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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.

News For Friday 05/17/13


News for Friday 051713

By Dave Graichen

 

Governor Bobby  Jindal  declares a state of emergency in response to potential flooding along  the  Mississippi River. Flood warnings are posted along the river from Arkansas  City, Arkansas to Baton Rouge. The National Weather  Service  says  the  main flooding concern is with those areas not protected by the main levee system.

 

State senators cracked open the Louisiana House’s version of the nearly $25 billion state spending plan Thursday and immediately raised questions. Members of the state Senate Finance Committee focused their concerns on a planned tax amnesty program, severance tax adjustments and the TOPS program. State Sen. Fred Mills characterized one piece of the plan that the House advanced as almost looking like a pay day loan, referring to a transaction in which someone gets immediate cash but eventually loses money on the deal. The committee will continue to look at the budget today.

 

Legislation prohibiting future teacher union employees from receiving state retirement benefits cleared the Louisiana House Thursday after fierce debate. House Bill 727 would not allow employees hired after Sept. 1 to belong to the Teachers’ Retirement System of Louisiana. State Rep. Herbert Dixon, D-Alexandria, denounced the proposal as a union busting measure. The House voted 57-40 in favor of the legislation, which now moves to the state Senate.

 

A bit of a scare yesterday in Alexandria. Police blocked off the streets surrounding the courthouse at about 10:20 a.m. after a suspicious package was found. Just after 2 p.m., Louisiana State Police bomb technicians and FBI agents determined what was in it. Police retrieved some electric hair clippers and two pocketknives. Sheriff William Hilton said in a news release. "In this day and time, you can never be too careful when something like this is found, especially in light of recent events.

 

One day after rejecting a public school $3.5 billion spending plan, lawmakers  said Thursday, they will consider a slightly different version submitted by the BESE board.

The panel on Wednesday rejected BESE’s initial proposal in light of last week’s ruling by the state Supreme Court, which struck down how the state financed school vouchers. The money was first planned to come from the $3.5 billion. But later in the day BESE officials said the rejected proposal inadvertently included language never considered by the board. The corrected version included language aimed at keeping the resolution intact if the court tossed out the voucher funding method, which it did.

 

Lawmakers have given final  legislative  passage to a bill requiring public  schools  to  formulate  a crisis response  plan  with  local lawmen, and rehearse that plan at  least  once  a year. The bill, received no opposing  votes  on  the Senate floor today. It's  now  headed  to  Governor Jindal's office, where  he can either sign it, veto it or allow  it  to  take  effect without his signature.

 

Lafayette Republican Charles Boustany will be involved in a  Congressional hearing today looking into the allegations that Internal  Revenue Service targeted conservative groups that applied for tax-exempt  status. Boustany says those responsible may have committed civil rights  violations.  Boustany is a member of the House Ways and Means Committee, which is  holding today's hearing. Steven Miller, who resigned earlier this week  as acting IRS Commissioner, is scheduled to testify.

 

There were no big winners  in  Wednesday night’s Powerball drawing so the estimated jackpot climbs to an estimated  $550  million which is the 2nd  largest  of all time. The next Powerball drawing is Saturday night..  By the way, The Mega Millions drawing  for  tonight is also up there.. it’s at  $190 million.

 

Louisiana State Police say a teenager who was not buckled up died in a Calcasieu Parish crash Thursday morning. Three teenage girls were in a car that allegedly ran  a  stop  sign and crashed into another vehicle. All three teenagers  were  unrestrained in the crash. One  died  from her injuries, the other  two  are  in critical condition.

 

New  Orleans Police have arrested the brother of the man accused  of opening  fire  on a crowd of people on Mother's Day, for his part in the shooting spree. Akein Scott was arrested Wednesday for 20 counts of attempted murder.  His  bail  set at $10-million. Yesterday, the NOPD says brother Sean Scott will face the same charges. Four others have been arrested as well for  harboring  the suspects.  Scott  allegedly  shot  and

injured 20 people Sunday; three are still in critical condition.

 

The ban on social networking while driving  bill  passes 94-0 on the House  Floor.  The  bill  by  Livingston  Senator  Dale  Erdy  would prohibiting  drivers  from  using  sites  like Facebook, Twitter  or Instagram  on  a  mobile  device while operating  a  motor vehicle.

The bill has to go back to the Senate for final passage.

 

A computer issue recently resulted in the disclosure of personal health information about 8,330 LSU Health Shreveport patients. Spokeswoman Meg Willett describes the release as unintentional and says those affected patients are being informed via notification letters sent out Wednesday. "No Social Security numbers, birthdates or financial account numbers were disclosed; so officials do not believe any financial information has been compromised.

 

The LSU Baseballers won game one of their three game series against Ole Miss last night with a 7 to 1 victory. Game two is tonight at 6:30. Tomorrow’s game is at 11:30 in the morning..

 

 

News For Thursday 05/16/13


News for Thursday 051613

By Dave Graichen

 

Residents in the city of Pineville could, in the not  too distant future, have a chance to  give a yea or a nay to the sale of alcohol in restaurants in the dry city. With a unanimous vote the House judiciary committee Wednesday morning sent Sen. Rick Gallot’s Senate Bill 116 to the House floor for a final vote.

 

New Orleans Police late Wednesday arrested 19-year-old Akein Scott, the alleged gunman in a Mother’s Day shooting that injured 19 people Sunday. Four people remain hospitalized, three in critical condition and one in stable condition. Scott has a long criminal record.

 

A state Senate panel Wednesday rejected a $3.5 billion funding request for public schools, further muddling an already confused picture on how classrooms will be funded. The Senate Education Committee approved a resolution, without objection, that asks the state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education to submit a new request in light of last week’s ruling by the state Supreme Court. The court’s 6-1 decision held that the state cannot use the Minimum Foundation Program,  the key source of state aid for public schools,  to also finance vouchers for some students to attend private and parochial schools. Gov. Bobby Jindal has said state aid for vouchers will continue but exactly how remains unclear.

 

Louisiana Education Superintendent John White said Wednesday that a court ruling throwing out funding vouchers through the public school funding formula will result in school systems receiving a $12 million refund for loss of the local shares contributed to vouchers. Local school officials have complained that the department was essentially using local funds to pay for vouchers because it deducted from each district's state allotment an amount equal to what local governments pay to educate students.

The $12 million is part of a $30 million payment that White said will have to be refunded to schools.

 

The state construction budget zipped through the Louisiana House Wednesday after millions of dollars were added for maintenance projects on public college and university campuses across the state. The House voted 100-0 in favor of advancing House Bill 2, the capital outlay budget, to the state Senate. House Bill 3, the spending engine for the construction budget, also cleared the House chamber.

 

Louisiana   lawmakers  learned  yesterday  they'll  have  an  additional 155-million  dollars  to spend in the fiscal year budget that starts July 1st. It's the result  of higher than expected individual income tax collections. The Senate  finance  committee  will  begin  its  examination of the House-approved budget next week.

 

The Louisiana Senate on Wednesday narrowly rejected an “Equal Pay for Women” law.

The Senate voted 19-18 for the measure, one vote shy of the 20 needed for passage.

 

A bill that would allow colleges and universities to impose a host of new fees onto students, including one that could cost up to $2,500 per semester for LSU’s digital media students, easily advanced in the Louisiana House Wednesday on an 80-18 vote.

Most of the discussion on the House floor centered on a provision within House Bill 671 that would allow public institutions around the state to charge a fee of up to $48 to help schools keep up with building maintenance.

 

An effort to delay implementing Gov. Bobby Jindal’s 401(k)-type pension plan for new state government hires is one step away from final legislative passage. The House Retirement Committee on Wednesday approved a Senate-passed resolution  suspending the “cash balance” law until July 1, 2014. The law has been challenged in the Louisiana Supreme Court and an IRS ruling is pending that could prove costly. If the IRS decide Jindal’s fails to provide a benefit equal to Social Security, both the state and the employee would have to pay more. A state Senate panel passed a similar House-passed resolution. Now, all that’s needed is for either chamber to pass one of the instruments that would suspend the law until 2014. Suspension resolutions cannot be vetoed by the governor.

 

Legislation that would create a Department of Elderly Affairs in state government cleared the Louisiana House Wednesday. The House voted 102-0 in favor of House Bill 352 , Which would abolish the Office of Elderly Affairs within the governor’s office and create a new state department devoted to senior citizen issues, such as funding for councils on aging, senior centers and meals on wheels. The bill now moves to the state Senate.

 

Minden Congressman John Fleming is calling on Congress to audit the  Internal Revenue Service, after alleged misconduct by the tax agency  surfaced. Fleming says he's filing legislation this week; calling first  for a Congressional audit of the IRS. Yesterday, President Obama announced he's accepted the resignation of  acting IRS Commissioner Steven Miller, after it came to light the agency  had targeted conservative groups for extra scrutiny in their  applications for tax-exempt status.

 

The National  Hurricane  Center  has  released its list of names for Atlantic hurricanes and tropical storms this season. The list starts with Andrea, Barry, Chantal, Dorian, Erin  and  Fernand. One name we won't  see again is Sandy. That name was retired after  last  year's east coast disaster.

 

The Louisiana House on Wednesday approved legislation aimed at protecting public employees from retaliation if they provide information requested by a legislator or legislative committee. The House voted 100-0 for House Bill 387, which is opposed by Gov. Bobby Jindal. Administration officials testified in committee that they found the bill was too broad and could have unintended consequences. State Rep. John Schroder, R-Mandeville the sponsor of the bill, said public employees could wage complaints with the Louisiana Board of Ethics, which would investigate and “offer its remedy.” The bill now moves to the Senate for consideration.

 

The U.S. Senate on Wednesday approved U.S. Sen. David Vitter’s waterway resources bill that is intended to expedite U.S. Army Corps of Engineers processes, set aside more dollars for river dredging and speed up flood-protection projects like southern Louisiana’s Morganza to the Gulf plan in Terrebonne Parish. The bipartisan Water Resources Development Act, sponsored by Vitter  and U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer won out with an 83-14 vote.  The legislation, a version of which has not passed Congress since 2007, next moves to the U.S. House for consideration, although House members are currently working on their own version of the bill.

 

The state Department of  Ag  and  Forestry says Louisiana is at less risk for wildfires this year than other  states who are dealing with serious drought conditions. The US Drought  Monitor shows that as of last week, there were no drought conditions in 93% of the state.

 

The story of the case of a white family who was allegedly beat up by black suspects for  "being in the wrong neighborhood" in Baton Rouge is receiving national  attention  --  and  now BRPD says the FBI may step  in. They say currently the incident does  not  meet  the  hate crime statute but federal laws could be different.

 

Legislation  that  would  add an amendment to the state constitution that removes the mandatory  retirement age for judges clears another committee. Currently the constitution  states a judge cannot remain in office past the age of 70 unless they  are severing a term. The  proposed  amendment by Ville Platte Senator  Eric  LaFleur  has

already made it through the upper chamber and now heads to the House Floor for final  passage.  If  passed,  the matter would head to the voters for the November 4th, 2014 election.

 

The House Bill that would require dogs to be crated in truck beds on  Interstates cleared Senate Transportation and now heads to full Senate  for possible final legislative passage. Tthe primary purpose of the bill is to reduce the number of  accidents caused by dogs who jump out of truck beds. The fine for  violating the proposed law would be $150 plus $50 for each additional  dog.

 

 

Sports..

 

Today marks the beginning of the final three game series for the second- ranked LSU baseball team. The Tigers host the Ole Miss Rebels, with the  team celebrating senior day this weekend.

 

 

 

News For Wednesday 05/15/13


News for Wednesday 051513

By Dave Graichen

 

New Orleans Police say they are  looking for 19-year-old Akein Scott who they say is a suspect in the mother's  day  parade shooting that injured 20 people. Three of the victims remain in critical condition after  the  brutal  attack  Sunday.  Officials  say Scott  has  been arrested many times in the past.

 

A Senate judiciary committee Tuesday  approved a bill aimed at getting around  possible  future  federal  gun regulations,  by  creating  a Louisiana-made  firearms and ammunition  classification.  Under  the Legislation, as long as the guns or ammo are manufactured within the state, they would  not  fall  under the federally-regulated commerce clause. That bill has already passed  the  House. It now goes to the Senate floor for what could be final passage.

 

The Jindal administration’s budget does not contain $42 million in termination pay and unemployment costs for the 5,000-plus state employees losing jobs because of its privatization of LSU hospitals, according to a report issued Monday. The report also notes that there are another $26 million in annually reoccurring “legacy” costs to cover retiree health and life insurance. The legislative auditor’s report looked at various effects of the privatization of hospitals in Baton Rouge, New Orleans, Lafayette, Houma, Bogalusa and Lake Charles.

 

Today is the final day for Louisiana citizens to submit their 2012 state  tax returns. Department of Revenue spokesperson Byron Henderson says  they've processed 1.5 million state returns this year, after processing  just over two-million the year before. Henderson says taxpayers who  waited until today, should file electronically.  Henderson says for those who still mail in their returns, the envelope  must have today's date as the postmark. He says if a taxpayer needs more  time to complete their 2012 state income tax return, they can request an  extension to avoid late-filing penalties.

 

Tonight's Powerball jackpot is up to an estimated $360 million dollars which is the third largest in the game's history. The cash value of tonight's jackpot is a whopping $229.2

million.

 

A Louisiana House committee refused Tuesday to advance legislation criminalizing sexual contact between psychotherapists and patients. State Rep. Dalton Honoré angered a woman by questioning whether legislation next would be filed to forbid a telephone repairman from dating a client.

 

Forging motor vehicle  safety  inspection  stickers would be a crime under  a  House-backed bill approved Tuesday  by  a  Senate  committee. State Public Safety officials told the committee that bogus stickers are on the rise. The bill would levee a $5000 fine and up to 5 years in prison for  a  conviction  of counterfeiting inspection stickers.

Next stop: the full Senate for debate and vote.

 

The Greensburg man who pleaded guilty to driving  drunk  and killing seven people in a car crash had his prison sentence reduced  from 80 years  to  35  years  today.  The  lawyer for Brett Gerald fired the motion  and  asked  the  judge  to consider  his  client's  "extreme remorse" and "lack of intent to cause harm."

 

The  National  Transportation  Safety  Board suggests  lowering  the allowable blood alcohol level from .08 percent  to  .05  percent for drivers. The NTSB's study indicates dropping the BAC could  cut down on  the  nearly  10,000  drunk  driving  related  deaths nationwide. Louisiana Highway Safety Commission Col John LeBlanc agrees. However,  LeBlanc says the last time the NTSB made a  recommendation to lower the  BAC  standard,  it  took 21 years for all 50 states to comply. Louisiana made the switch to .08 for drivers in September of 2003.

 

A  bill  that  would  protect  a minor-aged girl's right  to  choose whether or not to have an abortion  has  been  passed  by  the state House.  The  legislation provides for intervening between child  and parent, if the  girl  wants  to  have  her  baby.  The bills sponsor Denham  Springs  Rep.  Valarie Hodges say it would make  coercing  a minor-age girl into having an abortion an act of child abuse.

 

A House committee has rejected a bill that would require legislative approval of large  rate  hikes  for  the state's property insurer of last  resort,  Louisiana  Citizens. St. Mary  Parish  Senator  Brett Allain's bill has already passed  the Senate. In the House Insurance Committee, Insurance Commissioner Jim  Donelon  argued that, by law,

Citizens'  rates  must remain at least 10% higher than  the  private market. He feels Allain's bill - requiring lawmaker approval of rate hikes of 25% or more - will undo that. The committee voted  9-4  against  the  bill, which kills it for the session.

 

A congressional effort to delay upcoming flood insurance rate increases for many thousands of Louisiana residents, and others nationwide, was defeated Tuesday by a single senator who threatened to bring this week’s U.S. Senate floor action to a screeching halt. The proposal,  by Sen. Mary Landrieu, with the backing of Sen. David Vitter, R-La,  was an amendment to Vitter’s water resources infrastructure bill. The amendment would have stalled premium increases of 20 percent or more annually for some residents in the National Flood Insurance Program. But Sen. Pat Toomey, a republican from Pennsylvania, used a procedural move to block all the proposed amendments to the bill from receiving votes, unless Landrieu withdrew her proposal. She did in order to avoid gridlock. Landrieu said afterward that she will file a standalone flood insurance bill that she will push to move quickly.

 

A state House panel Tuesday endorsed the creation of special courts to divert non-violent offenders with mental health problems into treatment programs instead of prisons. The Administration of Criminal Justice Committee, without objection, approved Senate Bill 71. The legislation would authorize district courts to create divisions that would deal with offenders who have mental health problems, much like there are drug courts today. The mental health courts would be established by rule by each district court. They would not be mandatory. The bill now heads to the House floor for debate.

 

Louisiana seafood industry leaders  and state officials announce the official launch of the state's Seafood  Certification  program.  The program is aimed at boosting confidence in the quality of seafood for retailers,  restaurateurs and consumers by allowing easy recognition of products as being from Louisiana. Louisiana Seafood Promotion and Marketing Board  director  Ewell  Smith says the state Department of Wildlife and Fisheries will have oversight. Television ads for "Louisiana Certified  Seafood" are already on the air.

 

Wade   Lohse  is  finally  back  in  a  Lafayette  Parish  jail  and authorities  don't  expect  he'll have a chance at freedom for quite some time. Lohse became Acadiana's  Most  Wanted after he walked out of his vehicular homicide trial in March.

 

The Dalai Lama will visit Louisiana this week. The Tibetan holy  man will make public appearances in New Orleans Friday and Saturday, and will speak at Tulane University's commencement in the Superdome.

 

State Sen. Gary Smith and his wife went out of state to have their biological children born using a surrogate mom. On Monday, the Montz legislator got a House committee to advance legislation that would regulate the practice if other married couples want to do the same thing in Louisiana. The House Civil Law Committee voted 9-1 for the Senate-passed measure, which was opposed from both ends of the political spectrum. Gay rights advocates complained about exclusion and the Louisiana Family Forum and Louisiana Conference of Catholic Bishops objected on ethical and moral grounds. Senate Bill 162, which cleared the Senate 30-4, now moves to the House floor for debate.

 

In a sign that the GOP is rallying around Rep. Bill Cassidy as its choice for the 2014 Senate race, all of the Republicans in the state’s congressional delegation are supporting Cassidy at a June fundraiser in Washington. The Republicans want a one-on-one race between Cassidy and incumbent Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La. The invitation for June 11 fundraiser at the National Republican Senatorial Committee headquarters in Washington suggests minimum donations of $500 and touts “special guests” in Sen. David Vitter, and Reps. Rodney Alexander of Quitman, Charles Boustany, of Lafayette; John Fleming of Minden; and Steve Scalise of Jefferson.

 

 

 

 

News For Thursday 05/09/13


News for Thursday 050913

By Dave Graichen

 

The Louisiana House of Representatives is scheduled to vote today on a  24-billion dollar budget for next fiscal year. Many lawmakers do not like the governor's budget because of the  use of one-time dollars, but insiders say the votes are not there for an alternative  plan that would reduce state tax credits as a way to raise revenues. A group of republican lawmakers known as "fiscal hawks" were working  with democrats on a proposed budget that the Jindal administration  criticized as a tax increase on businesses. But that  plan fell apart when the governor put pressure on republican legislators.

 

Senator David Vitter has introduced legislation to end the free cell  phone program for the poor. The Senator says the  Lifeline Program, introduced in 1984, was originally about expanding  land line phone service to rural areas and low income households--at a  relatively low cost to taxpayers. But, the Lifeline Program has somehow become a dispensary of free  cell phones that currently costs taxpayers over $2-billion a year.

 

According to a new survey, Louisiana is the second best state in the nation to retire. The  study  by  Bankrate.com says besides jazz and beignets, our state offers retirees  an excellent combination of low taxes and balmy weather. Analyst Chris  Kahn  says  people  like  to retire in places where it's warm. Kahn  says popular places with warm weather, beaches and other major attractions  are  great  places  to  visit, but they don't make good places to retire due to overall tax rates and high cost of living.

 

The  House  Health  and Welfare Committee has approved a bill to tap into federal dollars  available  to expand Medicaid coverage to more of Louisiana's working poor. Testifying  before  the  panel,  former state  Health  and  Hospitals  Secretary  David  Hood says the state should take the federal money. Also testifying on the bill, acting Health and Hospitals  head Kathy Kliebert   who   says   the   expansion   will   eventually   become unsustainable. The  Jindal Administration has resisted the Medicaid expansion.  The committee passed the measure by a close 10-9 vote, sending it to the House floor.

 

A bill to increase student fees  at  LSU advances in House Education today. The bill by Baton Rouge Representative  Franklin  Foil  would implement  a  $60  a  year  fee  to  go  towards  campus maintenance projects. If passed it would go into effect this fall  and could top out at $300 a year by fall of 2017. It now heads to the House floor.

 

A  USA  Today  report  shows  LSU's  athletic department took in 114 million dollars in revenues in 2012 which  is  the  seventh  highest figure  among  public universities. LSU Associate athletics director Herb Vincent says  the  report  is accurate and the study also shows LSU's athletic department is one of the few in the country that does not rely on subsidies. Ticket sales, contributions and right  licensing  help  make  up the

revenue  totals. Vincent says LSU expects to see its revenue numbers continue to  grow  with  the  launch of the SEC Television Network in August 2014.

 

The  House  has  passed West Monroe Rep.  Frank  Hoffman's  bill  to prohibit smoking within  25  feet  of state-owned buildings. Hoffman amended  his bill to make it apply only  to  office  buildings,  the Capitol and nothing else. Hoffman's legislation passed the House by 84-11 vote. It now goes to the Senate for committee review in that chamber.

 

A Senate committee has approved a House-passed bill that would place criminal  penalties  on  anyone  who  makes  public  information  on Louisiana's holders of concealed weapon carry permits. That bill now goes to the full Senate, where it will be up for final passage.

 

The  "I'm  a  Cajun"  license  plate  bill  has made it another step further.  The  legislation by State Senator Fred  Mills  that  would start offering the  specialty  plate passes the Senate and now heads to the House for further consideration.

 

An  Abbeville man has been indicted on a second-degree murder charge in the  death  of  his girlfriend's 3-month-old daughter. Police say 25-year-old  Shane  Jude  Vincent  was  arrested  without  incident. Vincent was also charged  with  tampering with evidence in the death of Jayla Broussard last November.

 

Federal regulators are investigating whether workers at the Shaw Modular Solutions facility in Lake Charles, which supplies parts to nuclear plants, broke quality control rules and falsified records. CB&I, which acquired the facility’s owner, Baton Rouge-based Shaw Group, in February, said it is cooperating in the probe and has turned over all the requested documents.

 

The Louisiana House on Wednesday voted 99-0 to allow public high school students with disabilities to avoid taking the ACT and other standardized tests.

 

State Rep. John Bel Edwards, D-Amite and sponsor of the plan, said the exclusion would apply to students who are not pursuing a high school diploma and who have an exceptionality listed in state law. The proposal does not cover gifted and talented students. The legislation, which next faces action in the state Senate, is the latest move aimed at revamping rules of the state Department of Education.

 

A state Senate-passed bill that would spell out details of a 2012 law to overhaul early childhood education in Louisiana cleared the House Education Committee on Wednesday. The measure, Senate Bill 130, next faces action on the Louisiana House floor. Last year’s law calls for early learning performance guidelines for those from zero to age 3 and academic standards for 3- and 4-year-olds. In addition, pre-kindergarten centers and schools will get letter grades, and state aid will be linked to how the centers perform. The changes take effect in the 2015-16 school year.

 

Sports..

 

The number three LSU baseball team is in College Station, Texas,  preparing for a three-game series that starts tonight against the Texas  A-and-M Aggies. Head coach Paul Mainieri says he's excited about the  opportunity to play on the road in a new environment and in front of a  raucous crowd. You can hear all three games of that series on 970 KSYL.

 

 

 

 

 

News For Wednesday 05/08/13


News for Wednesday 050813

By Dave Graichen

 

A  single  vehicle  crash on Interstate 49  claims  the  life  of  a Pineville woman. State  Police reports the victim, 58-year-old Linda Jett, lost control of her  car and crashed into several trees on the side of the highway. She was  able  to  be  removed from the burning vehicle  by a passing motorist but was later pronounced  dead  at  a local hospital. The accident happened yesterday morning.

 

The Alexandria mall is cracking down on those roaming mobs of young people who seem to fill the mall on weekends. Mall officials announced a new policy Tuesday stating,  anyone under the age of 18 must be accompanied by an adult from 5 p.m. until close on Friday and Saturday evenings. The program is being branded “@5 Family Weekends” because it’s intended to put the focus back on a family friendly atmosphere in the mall. The policy will be enforced by mall security.

 

The annual Stamp Out Hunger! food drive involving letter carriers nationwide is set for Saturday. Locally, the drive will benefit the Food Bank of Central Louisiana in Alexandria. To participate, residents are asked to leave a sturdy bag containing non-perishable foods -- such as canned soup, canned vegetables, pasta, rice or cereal -- next to their mailbox prior to the time of regular delivery on Saturday, May 11. Local letter carriers will collect these donations as they deliver the mail and take them to The Food Bank of Central Louisiana.

 

The  state  Supreme  Court  has  ruled  the  funding  mechanism  for Louisiana's  private  school  tuition vouchers program violates  the state Constitution. The High Court ruled that using dollars from the so-called Minimum Foundation Program,  the  fund  for  public school funding  to  pay  the  vouchers  goes  against  the language of  the

Constitution.  Seemingly  un-phased, Governor Jindal  said he can get the millions needed to fund the vouchers in house bill #1, the state’s overall budget, before  it  makes  final  passage. That budget is already over a billion dollars in the red.

 

Details emerge on what's contained in the Louisiana House's proposed budget  for  the fiscal year that starts July 1st.  A  coalition  of Democrats and Republican "Fiscal Hawks" proposes to reduce state tax credits by 15  percent  as a way to fund critical services. The Governor's Office  says the plan will increase taxes on business and manufacturing by over  a  billion dollars over 4 years, and will severely damage the state's burgeoning  film  and  electronic media industries.

 

A  state  judge  has imposed a 9pm curfew on LSU running back Jeremy Hill. Under the judge's order, Hill must stay off the streets between 9 at night and 6 in  the morning, and must stay away from bars. It's all conditions of Hill's  probation  for  a fight on April 27th at a Tigerland  bar.  Hill  was  already  on probation  for  his  January conviction for carnal knowledge of a juvenile.

 

Shreveport  Police  say  a  high  school student is under arrest for bringing a handgun on a school campus.  Police  say  the 17-year-old Fair   Park  High  School  student  was  taken  into  custody  after authorities found a .22 caliber handgun in his backpack.

 

Dozens  of  people from Louisiana are listed as missing, so does the amazing tale  of three women who were found in Cleveland Monday give more  families hope?  State  Police  Captain  Doug  Cain  says  it's important  they  work  with parents of missing children to keep hope alive, but also not give  them false hope. He says human trafficking cases seem to be on the rise. The  website  for The National  Center  for  Missing  and  Exploited Children lists  32  kids,  with  pictures, as currently missing from

Louisiana -- some for decades.

 

A House  bill  that  would  allow  off-duty cops and concealed carry permit holders to bring their guns into  eating  establishments  has been killed in a Senate Committee. The bill is sponsored by Haughton Representative  Henry Burns, who explains his original intent was to allow officers to  eat  at  restaurants  that  serve  liquor without

leaving their weapon in the car. Burns says he may bring the original intent of his bill  back  as an amendment to other legislation.

 

It's  already passed the Senate,  and  now  a  bill  to  ban  social networking while driving has cleared another legislative hurdle. The House Transportation  Committee  approved  Livingston  Senator  Dale Erdey's  bill,  which makes posting to Facebook Twitter or Instagram from behind the wheel  punishable with fines and possible jail time.

Next stop the House floor, where it's expected to win final passage.

 

A solar energy tax credit would be phased out by 2020 under a bill approved in the Louisiana House on Tuesday. The House voted 95-1 for the measure which sponsor state Rep. Erich Ponti said is backed by the industry. Under House Bill 705, the tax credit would drop 35 percent in 2016 and then go away entirely by 2020. The credit cost  Louisiana $24 million in 2012. The bill now moves to the state Senate.

 

 

News For Tuesday 05/07/13


News for Tuesday 050713

By Dave Graichen

 

The House Ways and Means  committee  advances  several  bills to the House floor that limit the amount of tax breaks Louisiana doles out. These  measures  will  be  used  in a budget deal House members  are working to approve later this week.  One  bill  heading to the House floor  will  cut  tax  credit programs by 5-percent,  raising  state

revenues by an estimated  47-million  dollars.  Governor Jindal held a press conference after the committee meeting say what the state reps were doing was sneaky and he believes all they want to do is raise taxes.

 

An audit on Louisiana's food stamps program shows about two-million  dollars in benefits went to ineligible residents, including prisoners.  Legislative Auditor Daryl Purpera says one-point-one million dollars in  food stamp benefits went to over 17-hundred incarcerated participants  during fiscal years 2011 and 2012. The audit also shows that about 300 participants spent 100-percent of their  benefits at a single retailer. Purpera says it's an indication the food  stamp recipient used their benefit card to possibly by liquor or tobacco. Something not allowed under the program.

 

The  House  has  passed  a bill that will exempt Louisiana-based gun manufacturers from federal  gun  regulations.  The bill, by Metairie Rep. Joe Lopinto, provides for a license for in-state  made firearms and  that  the  making  and  selling of said guns is not subject  to federal laws. The measure passed by a wide margin.

 

A  House bill that would loosen restrictions on who can carry a gun into  a restaurant that sells alcohol will be heard in a Senate committee  today. The legislation by Haughton representative Henry Burns was  originally written to allow off-duty police officers into bars and  restaurants.  Burns believes his bill was amended to include ALL permit holders in a  effort by opponents to kill it, but that backfired and it passed. It

also passed on the House Floor despite confusion over who the bill  applied to.

 

In an effort to help traditional retailers and financially strapped state and local governments, the US Senate Monday passed a bill that would allow for the charging of state sales taxes on most purchases made over the internet. The Senate passed the bill by a vote of 69-27, getting support from Republicans and Democrats alike. But opposition from some conservatives who view it as a tax increase will make it a tougher sell in the House. President Barack Obama has expressed his support.

 

Louisiana judges would no longer be subject to a mandatory age 70 retirement under a proposition endorsed Monday evening by the state Senate.The Senate voted 33-2 for a proposed constitutional amendment contained in Senate Bill 5 , which  now moves to the House for debate. The proposition must receive a two-thirds vote of each legislative chamber before it goes to voters at the next statewide election which is in 2014.

 

Gas  prices continue to slide in  Louisiana.  The  current  statewide average  for a gallon of regular is $3.27 which is down a penny from yesterday.  Some  analysts  from the American Automobile Association say it's very possible prices  could  be  $3  a  gallon  by the time summer rolls around. A year ago at this time the price was $3.63.

 

A  proposal  to  help  state  road and bridge funding keep pace with inflation was rejected in a House  committee  Monday.  The bill would have indexed the gasoline tax to the Consumer Price Index.

 

A state audit shows that more than 44 percent of the Louisiana students who received scholarships from the state's TOPS program over a seven-year period had their awards canceled for one reason or another. The audit says the state spent $165 million in TOPS awards for the more than 42,000 students whose awards were eventually canceled. In response, TOPS administrators said more than 80 percent of money paid for TOPS awards went to students who completed the program. And they said most of the canceled awards were lost by students who failed to maintain enough credit hours but still had good grades.

 

The Iberia Parish Sheriff's office is investigating  the  death of a 3-year-old  child. Capt Ryan Turner says no charges have been  filed in the death  of  the  child because cause of death has not yet been determined. However he says  they  did  arrest  the four adults that were in the home that day after drugs were found during the investigation.

 

A  16-year Baton Rouge boy was  killed  when  the   car  he  was   a passenger  in  ran  off  I-10 in Ascension Parish and crashed into a line  of  trees.  The non-licensed  16-year-old driver and two other passengers in  the  vehicle were wearing  seatbelts  at  the time of the  wreck  and  suffered  only  minor  injuries.  An  investigation continues.

 

Legislation  that  would  prohibit  drivers  from  posting  on their Facebook  or  tweeting  while driving moves one step closer to final legislative approval. Livingston  Senator  Dale  Erdey says his bill calls  for  a  fine  of  up  to  175-dollars for the first  offense,

500-dollars for subsequent violations. The bill now heads to the House Floor, it's already been approved by the Senate.

 

 

News For Monday 05/06/13


News for Monday 050613

By Dave Graichen

 

All tax items on the Saturday ballot here in Rapides Parish all easily passed with over 70% of the vote.  The 9.60 Mil 15 year Sherriff’s tax renewal. Pineville School Dist. No. 52 -- 7.41 Mills - SB - 10 Yrs. And Big Island Sch. Dist. Number 50 -- 6.36 Mills - SB - 10 Yrs.  Race for Justice of the Peace Ward 4, Patricia "Pat" Paul won with close to 53% of the vote.

 

Boise  Incorporated  will  invest 111-million dollars to upgrade its paper mill  in  Deridder.  The  governor's office says the expansion will  retain  440  existing jobs and  create  54  new  direct  jobs. Deridder Mayor Ron Roberts  says  Boise  plans  to  convert  an  old newsprint  machine, so that it will be able to produce cardboard for

packaging. Roberts says Boise's investment, which will also create an estimated

600 construction jobs, is the  biggest ever by a private employer in Beauregard Parish.

 

The man who escaped from the Natchitoches  Detention Center Thursday was  captured  by  US Marshals Friday evening.  29-year-old  Derrick Evans was a trustee  serving time for attempted manslaughter when he turned up missing while  working at the jail's farm. Authorities say Evans was discovered in Jackson,  Mississippi  so  he  now sits in a jail there until he can be extradited back to Louisiana.

 

Discussions on the proposed state budget continued over the weekend and  more details could be released today. Lake Charles Representative Brett  Geymann says the state House wants to vote on a spending plan that has  bipartisan support and prevents the midyear budget cuts that have  occurred during the Jindal administration.  Geymann says their budget proposal will call for spending cuts, while  also suspending certain tax exemptions.

 

The 2013 legislative session has reached the halfway point. Council for  a Better of Louisiana President Barry Erwin says the session started  with a discussion on phasing out the state income tax. But Erwin says  that idea was quickly shot down, so the focus in the Louisiana House has  been on the proposed budget for next fiscal year. As far as other legislation goes, not one bill has passed the entire legislative process during the first 4  weeks of the session.

 

Legislation that would protect parents from FALSE child abuse claims  will be debated on the Senate floor today. Jennings Senator Blade  Moorish says he decided to file this bill after an innocent Iota family  was investigated by the Department of Children and Family Services in  the death of their baby.  Moorish says Amanda and Jerry  Spaetgens' baby died of SIDS, but since  one doctor reported suspected abuse, DCFS protocol removed the other  children from the home while they conducted an investigation. Moorish  says his bill would establish a "level of risk" that DCFS would use when  determining abuse.

 

The House Way & Means Committee is scheduled today to debate a proposal  to help state road and bridge funding keep pace with inflation. Ken  Perret, with the  Louisiana Good Roads and Transportation Association,  says the bill would index the state's 20 cent gasoline tax – dedicated  to highways - to the Consumer Price Index.  The state has a multi-billion dollar backlog of road and bridge repair  and replacement projects, with too little cash to get them started.  Perret says - if passed - House Bill 675, sponsored by Plaquemine Rep.  Karen St. Germain, would likely raise the gas tax by just under a penny  in its first year. The governor has said he will veto any bill that would raise taxes.

 

 

 

Sports..

 

Third ranked LSU has another nice winning streak going as they head into  the final two weeks of the regular season. The Tigers rebounded from a  series loss to South Carolina by sweeping Florida this past weekend. The Fighting Tigers will get back on the diamond Thursday night when  they begin a three-game series at Texas A-and-M.

 

 

News For Friday 05/04/13


News for Friday 050213

By Dave Graichen

 

What is up with the weather? Over the next couple of days, Louisiana is expected  to  set new records  for  low  temperatures. State climatologist Barry Keim says these chilly temperatures  are  the result of a late Spring cold air mass.

 

Next week, Louisiana's House of Representatives will debate the  24-billion dollar state operating budget for  the  fiscal  year that goes  into effect July 1st. Thursday, House Speaker Chuck Kleckley gave a strong indication the House will vote on a spending plan that does not include  the  patchwork  financing  recommended by Governor

Jindal.  Kleckley  told  lawmakers  Thursday  that a reworked  proposed budget could be unveiled on Monday. It's been reported  the  House  is  working  on  a budget that would

contain  spending  cuts,  while also reducing or eliminating certain tax breaks to raise revenue.

 

Former Governor  Edwin  Edwards spoke for about seven minutes on the Senate  floor  Wednesday  then  received  a  standing  ovation  from members. The expectant father  reminisced  about  working  with  the legislature  during  his four terms in office and told Senators that never more than now does  Louisiana  need leaders who are willing to

set aside personal interests.

 

Officials in 63 of Louisiana’s 70 school districts have submitted new salary schedules that will reward teachers for effectiveness and other areas, the state Department of Education announced Thursday. The new pay plans stem from a 2012 state law aimed in part at giving local school officials more flexibility in how educators are paid. The law has been declared unconstitutional by a 19th Judicial District Court, in Baton Rouge, but remains in effect while attorneys for the state appeal.

 

The   Southeastern  Conference  along with  its  primary  television rights  provider,  ESPN,  announced the start  of  the  SEC  network which  will televise  more   than   one-thousand  events  each year. The   network  will  broadcast  24-7  starting   in   August   2014. Commissioner  Mike  Slive  says the  SEC Network will televise three

SEC football games each week.  The new network will also televise 75 college baseball games a year.

 

A West Monroe newspaper reports the  sponsor of a controversial bill that  would  allow  optometrists  to  perform   eye   surgeries   is withdrawing  the  bill from consideration. Rep. Frank Hoffman's bill met fierce opposition  from ophthalmologists, who feel eye surgeries should only be done by medical  doctors.  Optometrists  are not MDs. Hoffman told the Ouachita Citizen he's reconsidered the wisdom of the bill.

 

A bill to allow voters to decide  if  they  want  traffic cameras in their area was killed in a House committee Thursday today. Bill  sponsor Jeff Arnold  says  his  bill would prohibit using the cams to levy  fines unless voters approved them. Opposition came from representatives of local governments, who  say  the  cams reduce accidents and generate revenue. The committee rejected Arnold's bill by a 5-to-10 vote.

 

In  a meeting that went into the evening hours, the Senate Education Committee  once  again  rejected  an  effort  to  repeal Louisiana's Science Education act, which allows discussion of alternate theories to  mainstream science. Chief among them the theory  of  Intelligent Design  creation  of  the  universe--as  opposed  to  the  Big Bang. Critics,  like New Orleans Senator Karen Peterson says the 2008  law is nothing less than sneaking religion into public school classrooms through the  back  door.  The committee deferred the bill--ending its progress for another year.

 

A proposal to increase certain fees the Secretary of State can collect failed to pass in the state House Thursday. House Bill 430 sponsored by state Rep. Walt Leger, D-New Orleans, got a favorable vote — 48 to 35 — but failed to meet the 53 vote majority to advance out of the House. The law would have authorized the Secretary of State to raise fees for filing and recording articles of incorporation for businesses from $60 to $75 among other fee increases.

 

An 82-year-old Jennings woman jumped to her death off the U.S. 90 Mermentau River Bridge Thursday morning. Deputies recovered the body of Irene Jeanise a short time later.

 

 

 

 

News For Thursday 05/02/13


News for Thursday 050213

By Dave Graichen

 

It appears a local couple was very happy with the decision of the Louisiana college board on Tuesday to support it’s president Dr. Joe Aguillard. Yesterday, Aguillard announced an anonymous $10 million donation, the largest single donation in the history of the 106-year-old college.

 

Louisiana is Number One among the 50 states for its rate of births to  unmarried women. The data comes from the U.S. Census Bureau, and shows  48.7% of all births are to non-married mothers. The city of Monroe ranked highly among U.S. cities for  births to single moms; with 62.5% of all births in 2011 to non-married women. Finally, the report shows that nearly a third of all un-married mothers  are women with less than a high school degree.

 

Yesterday the CEO of   Idaho Timber, Ted Ellis,  announced the company will reopen a sawmill in Coushatta later this year, creating 90 new direct jobs. The site was closed in 2008 as a result of the national recession. Idaho Timber LLC recently purchased the facility from Hood Industries. Idaho Timber, based in Boise, will make a $3.5 million capital investment to refurbish and reopen the mill by the third quarter of 2013. Hiring is under way and will be completed when the mill comes online.

 

The House Governmental Affairs Committee rejects a proposal to place term  limits on statewide elected officials. The governor is already term limited  to two terms and Erath Representative Simone Champagne believes the other  statewide elected officials should be limited to three terms. Champagne's legislation would have  asked  voters  if  they  want to restrict   the   Lt.   Governor,   secretary   of  state,  insurance commissioner,  attorney  general  and  agriculture  commissioner  to three, four-year terms. They, as you may suspect, all spoke out against the plan. The measure was defeated on a six-to-two vote.

 

Governor Jindal says 8000 students attending failing  public schools have been matched with the Fall 2013 Louisiana Scholarship  Program, which  provides  state-funded  vouchers to pay private and parochial school tuition. About 12-thousand  families applied for the vouchers this year. The state is appealing a  court  ruling  that the program makes  unconstitutional  use of public school dollars to  pay  those

vouchers.

 

A House committee rejects a bill banning discrimination  against any state employee based on their sexual orientation. Opponents  say the measure  would  advance  a sexual politics agenda. They say existing laws  provide  adequate  protection.  That  bill  was  involuntarily deferred.

 

The  House  Committee  on  Criminal  Justice  has approved a bill to reduce sentences for possessing marijuana, and  give those currently in prison for that offense a chance at possible early  release.  New Orleans  Rep  Austin  Badon  says state prisons are overcrowded and straining the state finances to house non-violent offenders. Under the bill, a 2nd offense would get up to a year in prison.

 

HB152 by Chris Hazel which allows  parole  eligibility for juveniles convicted of murder, advanced to the House floor  today. The bill is silent  on  whether  the  eligibility  would apply to those  already convicted and incarcerated. That issue would  be left for the courts to decide.

 

A state lawmaker  decides not to move his bill that would ban public schools from being  involved with the Louisiana High School Athletic Association. Abbeville  Rep.  Bob  Hensgens  filed  the  measure  in response  to  the  LHSAA's  decision  to  separate  its  high school football playoffs. There will be split football playoffs this fall, public schools will have their own post-season, while private and parochial schools will have their own brackets.

 

A Senate committee rejected a proposed  bill to make the position of Education Superintendent an elected one.  Currently  BESE  picks the Superintendent,  often  at  the Goveror's urging. Monroe Senator  Bob Kostelka brought the bill and was critical of current Superintendent John  White,  as  a  New Yorker who  doesn't  understand  Louisiana. Opponents say educations  gains  of the past several years were made

under an appointed Superintendent. The bill failed by a 2-to-4 vote.

 

The new owner of The Advocate introduced himself to managers of the newspaper Wednesday morning and said he was “extremely proud” to own Louisiana’s largest daily newspaper. John Georges, the CEO of Georges Media Group and publisher of The Advocate, said he had an enormous responsibility to The Advocate’s 450 employees and the Baton Rouge community.  Earlier in the day, governor Jindal told the press the paper could not be in better hands.

 

Here comes the  bride,  but  not  exactly what you may think. Zoo of Acadiana officials have invited the  public to attend the wedding of two giraffes on Sunday. They say their  16  foot giraffe Gabriel has waited  a  long  time  for a mate and thanks to donations  from  the community, they were able to get Evangeline, a new 14 ft girl in the habitat. Sunday is a celebration of this accomplishment.

 

The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and  Fisheries  is now offering an  app  for smartphone users to report outdoor related  violations. The app is  called, "LADWF Tips" and this is part of their Operation Game Thief program  which  could  offer cash rewards for information leading to arrests or convictions.

 

The  state  Department of Transportation says work on I-49 south  of Lafayette should  start  early  next  year. The project will upgrade U.S.Highway 90 to Interstate standards, and add a third lane in each direction.  The  first  section  will  run from  Ambassador  Caffery Parkwway to Albertson Parkway, at a cost  of about $75-million. DOTD expects to be bidding the project out by January.

 

Forcing a minor to undergo an abortion would be considered child abuse  under a bill approved by the House Criminal Justice Committee. The bill passed unanimously and heads to the House floor.

 

A state appeals court has ruled as unconstitutional a Louisiana law that makes it a felony for non-citizens to drive without documents proving they are legally in the United States. The decision, handed down Wednesday by the Lake Charles-based 3rd Circuit Court of Appeal, found that the statute is an improper effort by the state to enforce immigration laws, generally the exclusive realm of the federal government.

 

After defeating McNeese Tuesday night, the number three ranked LSU baseball team is set to open a three-game  series against the 19th ranked Florida Gators tonight. You can hear all the games on 970 KSYL. Airtime this evening is at 6

 

 

 

 

 

News For Wednesday 05/01/13


News for Wednesday 050113

By Dave Graichen

 

It took a daylong meeting, but the Louisiana College Board Of Trustees exonerated Dr. Joe Aguillard of all allegations that were made by several whistleblower complaints. The board was considering competing motions, one that would terminate Aguillard and another that would that would affirm him as president. They opted for the latter.

 

Much of the state is under a flash flood watch through Thursday.  Forecaster Robert Ricks, with the National Weather Service in Slidell,  says the problem is a slow moving low pressure system that's stalled  over southeastern Texas and Louisiana.  Ricks says we can expect periods of heavy rainfall, lightning and  possible severe thunderstorms. He says it comes on the heels of an April  with almost 10 inches of rainfall, bringing the risk of flash flooding  in low-lying areas. The rain should begin to move out tomorrow, with fair & cool  weather behind it...:

 

John Georges, who took over a small family company and transformed it into a billion-dollar business, completed a deal Tuesday to buy The Advocate, the largest daily newspaper in Louisiana. The Advocate, which dates back 171 years and serves readers from Lafayette to New Orleans, is one of the few newspapers in the United States whose print circulation is growing. It was owned by the descendants of Charles P. Manship Sr., who have been newspaper proprietors in Baton Rouge since 1909.

Georges said he will meet today with the newspaper’s 450 employees. He said he has been negotiating with the Manships for nearly two years.

 

Legislation that would double the amount of time a parent would have to  give up their newborn, no questions asked, advances in House Health and  Welfare. The proposal, by Pineville Rep Chris Hazel, would amend the "Safe Haven"  law to say a person could give up their baby within 60 days. Wade Bond with the Rapides Children's Advocacy  Center  supports the extension  of  the Safe Haven law. He believes it would help  assist

parents who feel the only answer is to murder their children. That bill now also heads for the House floor.

 

Two bills that take away the legislature's authority over the setting of  college tuition rates are moving through the Louisiana House of  Representatives. The House Education Committee approved a measure which gives the management boards of the state's 4  public college systems the power to set tuition rates. A similar piece of legislation passed out of the House Governmental  Affairs Committee. That Bill is proposing  a change to the state constitution, so that a two-thirds vote of the  legislature is no longer needed to raise tuition.

 

A bill that  would  prohibit  outdoor smoking within 25 feet of most state buildings passed in the House  Health  and  Welfare Committee. The  bill  by  West  Monroe  Representative Frank Hoffman  says  the penalties for those who violate  this  law  are  minimal  with first offense being a $25 fine, second offense a $50 fine and any  offense

after $100. Hoffman admits enforcement could be difficult. The vote was 15-1 and now heads to House floor.

 

A state Senate panel late Tuesday narrowly endorsed a revamped Medicaid expansion plan that would use the private insurance market place to provide health care coverage to Louisiana low-income adults. The Senate Health and Welfare Committee voted 4-3 for what state Sen. Ben Nevers, D-Bogalusa, called “a Louisiana solution” for state participation in the Medicaid expansion called for in federal law. The bill now heads to the full Senate.

 

A state Senate judiciary committee backed a proposal that would remove a requirement that judges retire after reaching age 70 and completing their current terms. Senate Bill 5 heads next to the full Senate for debate. If approved by the House and Senate, the constitutional change also would require approval from voters in a statewide election.

 

The House Governmental Affairs committee killed a measure that would have opened more of Governor Bobby Jindal's office to more scrutiny. The  committee voted 6-3 to back the governor's effort to keep  most of his records away from public view.

 

The   University   of   Louisiana   Board   of  Supervisors approves U-L-L's  request   to  move  forward  with  the school’s  115-million dollar  athletic facilities  master plan.  The  plan  includes  major renovations to the football stadium, Cajun Field.

 

Lieutenant Governor Jay Dardenne announces 2012 was a record-setting  year for tourism. Dardenne says a record number of visitors came to the state last year. Based on statistics from a U-N-O study, Louisiana attracted 26-point-3  million tourists last year, which resulted in more than 10-billion  dollars in total visitor spending.

 

The  full  House  has passed a bill that requires that dogs must  be secured in cages or  kennels,  while  the trucks or trailers they're being carried in are on Interstate highways. Kenner Rep. Tom Wilmott brought the legislation out of concern for the number of dogs killed when thrown out of moving trucks, and for the safety of motorists as well.

 

A Louisiana House committee rejected a bill that would have allowed convicted felons to vote if they were out of prison but still on probation or parole. Rep. Patricia Smith, D-Baton Rouge, said current law disenfranchises people who pay taxes. She said her house Bill 175 would encourage people to participate in society and would support re-entry programs designed to ensure people don’t reoffend. A victim rights’ organization opposed the measure, saying convicted felons shouldn’t be allowed to vote until they’ve completed their entire sentence.The House and Governmental Affairs Committee voted 5-2 against the bill.

 

A wreck involving two big rigs on  I-20 in Caddo Parish has left one of the two truck drivers dead. Caddo  Sheriff's  office spokesperson Cindy Chadwick says it happened shortly after midnight  last  night, with  one  18-wheeler running into the back of another

 

Ouachita  Parish  deputies  report a homeowner shot a suspected home invasion robber yesterday afternoon. They say the resident confronted the alleged thief and the suspect  tried  to run the homeowner over with his vehicle. The homeowner fired--hitting  the suspect at least once. He  was airlifted to a Shreveport hospital where  his  condition  is

unknown.

 

BP agrees to pay about $340-million to fund coastal restoration projects  for Louisiana. It's part of $1-billion the oil company will invest in  areas damaged by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill. David Cresson is  CEO of the Coastal Conservation Association of Louisiana. He says this  is good news that's been a long time coming. The state has been requesting BP make a down payment on the billion  dollars promised the state for coastal rebuilding, and they're now  making good on the promise. Cresson says the lion's share of the money  will go to barrier island projects.

 

Lake  Charles  annual  Contraband Days pirate festival begins today. The 54th annual event features pirates forcing the Mayor to walk the plank, a car show, live  music.  midway  rides, fireworks and a boat parade. The vent wraps up on May 12th.

 

 

 

News For Tuesday 04/30/13


News for Tuesday 043013

By Dave Graichen

 

The House Appropriations committee approves a spending plan for next fiscal year that does not contain any one-time money for recurring expenses.  As written, removal of one-time  dollars  from  the state's  24-billion  dollar  budget,  means  a 22-percent across the board reduction in funding for all state agencies, including higher education. .  Higher  Ed  Commissioner  Jim  Purcell  says such a reduction in funding for higher education next fiscal year would not be good for the state. The  proposed budget for next fiscal year heads to the House  floor, and it will be voted on May ninth.

 

After months of allegations, investigation, arguments and meetings, the Louisiana College Board of Trustees could decide Tuesday on whether Joe Aguillard will remain president of school. The 34-member board is expecting to hear competing motions — one that would terminate Aguillard and another that would that would affirm him as president. The vote is expected to be close.

 

The  state's  Legislative  Auditor  releases  a report that finds the overall impact of the state's aggressive film & TV tax incentives are a lot less than many originally believed. For example, the state spent $197-million  on  tax credits for  production  projects  in  2010 and received $27-million in  tax revenue  in  return.  Overall,  the   state   has   given  up  about $800-million  in  tax breaks for the movies over the past  5  years.

 

Deputies in Rapides Parish bust  a  drug suspect, who they say tried to  stash  his  dope  on the candy aisle  of  a  convenience  store. Sheriff's Lt. Tommy Carnline  says  officers  were watching the area outside  the  store  for drug activity. They saw a  transaction  and moved in to make the arrest,  but  the  suspected  ducked  into  the

store.  Store  workers pointed out that the suspect, Donald Hampton, put something on  a  shelf  among  the  candy.  It  turned out to be crystal  meth  rocks.

 

In response to federal questions, state health officials scaled back their request for blanket approval of the supplemental Medicaid financing included in the private takeover of LSU hospitals. The state Department of Health and Hospitals has submitted only a request for approval of a deal involving Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center in Baton Rouge. The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, called CMS, had asked numerous questions about an earlier broad-ranging  submission to encompass all potential deals. Among the questions was how the state could propose a November 2012 effective date when no agreements had even been signed at that point.

 

LSU  has released a written statement indicating running back Jeremy Hill has  been  suspended from the team after his arrest for battery last weekend. Coach Les Miles says he won't comment until the matter plays out through the legal system. Hill was busted after a fight at Reggie's Bar near the LSU campus and charged with simple battery. He was released on $500 bond. Hill was already on probation for a sexual encounter he admitted to with a 14 year old girl.

 

A House committee has approved a constitutional  amendment  to make it financially  easier  to pay one's sharply increased property  taxes. Speaker of the House Chuck  Kleckley,  of Lake Charles, authored the bill. He says he did so after hearing from  homeowners  who were hit with huge property tax increases. Kleckley proposes a three-year phase-in, if the  tax increase is 15% or  more over the previous year. It will need a two-thirds  vote  in both  the  House  and  Senate  before  it could be sent to voters to

decide on the fall ballot.

 

The Louisiana House Ways and Means Committee supported a measure to repeal state tax credits for wind energy systems and to phase down tax breaks for solar energy systems. The program has cost far more than originally estimated, and lawmakers have been concerned about the price tag. House Bill 705 by state Rep. Erich Ponti of Baton Rouge, was approved without objection and heads next to the House floor for debate.

 

A bill aimed at limiting the finance charges on consumer litigation loans sparked heated debate in the state Senate Monday afternoon. State Sen. Dan Claitor, R-Baton Rouge, said he filed Senate Bill 166 because people can end up paying way too much in fees when they borrow money ahead of an expected settlement. The loans have been compared to pay day loans. Critics contend that litigants borrow money that will be repaid once they receive a settlement but often end up paying exorbitant fees. The loans are promoted as a way for plaintiffs to stay in litigation while still paying their bills.

 

The  LSU  AgCenter  says  high prices and record yields for corn and soybeans drove Louisiana's  agricultural economy to a record high of $11.4-billion last year. That's about 6.5 percent more than the 2011 amount of $10.7-billion.

 

 

 

 

News For Monday 04/29/13


News for Monday 042913

By Dave Graichen

 

Nearly $500 million likely will melt away when legislators start making changes to the proposed state spending plan today. The Louisiana House Appropriations Committee will start tackling the $24.7 billion state operating budget that Gov. Bobby Jindal  presented for the fiscal year that starts July 1. The committee will make changes after weeks of testimony that raised concerns about the amount of one-time, or nonrecurring, money piled into the budget. Some changes are certain to please both legislators and the public. The Jindal administration, for example, agreed last week to rethink planned cuts to battered women’s shelters, cancer screenings and a program that helps senior citizens find free or discount prescriptions.

 

At the State Capitol, the House Appropriations Committee will begin work  on the annual state budget by trying to trim a half-a-billion dollars  from Governor Jindal's proposed budget plan. House Speaker Chuck  Kleckley says the issue is about $500-million of what's proposed by the  Governor, that being non-recurring revenue. Last Spring the House adopted the Geymann Rule, authored by Lake Charles  Rep. Brett Geymann, which mandates NO use of one-time money on recurring  expenditures. Kleckley says that leaves the Appropriations Committee  with the unenviable task of finding where to cut the budget to meet the  new rule. It may all be for nothing though since the Senate has no Geymann Rule, and could add the one- time money back into the budget bill.

 

Food banks around  the  state  are  lobbying  lawmakers  to  include $5-million  in  next  fiscal year's budget to help their efforts  to feed the needy. The Food Bank of Central Louisiana, says hunger is a real issue in our state  and state Agriculture Commissioner Dr. Mike Strain agrees. He'd like to  see  that  $5-million in the budget, to help  food  banks  buy  and  distribute  food to  the  thousands  of Louisiana  residents who have trouble putting  food  on  the  dinner plate. The  House  Appropriations Committee begins its work  on  the  state budget today. Currently there is nothing in there for Food Banks.

 

Legislators who have tried and failed to pass laws that would rein in the runaway costs of TOPS, the state’s merit-based college scholarship, could find broader support by focusing on the program’s academic requirements rather than its financial cost to the state. A survey of nearly 1,000 Louisiana residents has been noticed by officials. Part of the 2013 Louisiana Survey, conducted by the LSU Public Policy Research Lab, reported that 78 percent of respondents are against reducing the total amount of money students receive from the program. Another majority, 57 percent of the survey’s respondents,  support increasing the academic requirements for the Tops program.

 

Former  state  Department  of Health and Hospitals  Secretary  Bruce Greenstein exchanged "hundreds  of  telephone calls and thousands of text messages" with a former employer  who  was  bidding on a claims processing contract with the agency, according to  a letter released by the state Division of Administration. Greenstein  worked for CNSI before  working  for the state. The contract was worth $200-million,

but was abruptly cancelled  when  the  seeming  impropriety  came to light. Greenstein's last day on the job is Wednesday.

 

A bill to require Internet vendors to charge to all applicable state and local sales taxes on your purchases is moving  through  the U.S. Senate.  Senator  Mary  Landrieu  is  in support. She says Louisiana loses out on hundreds of millions in tax revenue yearly. Republicans say   this  represents  a  new  tax  on  consumers,   but   Landrieu

Disagrees, saying it simply enforces collection of a tax already on the books.

 

LSU running back Jeremy Hill faces an uncertain future after he was  arrested outside of a nightclub near campus. Hill faces a simple battery  charge after he allegedly punched a victim outside of Reggie's Bar. East  Baton Rouge D-A Hillar Moore says Hill may have violated his probation  stemming from a previous arrest. The former prep star at Redemptorist in Baton Rouge, pleaded guilty in  January 2012 for engaging in a sexual act with a 14-year-old girl in the  school locker room. Hill received a suspended six-month prison sentence  and placed on probation for 2 years. Moore says Judge Bonnie Jackson  will determine if Hill violated his probation.  Moore says that could mean ordering Hill to serve his six-month prison .

 

A new survey report ranks Louisiana among America's Top Five Least- Stressed States. The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index report ranks us  #2, behind only Hawaii for average stress levels of our citizens. You can read the whole report online at "well-beingindex.com

 

Preliminary data by the Department of Health and Hospital's Birth  Outcomes Initiative indicates babies born in Louisiana are spending  fewer days in intensive care. DHH Medicaid Medical Director Dr. Rebecca  Gee says this shows the efforts of the 58 birthing hospitals in the  state's pledge to end elective deliveries before 39 weeks, is working.  Gee says from the time they began in Births Outcomes Initiative in 2010

to 2012, Louisiana's babies have spent 20,000 fewer days in the NICU.

 

A Lake Charles man known for organizing "Just  For Jesus" rallies is facing  drug  charges.  Calcasieu  Parish deputies  arrested  James Bertrand Jr. last  week for possession  of  crack  cocaine  and  drug distribution.  Bertrand  has  been  arrested  four  times  before on various charges; one of those was less than two weeks ago at a local casino--for possessing cocaine.

 

It was a tough weekend for the LSU baseball team. They lost 2 of 3 to South Carolina. Up next, the Tigers welcome McNeese to the box Tuesday night.

 

 

News For Friday 04/26/13


News for Friday 042613

By Dave Graichen

 

An article in today’s Town Talk reports a major Louisiana College donor has announced it no longer will support the college “due to actions of President [Joe] Aguillard.

The Cason Foundation has donated $5 million to the private Baptist college in Pineville over the last 2 1/2 years to fund the Caskey School of Divinity. Edgar Cason, who established the foundation along with his wife, Flo, sent a letter dated April 15 to members of the LC Board of Trustees announcing he was withdrawing all future financial support. A report after an investigation by an independent New Orleans law firm, found that Aguillard had improperly diverted nearly $60,000 in funds donated to the Divinity School for use in LC’s projects in Tanzania, Africa. A separate internal committee composed of five LC board members has issued a report saying Aguillard did nothing wrong.

 

The Rapides Parish School Board approved a three-year contract for Superintendent Nason “Tony” Authement, who will begin work June 1. The contract includes a $160,000 base salary, an $800 monthly expense account and $3,500 for moving expenses. Authement currently resides in Houma. Former Rapides Parish Superintendent Dr.Gary L. Jones earned $145,000 in the final year of his contract.

 

US Senator Mary Landrieu believes the  strong support that's been on display  from  the  local community could help  Fort  Polk  avoid  a reduction in troops.  The Army is considering whether to reduce Fort Polk's personnel in half  as  it  looks  to  reduce  its active duty ranks.  Landrieu  says the Army should not overlook the  significant investments that have been made on this base. Fort Polk is among  21 posts nationally that could see a significant reduction in soldiers.

 

A  House  committee approves legislation that delays implementing  a new performance  evaluation system for teachers for a year. The bill is by Minden Rep.  Gary  Reynolds.  He says this is because of fierce opposition  from teachers and teachers  unions,  who  feel  the  new review method is flawed. Reynolds says his bill puts the whole thing

on hold. The so-called Compass evaluation method, also called the Value added

Model, uses student  performance  on  standardized tests as half the teacher's performance evaluation. Reynolds  says during the one-year delay, the system can be fine-tuned to satisfy all parties involved.

 

House Speaker Chuck Kleckley says he doubts  legislative attempts to force Louisiana to accept federal dollars to expand Medicaid will go anywhere this session. He says a lot of the problem  is inconclusive data on what it would mean fiscally for the state to offer  Medicaid coverage to about 400-thousand more residents who can't afford their

own health insurance. A  House  Committee  rejected  a  Medicaid expansion bill this week. Kleckley says other proposed Medicaid  bills will likely go nowhere. Governor Jindal says he'll veto any such bill that come to his desk.

 

In response to Decembers Connecticut school shooting, the House has passed a bill that requires state schools  to  work  with  local law enforcement  to  create  a  written  crisis  response  plan,  and to rehearse that plan as well. The bill goes to the Senate for committee assignment and review.

 

The House has passed legislation  that allows anyone with a concealed weapon carry permit to bring their  gun  into a restaurant that serves alcohol. Haughton Rep. Henry Burns original bill applied only to off-duty cops, but during committee hearing  he successfully amended the measure to include ALL CCP holders. The final vote was 63-25, sending the bill over to the Senate

 

The  Senate Education Committee unanimously votes against a proposal to cap  the  TOPS  scholarship program. The bill by Jennings Senator Blade Morrish faced  opposition  from  the governor's office. Morrish  says  he  filed  the  bill  as a way to preserve  the  TOPS scholarship because it's becoming too  costly  for the for the state

to fund, as tuition costs continue to rise. The bill is essentially dead for the session.

 

The world famous New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival starts today, and  local tourism officials are hoping for record attendance. Kelly Schulz,  with the Greater New Orleans Convention and Visitors Bureau, says the  2012 Jazz Fest brought just over 450-thousand visitors, from all over  the globe, to the Crescent City. Also this weekend, the festival international continues in Lafayette.

 

A spokesman with Texas Brine says  a  seismic  survey shows that the subsurface below the sinkhole in Assumption Parish  is  stable. They say  hopefully  residents  in Bayou Corne will be able to return  to their homes in early August. That would be a full year after they were evacuated.

 

The LSU College of Engineering has received a $15 million gift  commitment from Phyllis M. Taylor to go towards the renovation of  Patrick F. Taylor Hall and construction of a chemical engineering  facility. Rick Koubek (Co-Beck), Dean of the LSU College of Engineering,  says this contribution is a game changer. Koubek says this is the largest private donation to the LSU College of  Engineering in its history. He says the entire project is $100 million  and the state has said it will come up with half if they come up with  the other half.

 

Because  of  the  federal  sequestration's  severe  budget  cuts  an on-going project  aimed  at  mapping the annual dead zone that forms off our coast each summer maybe  dropped. The dead zone is caused by large-scale agriculture being dumped into the Mississippi that feeds into the Gulf. Mapping helps detect  if  programs created to end the problem are working.

 

This year's attempt  at  a  law ensuring equal pay for men and women who do the same work has stalled.  The  Senate  Governmental Affairs Committee deadlocked with a 4-4 vote. Bill sponsor Senator Ed Murray of New Orleans can try it again in a future committee meeting.

 

Sports..

 

Two of the top baseball programs in the country over the last five years  meet in Alex Box Stadium tonight as LSU hosts South Carolina. Aaron Nola  will be on the hill for the Tigers. You can hear the entire series on 970 KSYL. Airtime tonight, 6:30.

 

 

News For Thursday 04/25/13


News for Thursday 042513

By Dave Graichen

 

An independent investigation, conducted by a new Orleans law firm, looking into the actions of Louisiana College President Joe Aguillard, found he “engaged in falsehoods and misrepresented material information to the Board of Trustees on countless occasions.” However,  A special committee of the LC board found Aguillard “has not acted improperly.” That committee is due to report back to the board at a special meeting scheduled for Tuesday on the LC Pineville campus .

 

Central Louisiana community leaders spent Tuesday and Wednesday at the U.S. Capitol and the Pentagon making the case with the U.S. Army for the sustained viability of Fort Polk and its multibillion-dollar annual impact in the state. Baton Rouge economist Loren Scott estimated that Fort Polk has an annual $1.86 billion economic impact, including a $980 million payroll, which makes Fort Polk the largest federal employer in the state. (Scott calculated that a reduction of 5,300 troops would result in an annual loss to the state government of more than $24 million and more than $7 million in local government revenues. Counting families, contractors and more, the troop reduction would mean a total population of more than 20,700 people.)

 

LSU System President Dr. William L. Jenkins has named a 20-member search committee of faculty, staff and students, as well as community leaders to help select the next chancellor for LSU-Alexandria. The panel that will recommend finalists for the post to the LSU Board of Supervisors, who will ultimately choose the new chancellor to succeed David P. Manuel, who is set to begin serving as chancellor of Drury University in Springfield, Mo., in May.

 

The House Health  and  Welfare  committee votes down a proposal that would  require Louisiana to cover  more uninsured people through the state's Medicaid program. An expansion  of  the  Medicaid program is part  of  the federal health care reforms. Governor  Jindal  lobbied against it.  Supporters  of  the Medicaid expansion say it will help cover 400-thousand Louisiana residents  who  currently  lack  health insurance.  But Jindal says the Medicaid Program is inefficient  and outdated and it doesn't make sense to expand it.. A  Medicaid  expansion  bill  was  also heard in Senate  Health  and

Welfare but was deferred one week.

 

The  controversial  bill  to  allow  optometrists   to  perform  eye procedures  currently  only allowed to ophthalmologists  was  pulled from House debate today,  by  its  author  Monroe  area  Rep.  Frank Hoffman. Hoffman asked to return the bill to the calendar, while  he worked   on  some  amendments  that  would  make  the  measure  more

acceptable   to   ophthalmologists.   Ophthalmologists  are  medical doctors; most optometrists are not.

 

A proposal seeking to create a seamless network of early childhood education programs and standards for kindergarten readiness cleared the Senate without opposition. Under Senate Bill 130 the state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education would oversee all publicly-funded programs that provide education services to children from birth to age 5. The bill would require BESE to establish and implement common standards for kindergarten readiness, assessment and accountability. The system would be in place by the 2015-2016 school year. The bill now moves to the house.

 

Another  attempt  to place a cap on TOPS performance  based  college tuition  grants  is scheduled  in  the  Senate  Education  Committee tomorrow. Jennings  Senator Blade Moorish is the sponsor. He says he supports TOPS, but it's  becoming  unsustainable. His bill would cap it at its current level plus ten percent. TOPS costs taxpayers about

$168-million a year, and it's projected to double in cost by 2017.

 

The House of Representatives has passed a bill that would allow  residents to apply for a lifetime permit to carry a concealed weapon.  The bill is sponsored by freshman Rep. Barry Ivey, of Baton Rouge, who  says the measure is simply an option for approved CCP holders at a $500  cost. The House passed the  bill by 64-19 vote; sending it over to the Senate.

 

Attorney  General  Buddy  Caldwell  announces  9  people  have  been arrested  in  the  latest undercover investigation  targeting  child predators across Southern  Louisiana. HE says the Louisiana Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force works tirelessly to pursue people who exploit and victimize children  online.  Additional  arrests are

possible as the investigations continue.

 

According to a report by the Council For A Better  Louisiana, public schools  are  still  facing "chronic challenges." CABL's  review  is called the Louisiana Report  Card  on  Major  Education Initiatives. CABLE  President  Barry  Erwin  says  72.3  percent of  high  school students graduated on time last year and the  number of dropouts has

dramatically declined in recent years. He hopes  that  policy makers will  use  the report to understand the urgency in keeping  momentum going.

 

Pointe Copuee Parish deputies  are  investigating  the  murder  of a 92-year-old woman inside her New Roads home. Sheriff Bud Torres says Buelleur  Morris  was found beaten to death yesterday by her family. He says whoever killed  the elderly woman was let into the home, and did not force entry.

 

On the heels  of  last week's tragedy in Boston, a Vermillion Parish company has seen a  high  demand  from  law enforcement agencies for their  trained  bomb-sniffing  dogs.  US  K9 Unlimited  owner  Roger Abshire says his dogs have been in demand across  the  country, even locally here in Louisiana.

 

Legislation aimed at ensuring that women and men are compensated equally for doing the same work stalled Wednesday in the state Senate and Governmental Affairs Committee. The panel deadlocked in a 4-4 vote for Senate Bill 153 by state Sen. Ed Murray, D-New Orleans. Murray could try to revive the measure at another meeting.

 

 

News For Wednesday 04/24/13


News for Wednesday 042413

By Dave Graichen

 

Louisiana gets hit with another cold front today, but State Climatologist Barry Keim says the chances for severe weather associated  with this front are low. Keim says we will see some rain today though, with the possibility of some areas seeing up to two inches of rainfall, especially in south Louisiana.

 

At  the State Capitol, the House Ways & Means Committee has rejected Monroe  Rep. Katrina Jackson's bill, that would have doubled the tax on cigarettes--bringing  it  up  the  level of Mississippi's tobacco tax. The bill failed the pass the committee  by  a  vote of 11-7. It seems  any  efforts to raise the cigarette tax may be dead  for  the session. Two  other  tobacco  tax  bills  have been deferred by their sponsors.

 

The  House  has approved  a  bill  that  would  protect  the  Second Amendment rights  of  Louisianans  from  possible future federal gun regulations against owning semi-automatic  weapons  or  having large capacity  magazines. Debate was long and heated, with many  Democrat House members  challenging  people's  need  to  own  such  guns, and questioning  the  bill's ability to withstand a legal challenge.  In the end the bill was  approved  by  a  67-25 vote and will go to the Senate for committee review.

 

The House also passed Bossier  City  Rep.  Jeff Thompson's bill that would ban any public release of private information  on  who  in the state  has  a  concealed  weapon carry permit. Debate lasted over an hour. Thompson  says  concealed carry information is already private,  and his bill would place a $10-thousand fine on anyone who intentionally makes it public, as  was recently done by the New York Times in the

wake of the Newtown, CT school shooting. Thompson's bill passed by a 76-18 vote and moves to the Senate.

 

Public  school  teachers  from across Louisiana are expected at  the capitol today as the legislature takes up education matters.  The House Education Committee will consider  three  bills which are already state law, but subject to a court challenge.   Part  of that removed seniority as the key factor in teacher layoff decisions.

 

Lafayette's Festival International bringing in music lovers from around   the world kicks off today. The annual 5-day festival is always held  during the last full week of April. Kelly Strenge with the Lafayette  Convention and Visitors Bureau says the free festival is a celebration of diversity in music.  She says historic downtown Lafayette is transformed into an  entertainment complex featuring six music stages, food court areas,  street musicians and more. Strenge says they are expecting between 300 to 350 thousand people to  attend the festival through the weekend.

 

Many of us over the years have tempted fate and slipped around the gates at a railroad crossing to beat the train. It’s not a good idea any time, especially when you are driving a school bus filled with kids. A Lafayette parish school bus driver learned that lesson the hard way. He received a ticket for doing just that. He may also lose his job.

 

State Police say they'll take part in another national  prescription drug  take-back day this Saturday. They say it's an effort  to  help local  residents   rid   their   homes   of   potentially  dangerous prescription drugs. Expired, unused, and unwanted medications may be brought for disposal from 10 until 2 Saturday,  to  any State Police Troop.

 

The  House  of  Representatives  has  passed  a bill that will allow future drivers of a three-wheeled car to be made in Shreveport to do so  without  a  helmet.  Elio  Motors  will revitalize the old General  Motors  manufacturing plant in Shreveport to produce the three wheeled car which seats two and gets high gas mileage. The bill now heads to the Senate.

 

With a boom in business comes an interesting employee perk. The Port of  Lake  Charles  plans  to build an "employee village".  They  are expected to add over 5,000  permanent  jobs over the next two years. The  $70 million dollar village will include  recreation  facilities and  more. Scheduled completion is set for November of next year.

 

The Iberia Parish Sheriff's Office says a woman was shot  and killed in New Iberia last night. They say she was discovered lying  on  the street  and she had been shot twice. The identity of the 41 year old woman is  being  withheld  until the next of kin can be notified. No arrests have been made.. the investigation is ongoing.

 

Gruesome  testimony  was  heard  in  a  senate  committee  yesterday. It involved a bill that adds "burning by fire" in a domestic abuse case as  a  crime that is punishable by five to fifty years in prison.  A woman from  Ouachita  Parish  told the story of her former boyfriend who used an iron to burn her.  Senate Bill 70 advances to the Senate floor.

 

 

News For Tuesday 04/23/13


News for Tuesday 042313

By Dave Graichen

 

The effort to prevent a troop drawdown at Fort Polk continues today in  Washington D-C. Seventeen Fort Polk Progress members are in the nation's  capitol to make the case the military base should be strengthened. The  Department of the Army is considering whether to add or reduce troops at  Fort Polk.

 

Opposition from lobbyists  and  not  enough "Yes" votes on the House Ways and Means committee puts a halt on  an  attempt  to  raise  the state cigarette tax. Four  bills  that sought to raise the state tax on cigarettes do not make it out of the House Ways and Means Committee Monday. They only debated one of the measures and  that  was a  proposal to raise the tax on cigarettes from 36-cents a pack to $1.41, but the votes were not there. Governor  Jindal  said  he would veto any  cigarette  tax  increase, unless  lawmakers  pass another  measure  that  would  reduce  taxes elsewhere.

 

A new poll from LSU shows nearly two-thirds of Louisiana feel the big  cuts being made to state health care are unnecessary, and that Governor  Jindal should accept federal money to expand Medicaid. LSU Public Policy  Research Lab Director Kirby Goidel (goy-DEL) says almost 2 out of 3  don't want to see further health care cuts. The House Health & Welfare Committee is scheduled this week to hear  three bills pertaining to taking the federal Medicaid expansion money  that's part of the President's health care reforms. Goidel says 70% of  Louisianans polled say "take the money".

 

For the 3rd year in a row Louisiana has once again ranked highest in the nation for car insurance rates. Insure.com notes a variety of factors make up the ranking. Including

the number uninsured drivers  as  well  as  the  number  of  insurers competing  for  business,  driving  conditions,  and  the  way state insurance systems are set up.

 

The Louisiana Senate has overwhelmingly agreed to a new abortion restriction that would require doctors to be present when the abortion pill is administered. Senators voted 32-2 Monday for Senate Bill 90, which would prohibit doctors from remotely administering the pill via video hookup, a process criticized as “telemedicine abortion.”

The abortion pill works during the first nine weeks of pregnancy, causing an embryo to detach from the uterine wall.

 

A Senate panel Monday killed legislation that would have reduced the pension benefits of many current state employees, teachers and others in some state or statewide system retirement systems. The Senate Retirement Committee voted 4-2 against passage of the legislation which state Sen. Barrow Peacock said he sponsored to improve the financial health of the pension plans. Opponents said the legislation had the same constitutional problem as pension revamp efforts Gov. Bobby Jindal failed to pass last year changing current employee’s contracts with their employers.

 

The fiscal hawks, a group of Louisiana House Republicans, take flight this week with a package of bills aimed at changing the state budget process. With income tax repeal likely dead for the session, the focus shifts to a state operating budget that funds health care, education and other public services. The hawks want to rein in the use of one-time, or nonrecurring, dollars for expenses that must be met year after year. Gov. Bobby Jindal did little to appease their concerns by proposing a $24.7 billion state spending plan that relies on more than $400 million in one-time money to fund the state’s public colleges and universities.

 

A  bill  that  would ban employers from demanding access to personal social media and  email  accounts of potential employees or students passed in House Commerce and  is  now  headed  to the full House for further debate. Baton Rouge Representative Ted James  says under his bill an employee who refused to show their boss their Facebook Page couldn't be punished unless the information could harm the employer.

 

The  Jefferson Parish Sheriff's office says 5 people, three children and two  women,  were  shot  this  Monday morning  in  Harvey. They say the shooting happened around 4:30 while all the victims  were  sleeping. Four suspects were arrested. Four of the victims injuries appear  to be non-life threatening and one child is in critical condition.

 

The gas prices continue to drop. The current statewide average for a gallon of regular  in  Louisiana is $3.30 according to the American Automobile Association. That's  down  22  cents  from a month ago.

 

The  Mississippi  River  at  Vicksburg  has been re-opened to vessel traffic  after  barges  hit  the  U-S 80 railroad  bridge  yesterday morning. Lt. Ryan Gomez, with the US  Coast  Guard says a barge sank into the river as a result of the collision but it's been determined other vessels can still safely pass through. Gomez says the barges contained petroleum coke,  but  there  are  no environmental concerns at this time.

 

Trial  begins  today  in Lafayette for a man accused  of  a  1989 murder. In 2006, DNA evidence  connected  Daniel  Harmon to the rape and  murder  of Christina Wood. Jury selection in his  trial  starts tomorrow. Harmon  was  tried previously, but a mistrial was declared on a technicality.

 

Shreveport   Police  are,  again  this  year,   cracking   down   on cruising--which  they  define as large groups of vehicles driving up and down local streets very  slowly,  and  parking  and loitering in parks   and  parking  lots.  Complaints  about  cruisers  run   from obstructed  traffic  flow,  to  loud  music  and  noise,  to public intoxication  &  underage  drinking,  to  suspected  drug  activity. Cruising patrols lasted well into summer last year in Shreveport.

 

A House committee  has  found favorable a bill that would let parish governments choose if they wish to post bilingual traffic signs. The bill is aimed for areas of  Louisiana  where folks still speak Cajun French. That bill will go forward to the House floor for debate.

 

Hundreds of public school teachers are expected at the State Capitol on Wednesday as lawmakers renew arguments over the same education changes that sparked bitter debates last year. The focus is the Louisiana House Education Committee, which meets at 9 a.m. and is set to consider three overhaul bills that are already state law but also the subject of a court challenge. Backers contend the bills will serve as insurance if the Supreme Court strikes down a 2012 law that trimmed the authority of local school boards, removed seniority as the key factor in teacher layoff decisions and revamps salary schedules.

 

State Senate President Pro tem Sharon Broome said she will seek funding for  demolition of LSU’s Earl K. Long Medical Center during the current legislative session .

Broome said the hospital is antiquated and there are not many options available for its continued use because of its age and deterioration. The north Baton Rouge hospital  closed April 15.

 

Three years after the nation’s worst offshore oil disaster, Baton Rouge wants more than $35 million in lost taxes and other expenses the city alleges are the responsibility of oil giant BP and several of its contractors. The city’s civil suit was filed late last week.

News For Monday 04/22/13


News for Monday 042213

By Dave Graichen

 

The House Ways and Means Committee will consider legislation this  morning that would raise tobacco taxes. Monroe Representative Katrina  Jackson proposes to increase the tax on a pack of cigarettes from  36-cents to 68-cents. Jackson is moving forward with her bill, even  though Governor Jindal has said he'll "veto" any bill that raises taxes. Jackson says her proposed  cigarette tax increase would bring in 129-million dollars a year in  additional revenue. She says that's much needed money for a state that  has a large revenue shortfall for next fiscal year.

 

The Louisiana Workforce Commission reports 31 consecutive months of jobs  growth in the private sector; meaning a record of nearly 2-million  people currently employed in Louisiana. LWC Executive Director Curt  Eysink says the data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows the state with a March unemployment  rate of 6.2-percent; significantly lower than the national average.

 

A political battle is brewing between the Governor and state lawmakers  over privatization of state hospitals. Both the House and Senate have passed resolutions saying privatization  plans for state hospitals now run by LSU should be approved by a Joint  Budget Committee, but Mr. Jindal says those resolutions do not carry the  weight of law. Governor Jindal says he'll consider a bill that would change state law  where his hospital plans are concerned, but so far one hasn't emerged.

 

Nearly a year after Gov. Bobby Jindal declared that Louisiana wouldn’t tap into billions of federal dollars to expand Louisiana’s Medicaid program, lawmakers will take their first vote on whether to challenge his stance. Political squabbling over the federal health care law championed by President Barack Obama will be the nearly sole focus of Wednesday’s House Health and Welfare Committee hearing. Five measures on the agenda, all sponsored by Democrats, seek to enact the Medicaid expansion under the law. Similar proposals await debate in the Senate.

 

Saturday marked three years since the explosion of BP's Deepwater Horizon  oil rig in the Gulf, which began a months-long struggle to contain the  biggest environmental disaster in U.S. history. Governor Bobby Jindal  says about 200 miles of Louisiana marshes and beaches still have  oil, sheen and tar balls. He says there have been measurable impacts on  sea life in the Gulf as well. The Governor says BP needs to stop  saying they'll make it right in commercials, and actually put up the  money to get the job done.

 

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,  Louisiana ranks 17th in the nation for the number of infants who are  immunized by two years of age. State Immunization Director Dr. Frank  Welch says 75-percent of two-year olds in Louisiana are up-to-date on  their shots.  Welch says this week is National Infant Immunization week and the  goal is to encourage parents to make sure their child's  immunizations are up to date. Also this week, The Louisiana Shots for Tots Coalition is  sending reminder cards to parents of children who are behind on  their shots.

 

A University of New Orleans study says Super Bowl 47 had a 480-million  dollar economic impact for the region. John Williams, Dean of U-N-O's  College of Business Administration, says that's a higher dollar figure  than expected. He says it helped that the fans of the Super Bowl teams  had to fly in and spent several nights in a hotel. The study also shows Super Bowl 47 generated 21 million dollars in state  tax revenue and local governments in the greater New Orleans area  received nearly 14-million dollars.

 

Governor Jindal threatens to veto proposed legislation that would add a  2-cent fee to all cell phone bills, and dedicate it to services for the  hearing & speech-impaired. Mr. Jindal says, as written, he can't back it  because it means extra tax revenue when the goal is revenue neutrality.  Shreveport Rep. Patrick Williams, the bill's sponsor,  says   an existing 5-cent monthly fee on land lines to fund services for the  deaf brings in less each year, as more people move to cell phones. Mr.  Williams says by reducing that fee to 2-cents, and adding it to all cell  phone accounts, $1-million yearly will be raised for the LA Commission  for the Deaf.

 

The Eunice Police Department says a 30-year-old woman is under  arrest after her pit bulls attacked and injured a mailman. Nicole Courville is booked with cruelty  to animals, negligent injury and dogs running loose. Authorities say when officers responded one of the officers was attacked  and that's when shots were fired. He said one dog was shot dead and  two others were captured by animal control.

 

The Coast Guard closed the Mississippi River at Vicksburg after barges hit a railroad bridge there and about 30 barges broke free from the towboat “Captain Buck Lay.”

Petty Officer Ryan Tippets says nine towboats with 134 barges were waiting to get through Sunday evening. Every barge was accounted for, but the river remained closed with no word on when it might reopen. Tippets says three barges carried grain and the rest held coal. Tippets says one barge sank in the traffic channel. He did not know whether it must be removed before the channel can reopen.

 

Sports..

 

The LSU Tigers completed spring practice on Saturday with the white team  blanking the purple team 37-0. Quarterback Zach Mettenberger threw for  236 yards and two touchdowns and Odell Beckham led all receivers with  six catches for 202 yards and two TDs. Coach Les Miles told the press, he liked what he saw.

 

In LSU tiger baseball, the boys took 2 from Alabama over the weekend. The Tigers lost for just the second time in 20 games, falling to 37-4 overall and 15-3 in Southeastern Conference play. LSU remains atop the SEC West standings, four games ahead of second-place Arkansas. A huge SEC homestand begins Friday against South Carolina.

 

 

 

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