cassidy's US Senate campaign. The National Republican Senatorial  committee headquarters is the host site. The invitation lists the entire  Louisiana republican congressional delegation as "special guests. Latest fundraising totals show, Senator Landrieu has a million dollars  more in her campaign war chest than Cassidy

 

The  Bossier  City Margaritaville Resort Casino  is  in  it's  final stages  of getting  everything  together  before  opening.  State Police and  other  gaming officials are checking this week to see if the new casino is in  compliance  with  Louisiana  law.  They  say a determination  will  be  made  on  Thursday.  The  grand  opening of

Margaritaville  is scheduled for the July 4th week and Jimmy  Buffet with perform at the casino's theater on July 3rd.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

News For Monday 06/10/13


News for Monday 061013

By Dave Graichen

 

The LSU baseball team is headed back to Omaha for the first time since  2009 after sweeping its Super Regional Series with Oklahoma. The Tigers  reserved their spot in the College world Series with an 11-to-1 win over  the Sooners.  If LSU didn't get to Omaha this year, they would have been the first  senior class since 1985 not to play in the College World Series. The LSU team will leave on Thursday for Omaha, where they'll play the  College World Series at the new TD Ameritrade Park. The Tigers will take  on UCLA in their first game next weekend.

 

Senator David Vitter has filed a bill to help homeowners avoid  potentially drastic increases in the cost of National Flood Insurance.  Right now the NFIP is scheduled to implement rate increases of up to 20%  a year for four straight years. The bill seeks

to delay those premium hikes for a year, while a better solution is  worked out. Just weeks ago, an amendment to that same effect by Senator  Mary Landrieu was defeated in the Senate.

 

A family’s agonizing, months-long search for missing Jefferson Parish teacher Terrilynn Monette appeared to end Saturday when her car was pulled from a bayou with a body behind the wheel. While an autopsy still must be performed to find out if the corpse is that of the 26 year old teacher, officials who led search efforts, said the chances of the body not being her’s are slim.

 

State  Police  say an early Sunday morning two car crash  in  Sabine Parish has claimed  the life of a man from Dilboll, Texas.  They say Tommy Tilley Jr lost  control  of  his  vehicle  on  Highway 191 and crossed  the  center  line  hitting  a  truck  going  in  the  other direction.  After  impact,  Tilly slammed into several trees. He was pronounced dead on scene. The  driving  of  the truck received minor injuries.

 

State  wildlife  and  fisheries  agents  say a six-year-old boy  was seriously hurt during a boating accident on  the  Tickfaw  River  in Livingston  Parish  on Sunday night. Wildlife agents say five people were on a boat that slammed into a tree. Authorities say charges are possible against the boat operator.

 

State  Police say a driver  who  was  not  wearing  a  seatbelt  and possibly drunk is dead in a single vehicle crash in Claiborne Parish late Saturday  night.  They say 52-year-old Michael Waganer of Homer ran  off  La  Highway  2  and  struck  a  ditch  then  a  tree.  The unrestrained man was partially  ejected  and  pronounced  dead  at a

local hospital. Alcohol use is suspected.

 

The Louisiana Lottery Commission says a Lotto ticket bought in New Orleans is worth $835,701, but nobody won the jackpots for Easy 5 or the Powerball. That means Wednesday's estimated Powerball jackpot rises to $70 million.

 

The explosives recycling company that last month had its licenses suspended in the wake of an investigation into millions of pounds of improperly stored military propellant has launched its own salvo. Explo Systems Inc. and its owners are seeking damages along with a temporary restraining order and permanent injunction to halt the action of the state police that has put them out of business for now. The owners claim their constitutional right against unreasonable seizure and taking without just compensation were violated when the state police without warning on May 20 entered the premises at Camp Minden and physically confiscated all licenses and the keys to the storage magazines.

 

A  Caddo  Parish man has been arrested for setting fire to a church, allegedly because  he  was  angry with the pastor's teachings. State Fire Marshal Butch Browning says  25-year-old William Sexton, of Oil City, intentionally set the blaze that  destroyed  the Vivian United Pentecostal  Church,  on  April  23rd. He's charged with  aggravated arson, because people were asleep in the facility at the time of the fire. No one was hurt in the blaze.

 

An east Texas actress has been arrested in connection with allegedly ricin-tainted  letters  that  were  mailed last month  to  President Barack  Obama  and New York City Mayor  Michael  Bloomberg.  Shannon Richardson is also  known  as  Shannon  Rogers or Shannon Guess. She reportedly called police to implicate her  estranged  husband in the case.  The  letters  were postmarked from Shreveport. Richardson  is accused of mailing a threatening  communication to the president and faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted.

 

Two south Louisiana  woman are under arrest for defrauding Medicaid. The woman worked as home  health care providers, and allegedly filed bogus timesheets for home visits  to  patients  who,  it turned out, were  in a hospital at the time. They've been charged with  Medicaid fraud.

 

Police in Baker,  in  East  Baton Rouge Parish, say a small aircraft crashed into a neighborhood Friday--setting  three  homes  on  fire. It's confirmed  the pilot, who was the only person aboard the plane, was killed in the crash.

 

Narcotic  officers in Terebonne, Lafourche and  Assumption  parishes have busted a major cocaine ring. After a months-long investigation, eight people  have been taken into custody. They also seized 8 to 10 kilos of powder cocaine and over $80-thousand in cash.

 

 

 

 

News For Friday 06/07/13


News for Friday 060713

By Dave Graichen

 

State  lawmakers  have,  in  the  closing  hours  of the legislative session,  passed  a  $25.4-Billion  state  budget. This  averts  the necessity for a special budget session as was feared by many, just a day ago. The Senate approved the compromised  budget  bill by a 38-1 vote.  The  House  vote  was  unanimous. The budget deal includes  a

$69-million increase in funding  for  local  school  districts,  and small raise for school teachers. The budget deal has the approval of Governor  Jindal.  The Governor has already singed bills that change the way future budgets may be put together.

 

Public school teachers will see pay raises of about $500 under a budget compromise that won final approval less than an hour before adjournment Thursday, officials said.

The salary increase would stem from a surprising boost of $69 million in state aid to public schools, which was a key part of the late-session agreement on Louisiana’s $25.4 billion operating budget. Under the plan, half of the money would be used for certificated personnel, teachers and others, and the other 50 percent would be left to the discretion of local school districts.

 

The State Bond Commission signed off Thursday on a refinancing of Louisiana’s tobacco settlement bonds that will take advantage of low interest rates and generate more than $60 million to plug into next year’s budget. The dollars were included in the 2013-14 budget under negotiation by lawmakers to help pay for the state’s free college tuition program called TOPS, so passage was needed to keep the $25 billion spending plan in balance. The state will save an estimated $144 million over three years.

 

The congressional fight to avoid potentially skyrocketing flood insurance rate increases in Louisiana and elsewhere made its first tangible gains Thursday. The U.S. House approved legislation that would delay the rate hikes on “grandfathered” properties by a year. Nearly 500,000 people in Louisiana participate in the NFIP. The program has been in financial distress with a loss of more than $20 billion, largely due to payments made after hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005.

 

To celebrate National Get Outdoors Day, the U.S. Forest Service will waive most recreation use fees such as day-use areas that include picnic sites, swimming and boating sites in Kisatchie National Forest on Saturday. The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries says this weekend is a free for all fishing weekend for Louisiana citizens and visitors.  Spokesman Bo Boehringer says that means you can  recreationally fish in fresh or salt water without a fishing license. -- June 8th and 9th.

 He says they use this weekend as a recruitment tool in hopes to inspire Louisiana's youth to make fishing a lifelong hobby

 

A 29-year-old Kenner man  has  been  arrested  in the kidnapping and rape of a 7-year-old girl in Metairie. Deputies  say  the  girl  was kidnapped  Wednesday afternoon by a man who entered through a broken gate at her  apartment complex. Overnight, they caught up with David Carter, who  will  face  charges of aggravated kidnapping of a child and aggravated rape.

 

Southwest Louisiana will be the place to  win championships for high school  athletes over the next two  years. The  LHSAA  awarded  Lake Charles' Burton Coliseum as the host site for the girls and boys Top 28 basketball tournament. All seven  baseball  state championship games will also be played in southwest  Louisiana as  the  games  will  be  played  at  Sulphur's McMurray Park.

 

The  House bill aimed  at  protecting  the  privacy  of  Louisiana's concealed  weapon  permit holders has won final legislative passage. The bill imposes fines of up to $10-thousand  on anyone who releases or  publishes  the confidential information about  who  has  or  has applied for a CWP. He says Governor Jindal supported the legislation

and is expected to give it his signature.

 

Governor  Jindal has officially named Timothy Barfield the Secretary of Revenue.  Barfield  has pretty much run the department ever since the  departure  of Cynthia  Bridges  last  year.  Barfield  will  be compensated at around  $250-thousand  a year; twice what Bridges was paid. Barfield officially takes the title July 1st. He's also served

as  executive director of the Louisiana Workforce  Commission  during The Governor’s  1st term.

 

LSU will face one of the top pitchers in the country in Game 1 of their super regional series with Oklahoma. Tigers right-hander Aaron Nola will oppose Sooner righty Jonathan Gray. Game 1 of the best of 3 Super Regional Series starts on tonight, tomorrow night and Sunday if necessary at 5:30p.

News For Thursday 06/06/13


News for Thursday 060613

By Dave Graichen

 

This is it, the last day of the 2013  Legislative  Session,  And it appears the Louisiana House and state Senate officials have reached a preliminary agreement on the state budget that begins on July 1st. Word is, the deal was struck shortly after the chambers adjourned for the night. A final deal will not be completed until the various caucuses and factions have an opportunity to tell their members.

 

We have our first named storm of the 2013 hurricane season. Tropical Storm  Andrea  is  located  in  the east-central Gulf. It's forecast track should take it northeast into Florida. We could be seeing some related rain from Andrea though.

 

Gov. Bobby Jindal will allow Louisiana’s public colleges to raise new fees on their students, charges that will produce an estimated $18 million annually for campuses. The Legislative Fiscal Office said the building fee would generate $4.7 million for the LSU System each year, $7.2 million for the University of Louisiana System, $700,000 for the Southern University System and $4.9 million for the Louisiana Community and Technical College System.

 

The Louisiana Senate on Wednesday refused to take up House-passed legislation that would reduce the penalties for simple possession of marijuana.  A two-thirds vote was required in order to bring House Bill 103 up for debate as the 2013 session winds down. The Senate voted 22-10 to allow the measure to be heard but it was four votes short of the super majority.

 

The Louisiana House made a failed stab Wednesday at reviving a proposal to eliminate the mandatory retirement age for judges. Senate Bill 5 is a constitutional amendment that needs the approval of two thirds of the Legislature to go before voters. In the House, the bill needs 70 votes. The amendment would ensure that judges no longer are required to retire when they turn age 70. The House vote was 59-29 in favor of the bill, not enough for passage.

 

Members of the LSU and Southern University system governing boards will have to disclose which students receive scholarships from them, if Gov. Bobby Jindal agrees to a bill that received final passage Wednesday. Senate Bill 31 requires the boards to post the list of its scholarship recipients annually on their websites and to provide a list to the Louisiana Legislature. The list will have to include the name of each recipient, the board member who gave the scholarship and the annual dollar value of the award. Refusal to submit the information would suspend board members’ ability to give scholarships. The bill passed both house unanimously.

 

A bid to let Louisiana driver’s licenses comply with federal law requiring each state to create a national identification card for air travel, including domestic flights, has stalled in the state Senate. Officials with the state motor vehicles department have said that if the state doesn’t comply with the federal Real ID law, residents will need passports to fly starting in October.

 

The Lafayette Police Department  is  asking for the public's help in locating  a  suspect  involved  in  a shooting  in the city early Wednesday morning.  They say two suspects in masks  forcefully entered a home around 2:50am and once inside exchanged gunfire  with  the resident. One  suspect  was  killed by the home owner and  the other fled in a getaway car  and remains at large. The homeowner was later arrested on drug charges.  The motive for the shooting remains under investigation.

 

The  Coalition  to  Restore Coastal Louisiana is launching a program that will collect oyster  shells  from  New Orleans area restaurants and use them to improve public oyster seed  areas  along  the coast. It’s believed  the oysters can serve as a foundation for reefs. A one-million dollar donation  from  Shell  Oil  Company makes this program possible.

 

The Assumption Parish sinkhole has grown again. This time nearly 500 feet  of berm set up to help keep possible contaminants from leaking into other  waterways,  have now sunk. It's been almost a year since the now 15-acre sinkhole  caused  the evacuation of nearby residents in Bayou Corne.

 

 

 

 

Sports..

 

LSU  shortstop  Alex  Bregman  was  named  Wednesday as the National

Freshman Player of the Year by Collegiate Baseball magazine. Bregman

has  been  invited  to  join Team USA this summer  for  its  33-game

international tour, which includes a trip to Japan.

 

The LHSAA Executive Committee is set to vote today on the biggest issue  on their agenda, the split football championships. LHSAA President Todd  Guice of Ouachita High says the debate has been over whether the  playoffs for the private schools should have two divisions or up to  five.  The LHSAA president says the advantage of having five playoff divisions  for select schools, is that schools of similar size will be play each other in the postseason.

 

 

 

News For Wednesday 06/05/13


News for Wednesday 060513

By Dave Graichen

 

Details are still sketchy, but a Pineville police officer was seriously injured  Tuesday when a car collided with the officer’s motorcycle on Highway 28 East. Officer Michael Daenen  was struck by a vehicle turning onto Medical Park Boulevard. He is listed in stable condition. With several broken bones.

 

The Rapides Parish School Board approved a hire for executive assistant  superintendent, a position created in the district reorganization plan proposed by Superintendent Nason Authement. The plan, which included several position eliminations and additions, was approved on May 21, two weeks before Authement’s first board meeting.

 

In a break with tradition, six Louisiana House members — instead of the usual — three would work with the state Senate to hammer out a compromise on the state budget.

State Rep. Joel Robideaux, R-Lafayette, made the motion shortly after the House got underway Tuesday, signaling possible movement toward a resolution on the $25 billion state spending plan. If the House and the Senate cannot reach an agreement by 6 p.m. Thursday, when the session ends, legislators would have to return to the State Capitol for a special session.

 

The  House approved bill by NOLA Representative  Austin  Badon  that would  loosen  penalties  on  pot  possession  sentences passed in a Senate  Committee  4-2  yesterday. It heads to the  Senate  Floor today for possible final legislative passage.

 

Judges and parish sheriffs have  won  legislative  backing for their pay raises. With a 29-7 vote, the Senate gave final  passage Tuesday to  a  bill outlining five years of pay raises for judges.  Sheriffs can get  the salary hikes, because a law allows them to get the same raises as  district  court  judges.  The bill now goes to Gov. Bobby

Jindal, who has said he'll sign it into law.

 

Family, friends and well-wishers lined US 190 near Hammond yesterday, as the  body  of slain National Guard Specialist Chris Drake was driven by. Drake's  remains  were taken from a Hammond airport to a funeral home in Denham Springs.  He  was  killed  in Afghanistan by a rocket propelled grenade attack.

 

A low pressure disturbance in the southern Gulf of Mexico has potential  to become the year's first tropical storm. State Climatologist Barry  Keim says the system COULD become Tropical Storm Andrea. Keim says the system is mostly swirling over the area of the Yucatan  Peninsula, and is poorly organized at this time...but that could  change. Even if the system upgrades into the season's named storm, forecasters say it'll likely move to the northeast and the Florida panhandle.

 

Tuesday the legislature passed a law that would require state agencies to  pay  women  the  same amount of money as a male co-worker in the same position. Louisiana  Pay Equity Advocacy Director Camille Moran says  they  are thrilled this  has  made  it  all  the  way  to  the Governor's Desk. Moran says there  are a lot of state employees who are currently not receiving the same  pay  for  doing  the  same  work  and  she hopes

Governor Jindal will sign this bill into law.

 

Two far-reaching House-approved bills that sought to prohibit federal oversight of gun laws in Louisiana have stalled in the state Senate and apparently won’t become law this session. Promoted as states’ rights measures against what backers called an increasingly intrusive federal government, the proposals were easily approved in the Louisiana House despite concerns that they were unconstitutional. But senators have shelved the measures through procedural moves, creating hurdles that appear unable to be met by session’s end Thursday.

 

A  former  accountant  at  the Louisiana Department  of  Health  and Hospitals  faces  over  100 years  in  prison  after  she  allegedly swindled over one-million  dollars  from the state's Medicaid program and used the stolen cash to gamble. Attorney  General Buddy Caldwell announced the arrest of 46-year-old Deborah Loper of Baton Rouge.

 

Acadia  Parish deputies say they've identified the body  found  last week by a  boy  riding  his  4-wheeler.  The  remains  are  those of 31-year-old  Thomas  Mendoza,  a  citizen  of  Honduras.  An autopsy determined  Mendoza died of multiple stab wounds to his upper  body. A Crowley man has been arrested in connection with the murder.

 

College students will be paying extra fees this fall, including one for campus building maintenance, if Gov. Bobby Jindal goes along with legislation that won final legislative approval on Tuesday. The Louisiana House voted 71-16 to Senate changes, then shipped the legislation to Jindal’s desk. House Bill 671, sponsored by state Rep. Franklin Foil, R-Baton Rouge, would allow up to a $48 per semester fee for repairs and renovations to buildings on public college campuses. The schools face a $1.7 billion backlog of projects for which state funding has been lagging.

 

Baton Rouge Mayor-President Kip Holden said Tuesday that he’s 80 percent sure he will run for Louisiana lieutenant governor in 2015. Holden, a Democrat, was sworn into his third term as East Baton Rouge mayor president in January. The term ends the last day of 2016, but he would leave the mayor’s office a year early if elected lieutenant governor.

 

Home-based cookie and cake preparation businesses would no longer fall under the state sanitary code under a bill that won final legislative approval Tuesday. The Louisiana House and Senate agreed to a conference committee report settling differences between the two chambers. Today, the sanitary code exemption applies to preparation of jellies, preserves, jams, honey and honeycomb products made in the home for sale. Gross annual sales cannot exceed $5,000. The new bill would add cookies and cakes to that list and raise gross annual sales to $20,000

 

A Terrytown woman is arrested for stealing  over  a hundred thousand dollars  from  her employer. 38-year-old Kristen Carroll  worked  at Greco's restaurant,  and  reportedly  skimmed  the  money  from bank deposits to support her gambling habit. The alleged theft took place between 2011 and 2012.

 

New specialty “I’m Cajun” and “I’m Creole” vehicle license plates are just around the corner. Legislation that would create the prestige plates won final legislative passage Tuesday on a 92-0 vote. That sent the measure to the governor’s desk.

 

Police in Shreveport say a man is in serious condition in a hospital after being stabbed by his wife several times while he was sleeping. Sgt Bill Goodin says 54-year-old Curtis  Johnson  was  found  in his home  with nearly a dozen stab wounds. He says detectives identified 33-year-old Tracy Johnson as the prime suspect in the stabbing. Goodin  says  Johnson  is  in  serious condition, but is expected to survive.

 

 

Sports..

 

The  times are set for the NCAA Super Regionals this weekend and LSU is set  to  face  Oklahoma  at The Box, 6pm Friday. The game will be nationally televised on ESPN. Saturday's game is also at 6. LSU baseball coach Paul Mainieri announces Aaron Nola will be the  starting pitcher in Game 1 of the Super Regional series against  Oklahoma. Mainieri says Nola will most likely match up against the  Sooners' ace Jonathan Gray on Friday night

News For Tuesday 06/04/13


News for Tuesday 060413

By Dave Graichen

 

Cleco has once again sent crews Monday  to  assist  in  Oklahoma City after   Friday's  storm  that  damaged  Oklahoma  Gas  and  Electric Company's  system. According to a release, the work during the first trip to the  city  of  Moore  was so extensive they worked on basics like replacing poles. This storm did not create that type of damage,

but 33 Cleco line mechanics will  be  working  to restore the area's power to assist in recovery efforts.

 

The Rapides Parish Police Jury’s Finance Committee approved the sale of the Martin Luther King Jr. library branch building to Pill Box pharmacy owner Joe Williams Monday. The jury is expected to finalize the $78,000 sale at its regular meeting next Monday.

Williams said once the sale is final, “we’ll start rehabbing the building immediately.” He expects renovations to take a month or two to complete.

 

The  hurricane  forecasting  team  at Colorado State University says they'll stick with their prediction  of  18  named storms this year. CSU  researcher Dr. Phil Klotbach says the above  average  hurricane season   is   based   on  unusually  warm  waters  in  the  tropical Atlantic. He says the probability of a major hurricane landfall along the Gulf

Coast this year is 47%.

 

Louisiana  Tech  is  receiving  more accolades as the university has been named in the Top 25 schools  in  the  nation  that  provide its graduates  with  the  best  returns  on  their  investments  or ROI. The report was  put  together by an online financial news site which uses data from PayScale.com  who  rank  Tech  No. 1 in Louisiana for starting salaries of its graduates.

 

A House bill that would loosen criminal penalties for those convicted  of marijuana possession will be considered by a Senate Committee today.  The lower chamber passed the bill by New Orleans Representative Austin  Badon last week. Badon says sentencing currently in place for those  caught with pot makes no sense.  Badon says he hopes the bill will make it out of committee today then  pass the Senate Floor tomorrow.

 

Tangipahoa Parish deputies say early yesterday morning they  found  a 5-month-old baby alone in  a home with two dead people. Investigators  believe  26-year-old Brandon  Colona  shot and killed his girlfriend, 21-year-old Theresa Doby, then turned  the  gun  on  himself. The baby is OK, and in the care of a family member. Deputies  say Colona's motive is unclear at

this time.

 

An Allen Parish judge sets  bail  for  a couple accused of the April death of two-year-old child. Brandi Holyfield is the child's mother. she  and  live-in boyfriend Bobby DAvis Jr.  are  charged  with  2nd degree murder  and  conspiracy  to commit murder. A coroner's report indicated the baby died of blunt force trauma. Bond for the pair are set at $225-thousand each.

 

A bill that sets up clear rules about using a surrogate mother to have a  child is on its way to the Governor's desk. Norco Senator Gary Smith is  the bill's sponsor. He says current state law is extremely vague in this  area.  The bill has cleared both House & Senate, though many don't like it.  Smith says liberals object that it applies only to married couples;  meaning same-sex couples would be excluded. Louisiana Family Forum  president Gene Mills says conservative groups like his object to parts

 of the bill pertaining to reimbursement of the surrogate birth mother.  Mills says the LA. Family Forum feels  the bill will further erode the traditional family, and he's urging the Governor to veto.

 

Police in Opelousas arrest a man for  leaving  his  four  kids  in a locked  SUV  while  he  was in a bar shooting pool. Justin Rosette's kids were all between 1 and  11  years old. Rosette was charged with child desertion and drug possession.

 

The Slidell Police Department says a Mississippi  woman was arrested twice  in 24 hours for driving drunk. They say 26-year-old  Marjorie Portier  exhibited  signs of intoxication when she left a party at a bar Saturday morning  at  2:30 and was arrested for DUI. Police then arrested Portier leaving another  bar  the  next  night when she was

driving under the influence again. The incidents were  her first and second offense.

 

Folks on both sides of  the Mississippi River are upset to learn the state is shutting down the White Castle Ferry later this month. DOTD says it costs over million  dollars a year to run and it provides no state or regional transportation;  only local service. Residents are angry to hear that, as driving to the  nearest  bridge  to cross the

river will add dozens of miles to their daily travel; not to mention the additional fuel expense. The ferry is set to close on June 28th.

 

News For Monday 06/03/13


News for Monday 060313

By Dave Graichen

 

The state Senate adopted a $25 billion state spending plan Saturday that would create one-time salary supplements for public schoolteachers and school nurses. After 31/2 hours of debate, the Senate voted 37-1 in favor of sending House Bill 1, the main budget legislation, to the House for concurrence on the changes. Lawmakers who helped craft the House version of the $25 billion budget said Sunday that they don’t support the Senate’s changes to the spending plans for next year. The document is a radical makeover of the budget the House sent the Senate in May. Differences will need to be worked out in five days. The session ends at 6 p.m. Thursday.

 

Governor Jindal signs legislation that's designed to make it easier for  Louisiana families to adopt children who are in the state's foster care  system. The law is called the Louisiana Has Faith in Families Act.  Jindal says one critical component of the act is that it reduces the  wait time for adoptions to be completed.  State officials say there are about five-hundred children in foster care  available to be placed in a permanent home.

 

Opelousas State Senator Elbert Guillory has left the state's Democratic  Party and become a Republican; making him the only black GOP member in  the state Legislature. Guillory says over the past few years, the  Democrats have become what he calls "the Party of Disappointment", and  remain out of touch on several issues. Guillory made his announcement as he received the Frederick Douglass  Award at a national conference of black conservatives in Baton Rouge.

 

With the hurricane season underway, Insurance Commissioner Jim Donelon  urges homeowners to make sure they understand their level of coverage.  Donelon says read your policy so you understand the deductible you'll  pay, if your home is damaged by a named storm. He says it varies  depending on the insurance provider. Donelon says now is the time to get flood insurance, if you don't have  it. He says it will be too late, once a storm enters the gulf.

 

A 13-year-old boy came across a badly decomposed male body in Acadia  Parish. Sheriff's office spokesperson Maxine Trahan says the teenager  was riding his four-wheeler at an oil well site near Rayne when he made  the grisly discovery. The Acadia Parish Coroner's office says the body may have been there  less than a week. Trahan says they are treating the case as a homicide  and they sent the body to Lake Charles for an autopsy.

 

A bill creating increased penalties for acts of domestic violence  involving burning the victim has won final passage, and is going to the  Governor's desk. The bill was conceived by Ouachita and Morehouse Parish  D.A. Jerry Jones, who says a case he prosecuted in 2010--in which a  woman suffered 24 hours of such abuse--was his inspiration. Under current state law, a person committing such a crime could only be sentenced to 15 years in jail. Under the new law, the sentence could be up to 50 years.

 

Starting August 1st, it will be illegal to use a hand held device for  social networking while driving. Louisiana Highway Safety Commission  director John LeBlanc says using Twitter, Facebook, Instagram or any  internet browsing can get you a fine of $175 or more.  The bill amends the state's existing ban on texting while driving, to  encompass using a smartphone or tablet to read or send anything from  behind the wheel. LeBlanc says the law contains exceptions for checking  one's GPS for directions.

 

The  LSU baseball team heads to the the NCAA Super Regionals after they defeat UL-Lafayette 5-1 on Sunday night in Alex Box Stadium. LSU is slated to take Oklahoma this weekend at the Box.

News For Friday 05/31/13


News for Friday 053113

By Dave Graichen

 

Federal investigators say they are now  looking  into three letters, laced   with  the  toxin  ricin,  that  were  all  postmarked   from Shreveport.  One  was sent to New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, another to his DC-based  gun control group and the third was sent to President Obama. Shreveport Mayor Cedric Glover says police and city

offices are cooperating fully  with  the  FBI's investigation of the potentially deadly letters.

 

Tweeting while driving will now be against the law in Louisiana. Gov. Bobby Jindal announced Thursday his signature on Senate Bill 147. The bill nixes posting on Facebook and accessing other social network sites while behind the wheel.

 

The governor also signed House Bill 265, which creates a lifetime concealed weapons permit. The permit costs $500 and requires training and education every five years.

 

Governor Jindal  has  signed legislation giving residents the option of having the words "I'm  a  Cajun"  emblazoned  on  their  driver's license. Another  bill still moving through the legislature would set up "I'm Cajun" specialty license plates.

 

Another  bill  headed  to  the  Governor's desk  will  increase  the penalties  for acts of domestic violence  that  involve  the  victim being burned.  Monroe Senator Bob Kostelka sponsors the legislation, which makes domestic  violence with burning a felony punishable by 5 to 50 years with or without hard labor.

 

The state House of Representatives approved a bill Thursday that would expand technical education in all corners of the state. The 88-11 vote in favor of the community and technical college construction bill marks one of the last steps for a piece of legislation that has been roundly criticized by the state treasurer, the state Board of Regents and the people who run Louisiana’s four-year schools. The bill now heads back to the Senate for approval of technical changes made in the House. Then the measure goes to Gov. Bobby Jindal’s desk for signing into law.

 

A state Senate committee clipped the fiscal hawks’ wings Thursday on a package of bills aimed at revamping the state budget process. Amendments to the bills marked the second day in a row that the Senate Finance Committee spurned significant portions of the Louisiana House’s approach to the state spending plan. The committee refused to embed the hawks’ proposals into the state constitution, choosing instead to turn them into a pilot program that could fade away in a few years.

 

The Senate Education Committee has denied a compromise intended to spare Louisiana teachers from glitches in the state's evaluation program that could affect their employment status. Senators voted 4-3 against approving House Bill 160 The bill sought to delay for one year the Compass system’s determination that a teacher is incompetent so flaws in the system could be worked out.

 

It a great argument for wearing your seatbelt. Two Slidell police officers were injured when their patrol car hit a cement culvert and flipped during a chase. The officers were buckled up  and suffered minor injuries. The person they  were  chasing  was

eventually caught.

 

It’s a case of a man’s past coming back to haunt him. State  Police  arrest  a  Lafayette man on aggravated rape  charges. L-S-P  says  they  were able gather  enough  information  to  arrest 66-year-old Joseph Thibodeaux even though the encounters occurred 40 years ago.

 

Legislation requiring state government to pay men and women equally who  perform similar jobs is close to final legislative passage. The House  Labor Committee has endorsed the Senate approved bill and it heads to  the House floor for more debate. The bill will give employers the ability to pay one gender  more than the other if the pay structure is based on seniority,  education or experience.

 

A  former  Angola prison guard pleads  guilty  to  covering  up  the beating of an  inmate.  Prosecutors  say  the guard witnessed the beating but filed a false report denying the  assault happened. With his guilty plea he could face up to 25 years in  prison  himself.  A sentencing date is yet unknown.

 

After  her  Senate  floor tirade this week,  declaring  that  anyone opposed  to the Medicaid  Expansion  contained  in  Obamacare  is  a racist, New Orleans Senator Karen Peterson is now dodging questions. A Baton Rouge  TV  crew  asking  about  the comments, was ignored by Peterson as she rushed into the Capitol.  Peterson said Tuesday that opposition  to  the  expansion  "comes  down  to  the  race  of  the President".  Peterson  is also chairman of the Louisiana  Democratic Party.

 

Sports…

 

The Baton Rouge regional gets underway today with LSU taking on Jackson State at 2:00 and then UL Lafayette will battle Sam Houston State at  7:00. If the Tigers and Cajuns win, they'll face each other on Saturday  night.

 

The Alexandria Aces cruised to a 5-1 victory over the Rio Grande Valley Whitewings before 290 fans at Bringhurst Field last night.

News For Thursday 05/30/13


News for Thursday 053013

By Dave Graichen

 

The Senate Finance Committee has approved House Bill 1, the state budget  for the fiscal year that starts in July. However, as in past years, the committee restored about  $350-million that was cut in the House. There is just one week left for the Senate to pass  it, and for the House to concur on Senate changes.

 

A vote by residents  to allow the sale of alcohol in restaurants in the city of Pineville  is one hurdle away from reality. Senate Bill 116 passed the House of Representatives by a 87-6 vote earlier this week, after passing out the Senate on a 24-0 vote. The bill now goes to the governor’s desk for his signature.

 

Hurricane  season  doesn't  even  officially  start until  June  but Forecasters  are  already  tracking Tropical Depression  2-E  in  the Pacific Ocean. Computer models  show  the  system  could  enter  the southwestern  part   of  the  Gulf  of Mexico by the end of the week. However they doubt it will develop  into  anything  more  but if it

should  they  predict it will move toward South Florida rather  than Louisiana.

 

A  mother  and  her  two toddler sons are dead after a early morning apartment fire in Lake  Charles.  State Fire Marshal Butch  Browning  says it  will  take time to

determine the cause of the apartment blaze yesterday morning. But, preliminary  indications show there were no  working smoke alarms at the time of the fire.

 

State Police say the woman who crashed head-on into oncoming traffic in St. Charles parish Sunday - killing three  people  -  was driving while  drunk.  Though  they  haven't  released  40-year-old Jennifer Englade's  blood  alcohol  level,  they say it was above  the  legal limit. Englade in still being treated for her injuries in the crash. Englade has three prior DWI convictions.

 

The state Department of Education says student participation in Advanced  Placement college prep courses was up 33% for this school year.  Education Superintendent John White says over 23-thousand were enrolled  this year, up from about 17-thousand the previous year.  Advanced Placement courses offer students the chance to earn college credit while still in high school.

 

LSU Football Coach Les Miles is scheduled to raffle off a 24-story  building in downtown Baton Rouge today in an effort to raise adoption  awareness. Miles is one of several local celebrities and elected  officials who will participate in the "Over the Edge for Adoption" challenge.

 

The House has passed a bill to reduce  sentences for those convicted of  simple possession of marijuana. The bill  is  sponsored  by  New Orleans  Rep.  Austin  Badon,  who  says the intent is to spend less taxpayer money feeding and housing prison inmates who've committed no violent crime. Badon's  bill  passed  by  a vote of 54 yeas to 38  nays.  13  House members did not vote. It goes  next to a senate committee, with just one week left in the session.

 

Louisiana's judges and sheriffs  will get a pay raise as a result of a  bill  that's  moving  closer to final  legislative  passage.  The measure would give Supreme  Court justices a five-point-five percent pay increase on July 1st. Appeal Court judges, district court judges and sheriffs will see their pay go up four-percent.

 

The New Orleans Saints  are  still  silent on the DWI arrest of wide receiver Joe Morgan over the weekend.  State  Police  say they found him  on  the  side of a Jefferson Parish expressway early  Saturday, with a flat tire and asleep behind the wheel. Troopers say his blood alcohol level was nearly three-times the legal limit.

 

Louisiana ranks at the bottom of another list  for  healthcare, this time   for   the   growing  senior  population.  The  United  Health Foundation's inaugural  Senior  Report ranks the Pelican State 48th. Dr.  Rhonda  Randall,  senior  advisor   with   the   United  Health Foundation,  says there are several key reasons why Louisiana  ranks

so low, including  a  high  number of seniors who live in poverty, a high prevalence of seniors who smoke and of course the big “O”, obesity.

 

Alexandria Police say they busted the ice cream man  for  possessing pot. Officers say the driver of the ice cream van failed to signal a turn and was mighty nervous about being stopped. They found  a small amount of weed in his possession and took him to jail.

 

Police  in  Ponchatoula,  in  Tangipahoa Parish, say they've made an arrest in the city's first murder  in  over 5 years. Authorities say robbery  appears  to  be  have been the motive.

 

A 12-year-old boy has been arrested for making a bomb threat earlier this month at a Lafayette middle school. The threatening message was scrawled  on  a restroom wall.  The school was evacuated; no bomb  found.  The  child  has  been  released  to  his parents' custody and removed from the school.

 

A constitutional challenge to a state law that makes it a felony for non-citizens to drive without proof they are legally in the United States has attracted the attention of three national civil rights groups and four foreign governments. At issue is Louisiana’s “operating a vehicle without lawful presence” statute, which carries a penalty of up to one year in prison and a fine of up to $1,000.

 

People who donate money to public schools may soon be eligible for a tax break after a vote by the state House of Representatives Wednesday. House Bill 324 would authorize a tax rebate of up to 75 percent of the donation given to a public school. The law requires that the donations be used by the school for purchasing instructional materials, maintaining tutorial and in-school child care programs and for school-based health clinics. The bill passed on a 61-34 vote. It heads to the Senate next for further consideration.

 

A bill that would provide an income tax break for certain taxpayers making less than $50,000 per year failed by a large margin in the state House of Representatives Wednesday. House Bill 699, sponsored by state Rep. Jeff Thompson, R-Bossier City, would provide an overtime wages tax credit up to $500. On the House floor, Wednesday, Thompson said the bill was his way of helping people who make less than $50,000 keep more of their money.  The bill failed on a 26-71 vote.

 

The DeSoto Parish Sheriff's Office is searching for three suspects in the theft of about $1 million in copper wire from a Frierson company. The thefts happened in six separate incidents from the Trinidad Drilling Co. DeSoto Parish Crime Stoppers is offering a $1,000 reward for information that result in the suspects’ arrests. Anyone with information can call Crime Stoppers or contact the Desoto Parish Sheriff's Office

 

 

News For Wednesday 05/29/13


News for Wednesday 052913

By Dave Graichen

 

The  2013  Memorial  Day  weekend  was  a deadly one. State Police investigated 6 fatal crashes resulting  in 8 deaths.  This is up  from  last  year's 4 fatal crashes resulting in  4  deaths  last Memorial Day weekend.  They  report  says failure  to  use  a  seat  belt contributed  to most of the 8 fatalities; driving while drinking was also a factor in some of the crashes.

 

The Military is reporting a Louisiana solider was killed in Afghanistan. The family of Chris Drake of Tickfaw was  notified  on Sunday night about Drake's death. Drake was reportedly 20-years-old  and  graduated  from  Independence High School. As of Tuesday, May 28, 2013, at least 2,092 members of the U.S. military had died in Afghanistan as a result of the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001, according to an Associated Press count.

 

A planned contract to allow a partnership between Rapides Regional Medical Center and Christus St. Francis Cabrini Hospital to take over Huey P. Long Medical Center has been delayed because details have yet to be worked out. One of the things apparently holding up the contract is a plan to move the hospital’s functions to the England Airpark in Alexandria, a process that began a year ago but was halted by hospital budget cuts. The LSU Board of  Supervisors  Tuesday did approved  contracts to privatize four  more of its public hospitals, in Houma, Lake  Charles,  Monroe and Shreveport. The board ignored pleas from lawmakers and local residents in Monroe & Shreveport  to delay action until a more complete contract — one that shows cost estimates and personnel actions — could be developed.

 

The  state  Senate  deflected  another attempt to make voters decide whether Louisiana should accept  Medicaid  Expansion  money  in  the White  House  health  care  reform. Governor Jindal has rejected the expansion as being unsustainable  once  the  federal money runs out. Supporters say it'll bring health coverage to  over  250-thousand of

the state's working poor. An attempt was made to tack  that  onto  a hospital debt bill by Bogalusa Senator Ben Nevers. The amendment failed by a 15-23 vote.

 

A national business magazine ranks Lafayette first in the country for  economic strength and year-over-year growth indicators. Lafayette  Economic Development Agency President Gregg Gothreaux says being ranked  number one overall is a big deal for the city. Area Development Magazine, a site selection and facility planning  publication, ranked 380 metro areas in 21 different economic and  workforce measures over the last five years.

 

Two gun bills were heard on the  House  floor Tuesday. One received it final passage; another was sent to a conference  committee  to  hash out  differences  over  an  amendment.  John  Schroder's HB 6 allows off-duty cops to carry their weapons onto school campuses. That bill now goes to Governor Jindal's desk. The other,  HB  8  from  Bossier City  Rep. Jeff Thompson would penalize anyone who publicly releases names or personal information on the state's concealed weapon permit holders.  Thompson  objected to an amendment tacked on in the Senate to allow said information release IF the CCP holder commits a crime. A conference committee  was assigned to try to resolve that disputed amendment.

 

The state House of Representatives approved final passage Tuesday of a bill that would exempt students with disabilities, and who are not pursuing a traditional high school diploma, from taking the American College Test, commonly known as the ACT. Senate Bill 127, which passed on a 101-4 vote,  provides that schools accountability scores won’t be affected by students who opt out of taking the test.

 

LSU’s Board of Supervisors voted Tuesday to appeal 19th Judicial District Judge Janice Clark’s ruling that the university illegally denied The Advocate and other news outlets the names and other information related to LSU’s search for a new president.  LSU general counsel Shelby McKenzie told the board the university followed all applicable public records laws and would be willing to take its case to the Louisiana State Supreme Court, if necessary. The judge issued a one-paragraph ruling April 25, saying the documents requested by The Advocate and the Times-Picayune should have been surrendered by LSU.

 

This sounds like a joke waiting for a punch line, There are  snakes  in  the Louisiana State Capitol and this is not a political jab. Apparently  baby  water snakes have been found in the basement committee rooms curled up in closets, slithering across the

carpet, and in a bathroom corner.  Workers  are  installing  weather stripping to help keep the snakes out. A wildlife official say they are water snakes and  are  completely  harmless  to humans.

 

State Police say a Ragley man is charged with 3rd offense DWI, hit & run and other offenses, after crashing his  pickup truck into a home in Moss Bluff. Troopers say Brian K. LeBlue rear-ended  a car...then left that accident scene. He later ran a stop sign and smashed  into the  house;  stopping  partially in the living room. The two persons

inside were not injured.

 

Police in Eunice say a man who used  a glass coffee pot as a weapon to rob a local casino has been apprehended. Officers say 32-year-old John  Guillory allegedly took over $800 from  the  register  and  stole an employee's  smartphone  before  fleeing on foot. They say using  the coffee pot as a weapon gave them additional grounds to arrest Guillory.

 

 

 

 

Sports..

 

LSU's Aaron Nola has been named SEC Pitcher of the Year and shortstop  Alex Bregman has received SEC Freshman of the Year honors. Nola has won  ten games for the top ranked Tigers, while Bregman leads the team in  hitting.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

News For Tuesday 05/28/13


News for Tuesday 052813

By Dave Graichen

 

A bill that would ban publishing names or addresses of those who apply  for, or have been granted, concealed weapon permits could clear its last  legislative hurdle today. Bossier City Rep. Jeff Thompson says the bill  was triggered by the New York Times printing CCP holders' addresses.  Some of those folks were burglarized afterward; their guns stolen. The bill has already been passed in the House and the Senate.  It's scheduled today on the House floor for concurrence on changes made  in the Senate. After that it goes to the Governor's desk.

 

Legislation designed to create more details on privatization contracts effectively died Monday afternoon in a state Senate committee. The Jindal administration opposed House Bill 240, arguing it would curtail efforts to turn state government functions over to the private sector. HB240’s sponsor, state Rep. Kenny Havard, told the Senate Committee on Finance that he just wants to ensure that the deals save taxpayers money. Legislators complained that Havard’s 12-page bill was complicated.

 

The  Louisiana  Highway  Safety Commission says pickup truck drivers and passengers have the lowest level of seat-belt use at 72%. That's despite state law that requires all passengers in vehicles to wear a seat belt. Executive director,  Colonel  John  Leblanc, notes that's especially important in pickup trucks. Over  150 un-belted people riding in pickup trucks  were  killed  in accidents in 2011.

 

Though still over two years away, prospective candidates for Governor in  2015 are already fundraising. With no official announcements, both  David Vitter and Jay Dardenne are scheduling events with, and for,  financial backers.  Senator David Vitter has appearances scheduled for political action  groups who support him in state and federal races. Secretary of State  Jay Dardenne is also engaged in fundraising appearances and events. Neither man has declared his plans to run for the office. Although, Lt. Governor Jay Dardenne has said on several talk shows he would like to do so.

 

State Police say a suspected  impaired  driver ran across the median and head-on into a another car early Sunday  morning  on  U.S. 61 in St.  Charles  Parish--killing  three  people.  The  driver  and  two passengers  in  the other vehicle were pronounced dead. A toxicology test is ordered for the motorist who lost control.

 

A  32-year  veteran  of the U-S Air Force is challenging  democratic Senator Mary Landrieu.  Rob  Maness of Madisonville is a retired Air Force colonel, who has never run  for  political office. Maness says while serving in the Armed Forces he took  an  oath  to  support and defend  the Constitution, and he says Congress is not living  up  to

that same oath.  Maness  joins  Baton  Rouge  Congressman  Bill Cassidy  as  the  two

announced republican challengers to Landrieu.  The  election will be held in the fall of next year.

 

Organizers  of the Bayou Country Superfest  in  Tiger  Stadium  this weekend say they  WILL  be back for a 5th anniversary BCS next year. The Zac Brown Band closed  the  two-day show late Sunday night, to the delight of thousands of fans who crowded  into Death Valley. The city of Baton Rouge says the festival brings an  estimated $30-million in economic impact.

 

With over a week to go in the legislative  session,  Governor  Bobby Jindal has signed a handful of bills into law that were approved  by lawmakers.  One  of  those  bills  makes  it  illegal  to possess or purchase  the  different  chemical  compounds  needed  to  make  the synthetic  drug  known as 25-I. The  bill  was sponsored after a Little Rock

resident died after taking 25-I at last year's  Voodoo  Fest  in New Orleans.

 

Work to raise the funds needed to build a National Hurricane Museum in  Lake Charles continue to move forward. Gray Stream is chairman of the  museum's board of directors. He says talks with corporations have gotten  the project off to a good start towards their $70-million goal, raising about $14-million, in mostly corporate donations, for the museum. The museum will be built near the Lake Charles Civic  Center, where it can be easily seen and accessed from Interstate 10.

 

Someone purchased a Powerball ticket in the New Orleans area that  matched all six numbers from Saturday night's drawing. The jackpot was  50-million dollars, which will be split three ways as winning tickets  were also sold in Florida and Delaware.

 

Sports..

 

LSU Baseball will play Jackson State Friday afternoon to open up the  Baton Rouge Regional. U-L Lafayette and Sam Houston State are the other  two schools in the regional. The Tigers and Cajuns will play each other  on Saturday night if they both win on Friday. LSU is a national four seed, even though they just won the SEC  Tournament. But Coach Paul Mainieri says the important thing is that they are a top  eight national seed and will have the opportunity to host a super-regional.

 

 

News For Friday 05/24/13


News for Friday 052413

By Dave Graichen

 

On Saturday and Sunday the state is offering a state sales tax holiday  on items residents need for the upcoming hurricane season. Louisiana  Department of Revenue spokesperson, Byron Henderson, says during the  next two days, consumers will not have to pay the state's 4-percent  sales tax on items like flashlights, batteries and generators.  Henderson says the exemption applies to the first 15-hundred dollars of

the purchase price of each item. Henderson says a complete list of the items exempt from the state's  sales tax on Saturday and Sunday can be found on the Department of Revenue's website.

 

Fewer people are expected to take trips this Memorial Day weekend.  Louisiana AAA ("triple A") spokesman Don Redman says just under 35- million Americans will travel 50 or more miles for the holiday; a dip of  about 1% below last year. He says highway travelers will likely not  notice any difference.

 

The state Commissioner of Administration Kristy Nichols announced Thursday, The total operating expense associated with the privatization of nine LSU hospitals will hit $1 billion during the new fiscal year. That’s more than is in the current year’s budget of $955 million for the state to operate the charity hospitals. And substantially more than the $626 million Gov. Bobby Jindal proposed for private companies to operate the public hospitals in the fiscal year that begins July 1. Nichols said the administration would submit amendments to the state Senate Finance Committee to close the funding gap, recommending using some money from hospital leases as well as other state and local revenues.

 

A plan to privatize operations at Huey P. Long Medical Center, which could close the Pineville hospital and move operations to England Airpark in Alexandria, will be considered Tuesday. Commissioner of Administration Kristy Nichols said Thursday that operating agreements are expected to be signed by the end of next month for private and public hospitals or foundations to take over nine hospitals currently operated through the LSU Health System. Rapides Regional Medical Center and Christus St. Francis Cabrini Hospital will be providing medical care at the airpark facility While the effective transfer date for the Monroe and Shreveport hospitals is Oct. 1, Huey P. Long’s transfer won’t be complete until October 2014. The hospital will continue providing care in Pineville, through most of next year until the Airpark facility is ready.

 

The state Attorney General's Office says a  special  grand  jury has been  selected to look at possible criminal activity in the awarding of a $200-million  Medicaid  contract  by the Jindal Administration. The  contract holder,  CNSI is the former employer  of  former  Health  & Hospitals head Bruce  Greenstein,  who  resigned  when  the  seeming impropriety  came  to  light.  The state abruptly cancelled the CNSI contract as well.

 

An amendment to the federal Farm Bill to deny food stamp benefits to convicted  rapists,  pedophiles  and  murderers,  has  been added by Senator David Vitter. He notes in Louisiana alone, from 2010 through 2012 over a million dollars’ worth of food stamp benefits were issued to people who were in prison. This would be a lifetime ban  that  no state could opt out of it. While Vitter's amendment passed, the Farm Bill itself is still under debate.

 

The state Legislative Auditor is requesting financial documents from the Louisiana Republican and Democratic  Parties,  but the state GOP is questioning whether the request is politically motivated. Auditor Darryl  Purpera  says  he  asked  for the financial documents  after learning state law requires both parties to file yearly reports. Louisiana Republican Party executive  director  Jason  Dore says the request  came  after  the  state  republican  party  fought  against proposed  tax increases that House members were discussing. He  says they already  file  campaign  finance  reports with the state ethics board and the federal elections commission. Purpera says there's no political agenda at play. The State Democratic party submitted the requested paperwork.

 

Louisiana's Congressional delegates are attempting to stave off big  impending rate hikes for the National Flood Insurance Program. Metairie  Congressman Steve Scalise says he and New Orleans Congressman Cedric  Richmond are co-sponsoring a bill to delay those premium increases for  three to five years. Scalise says the 2012 Flood Insurance Reform Act would  mean rate hikes of up to 20% a year over a four-year span, in an effort  to keep the program well-funded. Scalise says those proposed increases  are unrealistic.

 

A bill allowing clerks of court to receive a 4 percent pay raise zipped through the state Senate Thursday. The Senate voted 27-7 in favor of House Bill 174, giving the proposal final legislative passage. To be eligible for the pay increase, clerks would have to complete annual certification updates and other education requirements. State Sen. Ed Murray, D-New Orleans, said the pay boosts would not cost the state anything. He said the money would come from the clerks’ budgets.

 

Attempts to  stop  AGL Resources from expanding its salt mine in Lake Peigneur (Pin-your)  has  been  defeated  in  the  state senate. The company has requested a permit that would allow them  to  use  up to 5-million gallons of water every day. The bill would have called for an Environmental Impact Statement first.

 

Fire officials in Lafayette say nine horses  are dead after the barn they  were in caught on fire. They say upon arrival  the  smoke  was already  venting  through  the sides of the barn and the flames were too intense for firefighters  to  make entry and it was too late for the nine horses inside. It is believed  the  blaze  started  from  a lightning strike.

 

It’s not nice to fool with the IRS.. 42-year old Roderick  Dewitt  Aguillard the Third has pleaded guilty to not filingt income tax returns  over  a  four  year  period.  The former Denham Springs resident reportedly earned 2.3 million dollars during that four year period.  He was sentenced to eight  months  in federal prison.

 

Hurricane season  begins  in  10  days, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration forecasts  a  highly  active season. NOAA expects  13 - 20 named storms, 7 - 11 hurricanes. three  to  six  of those could  be  major hurricanes of Category 3 strength or higher. The  season  officially   begins   June   1st   and   ends  November 30th...though storms have occurred both before and after  those dates in recent years.

 

The  Governor's Office of Homeland Security & Emergency Preparedness launches a new smartphone app to let you receive emergency alerts as they happen.  GOHSEP director Kevin Davis says the Alert FM app is a free download for iPhone or Android systems. The app receives  special  alerts sent out by GOHSEP, which could be related to disasters, weather  emergencies and even Amber Alerts. It can  be  downloaded  free  at  the  online   Apple  store,  or  from GooglePlay.

 

Governor Bobby Jindal has signed into law a bill  that  will  assist and  encourage  Louisiana military servicemen and women to come home to the Bayou State.  House  Bill 312 does that by extending the time allowed for returning military  to  renew  any state or professional licenses  they may have had before going into  active  service.  New Orleans Rep.  Nick  Lorusso's bill met no opposition in the House or the Senate.

 

After losing to Arkansas yesterday 4 to 1. The LSU Tigers will face Alabama again today in the SEC baseball tournament. Airtime 2:30p

 

 

 

News For Thursday 05/23/13


News for Thursday 052313

By Dave Graichen

 

State  Police  say  a  76-year-old  man  from  Pollock is dead after crashing  his  truck  late  Tuesday  night. They say Coy  Kirtland  was northbound on Hwy 165 in Grant Parish  when  he left the roadway and slammed  into  two culverts before over turning.  Kirtland  was  not wearing his seat-belt and was pronounced dead on scene.

 

The  House  Appropriations  Committee approves a Senate-passed  bill calling for $263-million in construction  of community and technical college buildings. The bill is sponsored by  Benton  Senator  Robert Adley,  who says enrollment at Louisiana's 2-year schools has doubled in recent years. Adley's bill calls for selling bonds to  finance  the building plan. The  committee  passed  the  bill--sending it to the House floor for

what could be final passage.

 

Plans to wrestle tuition-setting authority away from lawmakers and put it in the hands of educators fizzled and died in the state House of Representatives this week,  representing a major blow to Louisiana’s higher education community. Currently, two-thirds of the state Legislature must sign off before colleges and universities can raise tuition. It is the toughest threshold in the country to overcome. At the same time, Louisiana is near the bottom nationwide in funding colleges while keeping tuition at some of the lowest rates in the country.

 

Good  news for Louisiana public school education as this year's LEAP and iLEAP test results show an  increase  of  students  in  grades 3 through   8   performing  at  or  above  their  grade  level.  State Superintendent  of Education John White says this reduces the number of students performing  below  grade  level by nearly 5000.

In Central Louisiana, Evangeline Parish was listed as one of the most improved districts in the state, while Vernon Parish ranked as one of the top performing districts. Overall the performance of the voucher-supported students in private schools in the state scholarship program improved by less than a percentage point.

 

Legislation is moving through both chambers of the state legislature that attempts to make it difficult for Planned Parenthood to build a new  facility  in  New Orleans. Metairie Senator Danny Martiny has a resolution that was  passed by the Senate, which urges the state not to provide any tax incentives  for  the  construction  of  the  four

million dollar building. Planned  Parenthood  Gulf  Coast spokesperson Julie Mickelberry says the new health center in New Orleans is not just a place where women

can receive assistance to terminate  their pregnancy. She says women and men will also be able to receive reproductive health care, including breast exams and cancer screening.  Planned Parenthood doesn't currently operate  an  abortion clinic in

Louisiana.

 

A watered-down “Equal Pay for Women” measure cleared the Louisiana Senate on Wednesday. The state Senate voted 23-13 for the legislation after making it apply only to women who work for state government. Senate Bill 153 originally applied to women whether they worked in the private or public sector.

 

The Louisiana Senate gave final approval Wednesday to a year’s delay in Gov. Bobby Jindal’s new pension plan for future state employees. The Senate voted 35-0 for a Louisiana House-passed resolution suspending the law scheduled to go into effect July 1. The Jindal administration originally opposed the delay, but reversed course with the filing of the special resolution that can suspend a law without the governor’s approval. The administration has filed what it calls a “clean up” bill to fix flaws.

 

Louisiana’s judges would get steady pay raises over the next five years under legislation approved late Wednesday by the Louisiana Senate. The Senate voted 27-9 to accept the recommendation of the Judicial Compensation Commission which is embodied in Senate Bill 188. The bill now heads to the House for debate.

 

Consumers looking to pick up meat for this weekend's cook-out will see  beef prices are higher than normal at the grocery store. LSU AgCenter  livestock economist Ross Pruitt says that's because wholesale beef  prices are at historically high levels. Pruitt says beef is not the only meat seeing higher prices this year, the same can be said for chicken and pork as well.

 

A federal court has approved a class-action  lawsuit  for the people effected  by  the  Assumption  Parish  sink-hole.  The  now 15-acres sinkhole apparently caused by work performed by Texas Brine has left about 350 people forced out of their homes for nearly a year with no buyouts offered. WAFB is reporting a spokesman for the company  said

they  only  just found out that their insurance carriers were not in support of the buyout process.

 

Another  suspect  in  the  fatal  shooting of two  St.  John  Parish sheriff’s deputies has pleaded guilty. Derrick Smith is the third suspect  to  enter  a  guilty plea in the

case.   He  agrees  he  is  guilty of  accessory after the  fact  to attempted first degree murder  and  possession  of  a  firearm by an convicted felon. The suspected gunman

Brian Smith, Derrick's older brother and  Kyle  Joekel  are  both charged with first degree murder.

 

Deputies in Lafourche Parish have charged a Mexican  national  -  in the  country illegally - with 2nd degree murder for the death of his girlfriend's  20-month-old  son.  Sheriff  Craig Webre says the baby died from being shaken. 24-year-old Emmanuel  Hernandez  is  being  held  pending a million  dollar  bond.  The investigation into the baby's death is ongoing.

 

A bill that would consider coercing a minor-aged girl into having an abortion  a  form of child abuse has moved closer to final  passage. Denham Springs  Rep.  Valarie  Hodges'  bill  has already passed the House  and  this week was approved by a Senate Judiciary  Committee. She says her  bill  is  to  protect  young mothers who want to carry their baby to full term. That bill now goes to the Senate floor.

 

Sports..

 

LSU shut out Alabama yesterday in the SEC tournament. Today, they’ll be facing the razorbacks at 4pm.

 

Once again the LSU/Arkansas game will be  played  on its traditional Friday  after  Thanksgiving  time  slot  in  2013.  The Southeastern Conference   and   CBS  made  the  announcement  today.  LSU  Sports Information Director Michael Bonnette says since Arkansas joined the SEC in 1992, the Tigers  and Razorbacks have played 21 times with 16 of those games coming on a Friday. He says some of the other  dates  announced  also makes it look like the  LSU/Bama  game  in  Tuscaloosa  on  November  9th  will  be  in prime-time.

 

News For Wednesday 05/22/13


News for Wednesday 052213

By Dave Graichen

 

Roy O. Martin announces a $20-million expansion at its Chopin  (Sho-pan) plywood facility in Natchitoches Parish. The project will  retain nearly 700 jobs at the plant and produce 80 new direct and  indirect jobs. Company president Roy O. Martin III says

during this expansion, they'll upgrade their drying  equipment and add a production line.  Martin says construction will begin this summer, with the majority  of hiring taking place shortly before production begins on the new  timber line next year.

 

The Rapides Parish School Board voted 7-2 Tuesday to approved a plan brought, forward by Incoming Superintendent Tony Authement,  that will restructure the school district. The restructuring plan calls for the elimination of 44 central office positions. But,  the creation of 36 positions, plus changes to some existing positions. Authement says  the plan accomplishes three things,  streamlines the district, places “intense focus” on support for schools and provides targeted professional development opportunities for all schools. The plan’s initial cost to the district’s budget is an overall increase of about $680,000. The school board gave it’s stamp of approval to the plan at a special meeting last night.

 

A $3.5 billion spending plan for public schools was rejected by a Senate committee Tuesday morning, which may kill the measure for the session. The proposal, Senate Concurrent Resolution 23, was sharply criticized for proposed changes in how the state would fund special education students. A move to shelve the proposal won approval in the Senate Education Committee without objection. Unless there is a sudden change, the action means that the state’s 2011-12 public school financing plan will be in effect for the 2013-14 school year. That aid package did not include any changes in special education.

 

A 34-member Cleco team is expected to arrive today in Oklahoma City to  help Oklahoma Gas and Electric Company get their system back online.  Cleco spokeswoman Robbyn Cooper says (OGE called to request help because  they believe their entire electric grid was destroyed by the massive  deadly tornado.  Cooper says Cleco is a member of the Southeastern Electric Exchange's  mutual assistance program where member utilities offer power  restoration assistance after major weather events. She says) OGE serves  801,000 customers in Oklahoma and western Arkansas but at this time it  is impossible to say exactly how many people are without power.

 

Teams of  volunteers  from  the Red Cross in Louisiana left yesterday to help  those  affected  by  the  tornado   in   Oklahoma.  Red  Cross spokeswoman  Nancy  Malone says their workers will  help  distribute food and supplies to  the storm victims and first responders and are prepared to stay for at least two weeks..

 

Proposed gun bills met with mixed success on the Senate floor. A House  bill to assure that concealed weapon permit holders' identities remain  private won Senate passage.  The bill was amended to allow publishing a name, if the CCP holder  commits a crime with a handgun. The bill passed and goes back to the House for amendment concurrence.  The Senate delayed voting on a House-passed bill that would defy any  possible future federal ban on semi-automatic weapons.  But,one gun bill is on its way to Governor Jindal's desk. HB 265 would allow  concealed weapon permit holders the option of buying a lifetime permit,  rather than renewing every five years.

 

Law  enforcement  statewide  is  increasing patrols and  checkpoints through June second as part of the state's largest-ever concentrated effort to increase seat belt usage  through the "Click It or Ticket" campaign.  Colonel John LeBlanc with the  Louisiana  Highway  Safety Commission says  the  campaign  coincides with the upcoming Memorial Day Weekend. LeBlanc also reminds motorists all  occupants  of  the  vehicle must wear their seat belts. Not just the front seat passenger.

 

The  bill  that  would prohibit drivers from posting to Facebook  or Tweeting while behind the wheel gets final legislative passage Tuesday  in the Senate. Also heading to the Governor's desk for his signature is the bill by Shreveport  Representative  Barbara  Norton that says drivers  of  Elio,  the three wheeled vehicle to be manufactured  in

Shreveport won't have to wear helmets.

 

The state revokes Explo Systems  license  to  operate  in  Louisiana after the company failed to properly store millions of pounds  of  a military  propellant.  Explo was renting out space at Camp Minden, a Louisiana  National  Guard  Base  in  Webster  Parish  to  dismantle military propelling charges.  State  Police Lt. Julie Lewis says all the  improperly  stored  material  is  now  in  appropriate  storage magazines at Camp Minden and Explo has surrendered  its  keys to the facility.

 

State Police say a 10-year-old  child  is dead after a car driven by her unlicensed 15-year-old sister crashed  on  their way to baseball practice  in  Tangipahoa  Parish.  Spokesman  Nick Manale  says  the 15-year-old was driving the car with her three  siblings: ages 9, 10 and 12. The 10-year-old died from her injuries; the driver and the other two juvenile passengers suffered minor to moderate injuries.

 

Sports..

 

The LSU Tigers face Alabama this afternoon in the SEC Tournament. The  Tigers took two out of three from the Crimson Tide during the regular  season.

 

News For Tuesday 05/21/13


News for Tuesday 052113

By Dave Graichen

 

After tornadoes ripped through northwest Louisiana last week, the  National Weather Service says the area could be faced with severe  conditions once again today. State Climatologist Barry Keim says the  front that produced destructive tornadoes in Oklahoma yesterday could  spawn more twisters in north Louisiana today.  Keim says there is a slight chance for severe weather in the northern  third of the state, and a moderate chance for severe weather in the northwestern part of the state. He says Louisianians should take these  forecasts seriously and be prepared for anything.

 

The state Senate Finance Committee on Monday advanced two proposed constitutional amendments that opponents said would protect more areas of the budget from cuts.

The propositions, contained in House Bills 532 and 533, would provide more financial stability for hospitals, nursing homes, intermediate care facilities and pharmacists  through constitutionally protected funds. The committee voted 9-1 to approve the measures. The bills now move to the state Senate floor.

 

A  proposal for Louisiana to tap into  federal  healthcare  overhaul funds available for expanding Medicaid has been stalled in the state senate.   The Finance Committee rejected the bill yesterday with all but one Republican voting against expansion.  A similar proposal is slated for house action later this week.

 

Homeowners who use solar power and provide electricity for utility  companies are watching a vote that is expected to take place at today's  Public Service Commission meeting. Those solar customers are eligible  for credits on their utility bill, but P-S-C member Clyde Holloway is  proposing smaller credits for those homeowners.  Holloway says the proposed change would level the playing field for  those utility customers who don't have solar panels. Public Service Commissioner Foster Campbell opposes Holloway's attempt  to change the rules with the solar program. Because he says they would be  breaking its promise to solar customers.

 

Governor Jindal has ordered a review of Texas Brine's permits to operate  in Louisiana. The Governor says has lost patience with the Houston company,  for dragging its feet on property buyouts for residents near the 15-acre  Bayou Corne sinkhole. However, Texas  Brine is blaming their insurance carrier  for the holdup in buying property  near  the  sinkhole. Damage  estimates  from the massive hole in the ground are estimated at some 40-million dollars. Some folks living near the sinkhole have been evacuated for over nine months

 

The Senate Finance Committee quickly signed off Monday on multi-year, 4 percent pay raises for Louisiana clerks of court. Under House Bill 174, the clerks could opt for 4 percent pay raises in each of four years. The money to cover the raises would have to come from self-generated funds. State Rep. Jeff Arnold of New Orleans, said the raises are optional and would be the first opportunity in seven years for a pay increase.

The bill now heads to the state Senate floor.

 

A bid to give judges five years of annual pay raises easily received the backing Monday of the state Senate’s budget committee,  after it was changed to require money for the salary hike to come from the annual judicial budget. Judges haven’t had a raise since 2010. The proposal now goes to the full Senate for debate.

 

The grand opening of the Margaritaville  Resort  in Bossier City has been set for the July 4th week. Officials say the  entire event will include  fireworks,  live  music  and  more.  They are hoping  Jimmy Buffett will be able to make an appearance at the  grand opening and they say the expectation is high.

 

 

 

News For Monday 05/20/13


News for Monday 052013

By Dave Graichen

 

The Jindal  administration  has  proposed  privatization  deals with eight LSU hospitals, but lawmakers have learned there's only  enough money  in next year's budget to fully fund three of them. Department of Health  and Hospitals Undersecretary Jerry Phillips says they are aware of the  problem  and  they  believe  there may be other funding

sources out there to get these deals done.

 

He doesn’t officially start his new job until June 1st. but, Incoming Rapides Parish schools Superintendent Nason “Tony” Authement is planning to create four “school turnaround teams” as part of a restructuring of the school district’s central office.

The School Board will consider Authement’s restructuring plan Tuesday at a special meeting, which will begin after the regularly scheduled committee meetings that start at 5 p.m. The school turnaround will be charged with helping to improve the district’s 17 schools that were graded as a D or F by the state Department of Education.

 

The state Senate settles in this week to begin its work with the  proposed $24-billion budget for the fiscal year that starts in July. The  House passed that bill out over a week ago. Lt. Governor Jay Dardenne,  who is a veteran of the legislature, says he's pleased with how the  House handled tax incentives for the film & TV industry. Dardenne says the budget bill passed by the House makes some cuts to the  departments he oversees,  tourism, culture, state parks and most museums  but they are cuts he feels he can work with.

 

Business as usual? State ethics officials pushed a limited legislative agenda this year, but even that scaled-down approach got nowhere. No bills were filed, although Louisiana Ethics Board members says they sought legislative fixes from the Legislature’s leaders and from Gov. Bobby Jindal. Some of the measures that did get filed in the 2013 regular session of the Louisiana Legislature are contrary to the recommendations the Ethics Board had established. The Ethics Board asked for help with a handful of challenges it continues to encounter in enforcement of conflict of interest, nepotism and campaign finance laws. Some of the disputes have led to lawsuits and others concern about creating some big holes that could allow ethical misconduct.

 

A new report on poverty shows that the number of poor people living in the Baton Rouge suburbs increased by 31.8 percent from 2000 to 2011. But, the good news in the report is that 31.8 percent figure is less than half of the average percentage change reported for the nation’s largest cities. Nationally, the number of poor people living in suburban areas in the 100 largest cities went up 63.6 percent from 2000 to 2011, from just over 10 million to nearly 16.4 million.

 

The Calcasieu Parish  Sheriff's  office announces an arrest has been made in a murder that happened in 1962. Seventy-three-year-old Felix Vail  was  arrested  in  Canyon Lake,  Texas  and  booked  into  the Calcasieu Parish jail last  night. Investigators believe Vail killed his wife Mary Horton Vail, who  was  found  dead  in  the  Calcasieu

River.  Felix  claimed  it  was  a boating accident. The Mississippi native is also a suspect in the deaths  of  a girlfriend and another wife.

 

Marksville police  captured  an  inmate  from  the  Avoyelles Parish Detention  Center  who  was on the run. Authorities say  21-year-old Christopher Roy escaped while  on  work  detail.  He was found early Saturday  morning  at a home in Marksville. Roy has been  in  prison since November and he was scheduled for release in 2015.

 

Congratulations to Louisiana State Police Superintendent Col. Mike Edmonson. Who on Saturday received the Buford Pusser National Law Enforcement Award for his efforts to promote partnerships among local, state and federal law enforcement agencies. The award is given annually to “deserving officers who have exhibited both heroism and leadership in law  enforcement.

 

A state lawmaker will look into whether legislation is needed to allow  parents track their children with G-P-S devices while at school.  Mandeville Representative Tim Burns says there's rules on the books  against electronic devices in the classroom like phones, so legislation  might be needed for parents to track their kids at school. Burns says he's asking the state legislature to approve a study  resolution this year to get a better idea on what schools have to say  about GPS devices in the classroom. He says they'll also look into the available technology and possibly propose legislation next year.

 

The Louisiana Department of Children and Family Services is seeking new  foster families. The state currently has about two-thousand foster homes  that serve four-thousand foster children. But D-C-F-S Secretary Suzy  Sonnier (SAHN-yay) says they are in need of families willing to take  large sibling groups or children with special needs.  Sonnier says parents can learn more about becoming a foster parent by  visiting the department of children and family services website.  Sonnier says foster parents take in children who had to leave their  family because of abuse or neglect.  She says the goal is to eventually reunite those children with their birth parents, relatives or family members.

 

Whitney and Hancock banks, which operate some 250 full-service bank branches in Louisiana, Texas, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida are expected to close 40-45 area branches this year in all five states in which they operate, including Louisiana. The specific branches that will be closed — and how many employees might be laid off — will not be released until later. Most of the closings will occur Aug. 30 and all closings will be completed by year’s end.

 

Sports….After a record-breaking regular season, the second ranked LSU baseball  team can focus on the postseason. The Tigers will begin play in the SEC  Tournament in Hoover, Alabama on Wednesday. LSU will play Against the  winner of Tuesday's game between 10th seeded Auburn and seventh seeded  Alabama. The Tigers will need to win four games this week to win the SEC  Tournament. Hear Those Games On 970AM KSYL.

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June 1st

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L'Auberge Casino & Resort

 

Lynyrd Skynyrd

June 8th

Kinder, LA

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Wayans Brothers

June 8th

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