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SHELITA MARIE BANKS

Shelita Marie Banks, 54, a resident and native of Houma, La., passed away peacefully on Friday September 3, 2021 at Ochsner Baton Rouge Hospital in Baton Rouge, La.
Visitation will be observed on Saturday, September 18, 2021 from 8 a.m. until funeral services at 10 a.m. at Jones Funeral Home 715 Sixth Street Morgan City, La. 70380. (All visitors are asked to adhere to the CDC-local regulations by wearing masks and practicing social distancing). Burial will be at a later date in the Southdown Cemetery.
Memories of Shelita will forever remain in the hearts of her husband, Richard Lee Walters; children, Keyanna Celestine and Daquine Banks; mother, Patricia Beasley Johnson; sisters, Melissa Banks, Shardell (Brynel) Walker, and Renea Walker; brother, Roosevelt Johnson; six grandchildren and a host of nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends.
Shelita was preceded in death by her father, Gilbert Banks; brother, Tommy Johnson and her maternal grandmother, Olivia Beasley.
Arrangements entrusted to jones funeral home of Morgan City-Franklin-Houma and Jeanerette. Please visit www.jones-funeral-home.com to send condolences to family

ALTA LEE WARREN CELESTIN

Alta Lee Warren Celestin, 82, a resident of Houma, La. and native of Montegut, La., passed away peacefully on Sunday, September 12, 2021.
Visitation will be observed on Friday September 17, 2021 from 9 a.m. until funeral services at 11 a.m. at Jones Funeral Home, 1101 Main Street Franklin, La. (All visitors are asked to adhere to the CDC-local regulations by wearing masks and practicing social distancing). Entombment will follow funeral services in will follow in the Celestin Garden of Memories Cemetery.
Memories of Alta Lee will forever remain in the hearts of those she is survived by, which include: two daughters, Debra Townsend and Sharon Singleton and her husband, Reverend Jerome Singleton Sr.; four sons, Paul Celestin, Jr. and his wife, Rachel, Dereck Celestin, Jerroid Celestin and his wife, Juluana and Jerome Celestin of Dallas, TX; six sisters, Wilma Lee (Charles) Williams, Mary (Raymond) George, Iona Fleming, Gwendolyn Harris, Lisa (Donald) Saucier and Rosary Lynn (Bryan Sr.) Turner; two brothers, Sylvester (Terry) Warren and Elvis Warren; brother-in-law, Moses (Gertrude) Celestin; fifteen grandchildren, twenty-nine great-grandchildren, two great-great-grandchildren and a host of nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends.
Alta Lee was preceded in death by her: husband, Paul Celestin Sr.; parents, Sylvester Warren Sr. and Rose Del Warren; maternal grandparents, Octave Lagarde and Lucinda Mason and her paternal grandparents, Spurgen Warren and Rebecca Smith Warren.
Arrangements entrusted to Jones Funeral Home of Morgan City-Franklin-Houma and Jeanerette. Please visit; www.jones-funeral-home.com to send condolences to family.

Franklin/Baldwin Senior Dinner Set for Thursday

St Mary Community Action Agency’s CEO Almetra J. Franklin announces the September Senior Dinners for residents of Franklin/Baldwin area is scheduled for Thursday September 16th, 2021 at the Franklin City Park Recreation Center located at 505 Haifleigh Street in Franklin, LA. The senior feedings remain “drive thru” due to Covid-19 safety protocol. We ask all seniors to remain in their vehicles, and the dinners will be distributed to them. All Senior dinners are sponsored by the St. Mary Parish Government and St. Mary CAA. Pickup begins at 11:30 am until 12:30 pm. For any questions or inquiries, please contact the St. Mary CAA Central office at (337) 828-5703.
St. Mary CAA is an Equal Opportunity Provider, Employer and Lender!!

St. Mary schools will resume classes Wednesday

St. Mary Parish public schools will resume classes Wednesday, Superintendent Dr. Teresa Bagwell said Tuesday.

Classes ended by 12:30 p.m. Tuesday because of the heavy rain anticipated from Tropical Storm Nicholas.

Seven more COVID deaths, 61 new cases since Friday

Seven more COVID-19-related deaths have been reported for St. Mary Parish since Friday, according to the daily Louisiana Office of Public Health Tuesday update.

The seven fatalities, six of which were reported for the period ending at midday Tuesday, raise the pandemic death toll to 202 in St. Mary.

The OPH also said 61 new COVID cases have been identified in St. Mary since Friday, bringing the pandemic case count to 8,132.

Statewide, 2,200 new cases were reported for the 24 hours ending at midday Tuesday along with 121 deaths.

The number of COVID-positive people in Louisiana hospitals continues to drop. On Tuesday, the total was 1,612, down 19 from Monday.

From the Editor: Port has a tough month, but some wins, too

The August meeting of the Morgan City Harbor and Terminal District Commission was one for the books. Commissioners heard that four dredges would be working in area waters at the same time, from Berwick Bay to the sea buoy.
Monday’s September meeting had some twists and turns, many but not all courtesy of Hurricane Ida. In the end, the overall feeling was relief.
“We dodged a bullet, guys,” said Tim Connell, civil engineer and project manager for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in New Orleans, who took in the meeting by conference call.
But it’s too early to say that the port escaped damage altogether.
Port Executive Director Raymond “Mac” Wade warned immediately after Ida that sediment below the surface may have encroached on channels being cleared by the dredging. Hurricane Harvey, a Category 4 storm that hit the Texas coast in 2017, created tidal shifts that reduced the depth in some areas of the channel by 5 feet, Wade said
So, after Ida, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Admin-istration sent a survey boat. That hasn’t worked out yet.
The boat first went to the wrong location, Wade said. And as it moved to the right survey area, it broke down.
Another survey boat was dispatched, only to run out of fuel. A third vessel sent to bring fuel to the survey boat broke down.
Those weren’t the only mechanical problems experienced by the port in the last month.
The four dredges set to begin or continue work in the last month are the Brice Civil Constructors’ Arulaq, designed especially for the channel between Eugene Island and the sea buoy; a Manson Constructors dredge that was to work the same portion of the channel; a Great Lakes Dredge & Dock dredge tasked with work closer to the port near Crewboat Cut; and a Weeks Marine dredge to work elsewhere in the Atchafalaya.
The Arulaq continues to perform its function of agitating and removing sticky “fluff” mud from the Eugene Island-sea buoy leg. And the Corps’ $7 million contract was altered to exercise an option to bring the Manson dredge Newport to the bar channel.
The Great Lakes dredge Alaska went to work Aug. 20 and paused for Ida. But before it could resume work, a problem was discovered: The dredge’s Coast Guard certificate of inspection expired.
The expiration isn’t just a matter of paperwork.
“Apparently, there are some substantial deficiencies to be ironed out ...,” Connell told the commissioners. “We really need to get going down there.”
The Weeks Marine barge was set to begin work the middle of this month. But it was called away during Ida for emergency work on the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway. That’s expected to cause a two- to three-week delay, Connell said.
But the last month brought some triumphs, too.
Consultant Mike Knobloch told the commissioners Monday that a joint state legislative committee approved the port’s application for a grant to finance the western portion of the planned dock expansion.
The $15 million grant will come in three $5 million installments, the first in about 2½ years.
The expansion and the push to dredge the channel to its authorized dimensions of 20 feet deep and 400 feet wide are designed to help the port handle large vessels. The port has been largely off limits for those vessels since 2015 because of silting resulting from floods.
The Emergency Operations Center also performed the way it was designed to perform, commissioners heard. The EOC, which opened just in time for newly sworn Gov. John Bel Edwards’ trip to Morgan City during the 2016 flood, provided a base of operations for Coast Guard members from around the country, as well as NOAA and Homeland Security.
The EOC has cots for 20 people, a kitchen and showers, all used by members of the military and officials who needed a base close to the most heavily damaged areas but also a secure headquarters with reliable power and communication.
Bill Decker is managing editor of The Daily Review.

Landry vows to fight vaccine requirements

Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry said he will challenge President Joe Biden’s COVID-19 employer vaccine mandate in court if it’s implemented in Louisiana.
Biden’s mandate will apply to businesses with 100 or more employees, be implemented through the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and come with potential $14,000 fines per violation.
Landry blasted the proposal in a strongly worded social media statement.
“The decision of an individual to get a COVID shot is not the President’s to make. If Biden attempts to mandate it upon Louisiana citizens, I will challenge his unconstitutional overreach in court,” he said.
Landry has been an outspoken opponent of mandatory COVID-19 vaccinations, particularly as a condition of attending Louisiana colleges and universities. He maintains students and residents should have the right to choose.
U.S. Sen. John Kennedy, R-Louisiana, holds a similar view. Kennedy also issued a statement on social media.
“I believe the vaccine works and have taken it myself, but I also believe in freedom and civil rights, more importantly. All the Biden vaccine mandate does is politicize the issue and sow even more distrust towards the federal government. Freedom should always win out,” Kennedy tweeted Friday afternoon.
Louisiana’s other U.S. senator, Republican Bill Cassidy, is a medical doctor and critic of the president’s sweeping attempt to increase the country’s COVID-19 vaccination rate.
“President Biden should not mandate private businesses with no connection to the federal government (to) mandate their employees get vaccinated. That is an issue between the employer [and] employee. I am for vaccinations, I am not for the federal government dictating how we live our lives,” Cassidy tweeted.
Biden announced the policy Thursday, saying unvaccinated Americans “can cause a lot of damage, and they are.”
“We’ve been patient. But our patience is wearing thin, and your refusal has cost all of us,” he said. “This is not about freedom or personal choice. It’s about protecting yourself and those around you, the people you work with, the people you care about, the people you love.”
Gov. John Bel Edwards has not commented on the employer mandate, which the state’s largest business association opposes. Edwards has supported voluntary employer vaccine mandates, such as at Our Lady of the Lake hospital in Baton Rouge.
Edwards also vetoed three bills in July that would have limited COVID-19 vaccine mandates, including a bill that would have prevented state and local government agencies from discriminating against the unvaccinated.
According to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, federal anti-discrimination laws do not prevent an employer from requiring all employees physically entering the workplace to be vaccinated for COVID-19, as long as employers comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and other anti-discrimination considerations.
Landry has openly feuded with Edwards regarding the governor’s statewide indoor mask mandate, which applies to K-12 students. Landry went so far as to post religious and philosophical opt-out templates for mask and vaccine mandates on his Facebook page.
The Biden administration policy requires workers to receive two doses of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved Pfizer vaccine to be fully vaccinated, or submit to weekly testing. Governors and attorney generals in more than half of U.S. states stand opposed.
A request for comment from the attorney general’s office was not returned by time this story published.

Business leaders express concern about Biden vaccine mandates

The Louisiana Association of Business and Industry is raising concerns over President Joe Biden’s new COVID-19 vaccine mandate for federal employees and private sector businesses, a policy that could affect as many as 100 million Americans.
The group is Louisiana’s largest business organization, representing more than 2,000 employers. It also serves as the state chapter for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers.
After Biden’s announcement requiring mandatory vaccinations at businesses with 100 or more employees, LABI President and CEO Stephen Waguespack expressed legal and economic unease.
“I have been vaccinated and LABI encourages everyone to consult their doctor about doing so if they haven’t already. Improving vaccination rates is critical to our community’s health and economy,” Waguespack said. “Having said that, President Biden’s proposal to require American companies to mandate vaccinations is clearly not the role of the federal government, and OSHA has no constitutional authority, capacity or standing to enforce such an action.”
The Biden administration’s vaccine mandate plan will be enacted through a regulatory rule from the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
The plan also includes weekly testing regimens for employees with religious, medical and other legally recognized exemptions. Each violation carries a potential $14,000 penalty, the administration said.
Waguespack cited numerous considerations, such as companies offshoring operations to retain skilled employees, the potential for predatory litigation, lost jobs and labor shortages, as well as the risks and costs associated with exorbitant fines.
“Instead of taking targeted actions to jump start our stagnant economy, the Administration and Congressional leadership continue to propose new taxes, unprecedented spending and mandates that will drive up costs and stifle economic growth,” Waguespack said.
“We implore the President to reconsider this action and return to a more productive and constitutional effort to improve vaccination rates through education and access.”
Biden said Thursday unvaccinated Americans “can cause a lot of damage, and they are.”
“We’ve been patient. But our patience is wearing thin, and your refusal has cost all of us,” he said. “This is not about freedom or personal choice. It’s about protecting yourself and those around you, the people you work with the people you care about, the people you love.”
Louisiana has ranked among the lowest-vaccinated states. Gov. John Bel Edwards said about 43% of vaccine eligible Louisianans are fully vaccinated.
Edwards, a Democrat, has yet to comment on the large employer vaccine mandate. His public statements and social media remain focused on Hurricane Ida recovery and COVID-19 health-related activities. A request for comment was not returned.
Louisiana’s two Republican U.S. senators, Bill Cassidy and John Kennedy, also remained silent, as has U.S. Rep. Troy Carter, a Democrat representing New Orleans.
New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell has not commented, though she has implemented some of the most stringent coronavirus health measures in the country, such as the so-called vaccine passport system to enter restaurants, bars, gyms, pool halls, arcades and many other private businesses.
Louisiana’s GOP-dominated congressional delegation, however, has levied harsh criticisms against the president.
U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., the second-highest ranking House Republican, said the Biden employer mandate was “about government control.” He also cited Biden’s statement July 25, which said vaccine mandates are “not the role of government.”
“This is not about science,” Scalise said.
Louisiana Republican House representatives Clay Higgins and Mike Johnson followed suit. Higgins said the president “has zero authority to mandate vaccine compliance.” Johnson called the move a “brazen overreach.”

CARMEN R. SOLAR

Carmen R. Solar, a lifelong resident of Morgan City, passed peacefully away on Friday, September 10, 2021 at the age of 99.
Carmen was devout in her Catholic faith and would consistently keep a prayer list for many family, friends, and strangers. She prayed for each every day. After many years of working for the City of Morgan City, Carmen retired to take care of her father until his passing. She then returned back to work for the City once more, showing dedication to her hometown that few exhibit. Carmen was looking forward to her 100th birthday which was only five months away.
Carmen’s beautiful memory will remain in the hearts of her son, David Solar and his wife, Karen; two grandchildren, Starlyn Ashley and Melanie Ortiz; four great-grandchildren, Lauren Martin and her husband, Chris, Ariel Ashley and her fiancé, Anthony Cutrera III, Kennedy Ashley, and Michael Ortiz; and four great-great-grandchildren, Tate Martin, Tyler Martin, Anthony Cutrera IV, and Adley Jane Ashley.
She was reunited in heaven with her parents, Howard and Pearl Randall and sister, Patricia “Pat” Badeaux.
Services are pending at this time.
The family would like to express their gratitude to their Heart of Hospice Aide, Shawniece ‘Niecey’ Carmouche, Heart of Hospice Nurse, Bonnie Blanchard, the Chaplain for Heart of Hospice, Ronald McCoy, Dan & Ann Powell, Lauren Arcemont, and Father Noas Kerketta.

LEE ADAM NINI JR.

March 20, 1953 — August 29, 2021
Lee A. Nini, Jr. passed away peacefully at his home in Marrero, LA at the age of 68. He was a native of Berwick, LA and a longtime resident of Marrero, LA. Son of Gloria Chauvin Nini and the late Lee A. Nini, Sr. He was an avid hunter and fisherman and forever a family man. He is the beloved husband of Gretchen Winters Nini, deceased. Survivors include: his dear son Carl Nini and wife Ann Boullosa Nini, Gretna, LA, granddaughter Ashley Nini Wilson (husband Nick), Madisonville, LA, two grandsons, Jace and Cory, Gretna, LA and two great-grandchildren, Addison and Peyton Wilson, Madisonville, LA. He leaves behind his “Sidekick” Koko who never left his side, three Aunts: Lana Chauvin Hood, Des Allemands, LA, Eljean Carline Nesmith, Berwick, LA and Gloria Reed Chauvin, New Iberia, LA and many cousins. He will be deeply missed by all who knew and loved him.
The funeral mass will be conducted at St. Stephen Catholic Church in Berwick, LA, Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 11:00 a.m. with Fr. Manny and Monsignor Courville officiating. Interment will be held at Westlawn Memorial Park Cemetery, Gretna, LA.

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
P.O. Box 566, Franklin, LA 70538
Phone: 337-828-3706
Fax: 337-828-2874

Morgan City Review
1014 Front Street, Morgan City, LA 70380
Phone: 985-384-8370
Fax: 985-384-4255