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Hanagriff: Voluntary evacuation issued south of Gulf Intracoastal

A voluntary evacuation in St. Mary Parish for areas south of the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway was issued immediately following the National Weather Service’s 10 a.m. update on Hurricane Delta.
In issuing the voluntary evacuation, St. Mary Parish President David Hanagriff said it may be upgraded to a mandatory evacuation depending on Delta’s track later today once it enters the Gulf and could be expanded to include other areas.
“Even though it might shift a little more west, that’s not really good for us, either, because of the sharp turn this storm is going to take,” Hanagriff said. “This is not like Laura. Laura basically went straight north. Because of the low-level trough, they think it’s going to take a right.”
Wednesday morning, Hurricane Laura made landfall along the Yucatan Peninsula near Puerto Morelos, and will make its way into the Gulf of Mexico later in the day, the National Weather Service report-ed.
It’s expected landfall has shifted west more to eastern Cameron Parish where it is expected to make landfall in the daytime hours Friday, the weather service said.
In about a 24-hour period prior to landfall, the storm will make a pronounced right turn.
In anticipation of the storm, Legacy’s Nursing & Rehabilitation Centers in Franklin and Morgan City have announced they will begin evacuating residents Thursday, St. Mary Parish Office of Emergency Prepar-edness Director David Naquin said.
As for help evacuating residents, if that is needed, the news is not very positive.
Naquin said the con-tract that St. Mary Parish signed for evacuees to go to has been cut from 900 occupants from St. Mary and St. Martin to just 50. Also, hotels are not available to house evacuees because 6,800 residents affected from Hurricane Laura are still being house in them, Naquin said.
Instead, mega shelters will be set up, but the locations of those have not been determined. They could be from Dallas to Shreveport to Rapides or Ouachita parishes, Naquin said.
However, another is-sue is transportation, as Naquin said the state has 45 buses statewide and needs 600 to evacu-ate residents.
“We have some plans that we’re trying to make, but at the end of the day, we’re asking everybody to please, help your neighbor, take them with you, find a spot, make sure you have transportation, because it’s just not going to be as available as it has in the past,” he said.
With the storm’s pro-jections, high water will be an issue from the Wax Lake Outlet on west in St. Mary Parish, Hanagriff said.
“However, we’re going to have a wind situation — and potentially rain, depending on what the forecast models going to show as we get a little close — for the entire parish,” he said.
In preparation for ele-vated water levels, the St. Mary Levee District is closing a gap in what will be the Bayou Teche floodgate.
“The wall is in place,” Levee District Opera-tions Manager Mike Brocato Jr. said Wednesday morning. “We just don’t have the barge. It’s not ready, so our contractor’s out there right now working on setting up a structure to drop sheets across it to block it off. If they can finish that, which they’re telling me they can, that area inside the Teche will be protected.”
He said work also is being done in the Industrial Road and Metal Shark area to provide extra elevation, while work via an emergency contract for the east-west tie in south of the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway near La. 317 in the Bayou Sale area is being undertaken right now.
“They’re in the process right now of hauling dirt,” Brocato said. “We’re going to try to build that levee to try to tie in to higher ground to an eight foot level. That’ll give us a little additional protection there.”
However, he said that the highest elevation protection is provided on the southern end of Bayou Sale is 8 feet.
“With current predic-tions, it’s more than likely going to top that,” Brocato said.
Flood gates in Morgan City and Berwick up to 12 feet in elevation are being closed as a precaution, while the Franklin, Yellow Bayou and Hanson canals will be closed.

Seven new COVID cases in St. Mary

Seven new cases of COVID-19 were reported at midday Wednesday for St. Mary Parish, according to the Louisiana Office of Public Health. Totals were adjusted downward in St. Martin and Assumption.

The seven cases raise St. Mary's total since the pandemic began to 1,963.

St. Martin's total was reduced by five to 1,119, and Assumption's total was reduced by one to 771. The cumulative statistics are sometimes adjusted to eliminate duplicates or to reassign cases to other parishes.

No local fatalities were reported Wednesday, so the death toll remains at 78 in St. Mary, 61 in St. Martin and 24 in Assumption.

Statewide:

--1,052 new cases were reported Wednesday, raising the pandemic total to 170,097. The OPH said the Wednesday number includes 406 backlogged cases resulting from tests performed before Sept. 16.

--9 new deaths raise the toll to 5,411.

--15 fewer COVID-positive people are in hospitals for a total of 552.

--7 more people are on ventilators for a total of 78.

St. Mary public schools, Immanuel Christian will be closed Thursday; Central Catholic awaiting word

The approach of Hurricane Delta as a major hurricane will necessitate the closure of all schools and offices of the St. Mary Parish School Board on Thursday, Superintendent Teresa Bagwell said Wednesday.

Students will be scheduled for distance learning in lieu of attending school on campus Thursday, which will foster a continuation of instructional activities while families make preparations for the impending hurricane.

Schools and offices will remain closed for the previously scheduled “fall break” on Friday and Monday. Students and staff will return to school on Tuesday.

Additionally, the St. Mary Parish School Board meeting scheduled for Thursday will be moved to 5 p.m. Oct. 15 in the Evans Medine Board Room. An updated board agenda will be publicized prior to the meeting.

Parents should monitor school and district websites for ongoing coverage of the response to Hurricane Delta as events transpire. The safety and security of students and staff is of deepest concern and we ask that all citizens take every precaution in preparing for this storm.

Central Catholic was awaiting word on a possible school closure as of about 12:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Immanuel Christian School in Morgan will not have classes Thursday. Students were already scheduled to be off Friday and Monday for the fall break.

McEntire, Rucker host Nov. 11 CMA Awards

NASHVILLE — The Country Music Association has revealed that Country Music superstars and previous CMA Awards winners Reba McEntire and Darius Rucker will host “The 54th Annual CMA Awards” live from Nashville on Nov. 11 from 7-10 p.m. on ABC, according to a CMA news release.
Country Music’s Biggest Night will take place from Music City Center and will feature the biggest artists and performances in country music. McEntire and Rucker came together to announce the news live Monday morning on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”
“I’m thrilled to be back hosting the CMA Awards and even more thrilled that I get to share the stage with Darius Rucker,” said McEntire. “We’re looking forward to a night of celebrating great Country Music and hope you’ll tune in and watch!”
“I look forward to the CMA Awards every year because of the incredible performances and the opportunity to celebrate the year in Country Music,” said Rucker. “To be invited to host this year’s awards alongside Reba — are you kidding me?! — it is an absolute honor. Even though this year will look a little different than normal, I know that we’re all eager for a night of musical celebration, and this year’s show definitely won’t disappoint!”
Rucker joins the CMA Awards stage for the first time as host, while McEntire returns for the fifth time.
“We are beyond thrilled to welcome Reba and Darius as this year’s CMA Awards hosts,” said Sarah Trahern, CMA chief executive officer. “Their playful chemistry and genuine warmth are exactly what we know our viewers want to see this year. We look forward to bringing fans a night of celebration, live performances and a television experience unlike any other. We cannot wait to share more details about our show in the coming weeks.”
McEntire, a multi-media entertainment mogul, has become a household name through a successful career that spans across music, television, film, theater and retail. The Country Music Hall of Fame and Hollywood Bowl member has won 16 ACM Awards, 15 American Music Awards, nine People’s Choice Awards, six CMA Awards, three GRAMMY Awards, a GMA Dove Award and was a 2018 Kennedy Center Honors recipient, in addition to multiple philanthropic and leadership honors. She has celebrated unprecedented success including 35 career No.1 singles and selling over 56 million albums worldwide.
Last month, McEntire received her 51st CMA Awards nomination as well as her 60th Top 10 hit on the Billboard chart, extending her record for the most among female artists. She has now collected Top 10 hits in five straight decades and is the fourth artist to achieve the feat alongside George Jones, Willie Nelson and Dolly Parton.
The Oklahoma native and Golden Globe nominated actress has 11 movie credits to her name, a lead role on Broadway in Irving Berlin’s “Annie Get Your Gun” and starred in the six-season television sitcom “Reba.” Her brand partnerships include Dillard’s, REBA by Justin and she was named the first female and musician to portray KFC’s iconic founder Colonel Harland Sanders in their celebrity colonel campaign.
McEntire just launched her very first Spotify original podcast, Living & Learning with Reba McEntire, with her former “Reba” TV show co-star Melissa Peterman. Together with their guests including Dolly Parton, Leslie Jordan, Kristin Chenoweth and more they explore a variety of topics including aging, cancel culture, dating and more.
Three-time GRAMMY Award winner and Grand Ole Opry member Darius Rucker first achieved multi-Platinum status in the music industry as lead singer and rhythm guitarist of Hootie & the Blowfish, whose 2x Diamond-certified Cracked Rear View remains the seventh-highest selling studio album of all time.
Since releasing his first Country album in 2008, which earned him the CMA Award for New Artist of the Year, Rucker has gained a whole new legion of fans with four No. 1 albums and nine No. 1 singles at Country radio. His current of-the-moment single, “Beers And Sunshine,” was written via a Zoom session earlier this year and calls for slowing down to enjoy the simple things in life when the world feels out of control.
A lifelong philanthropist, Rucker is a constant supporter of MUSC Children’s Hospital in his hometown of Charleston, SC and has raised more than $2 million for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital through his annual Darius & Friends event.
Nominations for “The 54th Annual CMA Awards” were revealed last month and can be found at CMAawards.com. Winners of “The 54th Annual CMA Awards” will be determined in a final round of voting by eligible voting CMA members. The third and final ballot is open now and closes, Oct. 27.
“The 54th Annual CMA Awards” is a production of the Country Music Association. Robert Deaton is the executive producer, Alan Carter is the director and David Wild is the head writer.
About the CMA Awards
The first “CMA Awards Banquet and Show” was held in 1967. The following year, the CMA Awards was broadcast for the first time — making it the longest running, annual music awards program on network television. The CMA Awards have aired on ABC since 2006. ABC is the network home of the CMA Awards and CMA’s other two television properties, “CMA Fest” and “CMA Country Christmas.”

Researching family history exposes old murder charges

DEAR ABBY: While researching my family, I discovered that my now-elderly mother was charged with the murder of a toddler 40 years ago, before I was born. She was never convicted and never mentioned it. However, after reading her testimony and things she’s said after the incident, I have no doubt she is guilty.
This has me reeling because she has always been a great and loving mother. When she heard I was researching our family, she mentioned that I would find something unsavory and asked me to please not look into it because it’s in the past and she didn’t want it to tarnish my image of her. I don’t know how to feel or what to do.
SHOCKED IN THE WEST

DEAR SHOCKED: If your mother was charged with murder, either the charges were dropped or she was found innocent by a jury. You wrote that your mother was a great and loving mother. For that you should feel grateful because not all children are so fortunate as you were. I think it’s time for you to take the opportunity to get her side of the story. Unless you have all the facts, the last thing you should do is judge her.

DEAR ABBY: My sweet, introverted son has just started high school. He’s a shy person who has a hard time making friends, and the few friends he had in middle school aren’t attending the same high school. He has confided that he is terrified that he will be bullied and won’t know how to respond. He asked me if there was a phrase that repels bullies. I told him I don’t know any and I would ask you.
WORRIED MOM

DEAR WORRIED MOM: Like your son, many students transitioning to high school are afraid of the unknown. Why is he afraid of being bullied? Did it happen to him in middle school? If so, why? Many schools have antibullying policies in place, and students who are subjected to it should report it immediately.
While I know of no one-size-fits-all phrase that will repel a bully, I do think that enrolling your son in martial arts classes would give him a sense of confidence that he is lacking now. You should also encourage him to get involved with special interest groups at his new school, which might enable him to meet and interact with more kids and possibly make new friends.

DEAR ABBY: My husband insists that I go out in public without wearing any underwear. He thinks it’s sexy. I am uncomfortable doing this because it makes me feel dirty and trashy. I also feel it is unsanitary.
Your thoughts?
NOT MY THING IN VIRGINIA

DEAR NOT: I’m glad you asked. Dirty and trashy are separate issues from unsanitary. You are a married adult woman, and wearing or not wearing anything under your dresses or skirts has no bearing on whether you are (or aren’t) a “good” girl.
I imagine some couples go out for a special night on the town “commando” because it’s exciting, their secret, and maybe can lead to romance later. Some people also feel more comfortable never wearing underwear. If you have questions about whether the practice is unhealthy, discuss it with your physician or gynecologist.
Bottom line, you should not do anything you’re uncomfortable with.
***
Abby shares more than 100 of her favorite recipes in two booklets: “Abby’s Favorite Recipes” and “More Favorite Recipes by Dear Abby.” Send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $16 to: Dear Abby, Cookbooklet Set, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447.

10 P.M. WEDNESDAY: Hurricane warning for Sabine Pass to Morgan City

BULLETIN
Hurricane Delta Advisory Number 14...Corrected
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL262020
1000 PM CDT Wed Oct 07 2020

Corrected to remove Mobile Bay from the Storm Surge Warning area

...STORM SURGE AND HURRICANE WARNINGS ISSUED FOR A PORTION OF THE
NORTHERN GULF COAST...

SUMMARY OF 1000 PM CDT...0300 UTC...INFORMATION
-----------------------------------------------
LOCATION...22.5N 90.9W
ABOUT 525 MI...845 KM SSE OF CAMERON LOUISIANA
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...90 MPH...150 KM/H
PRESENT MOVEMENT...WNW OR 300 DEGREES AT 17 MPH...28 KM/H
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...972 MB...28.71 INCHES

WATCHES AND WARNINGS
--------------------
CHANGES WITH THIS ADVISORY:

A Storm Surge Warning has been issued from Sabine Pass to Ocean
Springs, Mississippi, including Calcasieu Lake, Vermilion Bay, Lake
Pontchartrain, Lake Maurepas, and Lake Borgne.

A Hurricane Warning has been issued for the northern Gulf of Mexico
coast from east of Sabine Pass to Morgan City, Louisiana.

A Tropical Storm Warning has also been issued for the northern Gulf
of Mexico coast from San Luis Pass, Texas to Sabine Pass, and east
of Morgan City, Louisiana to the mouth of the Pearl River,
including New Orleans, Lake Pontchartrain and Lake Maurepas.

The Storm Surge Watch has been discontinued from the
Mississippi/Alabama border to the Alabama/Florida border, including
Mobile Bay.

The government of Mexico has discontinued the Tropical Storm
Warning from Rio Lagartos to Dzilam, Mexico.

SUMMARY OF WATCHES AND WARNINGS IN EFFECT:

A Storm Surge Warning is in effect for...
* Sabine Pass to Ocean Springs, Mississippi including Calcasieu
Lake, Vermilion Bay, Lake Pontchartrain, Lake Maurepas, and Lake
Borgne

A Storm Surge Watch is in effect for...
* High Island, TX to Sabine Pass
* East of Ocean Springs, Mississippi to the Mississippi/Alabama
border

A Hurricane Warning is in effect for...
* East of Sabine Pass to Morgan City, Louisiana

A Tropical Storm Warning is in effect for...
* San Luis Pass, Texas to Sabine Pass
* East of Morgan City, Louisiana to the mouth of the Pearl River,
including New Orleans
* Lake Pontchartrain and Lake Maurepas

A Tropical Storm Watch is in effect for...
* East of the mouth of the Pearl River to Bay St. Louis Mississippi

A Storm Surge Warning means there is a danger of life-threatening
inundation, from rising water moving inland from the coastline,
during the next 36 hours in the indicated locations. For a
depiction of areas at risk, please see the National Weather
Service Storm Surge Watch/Warning Graphic, available at
hurricanes.gov. This is a life-threatening situation. Persons
located within these areas should take all necessary actions to
protect life and property from rising water and the potential for
other dangerous conditions. Promptly follow evacuation and other
instructions from local officials.

A Storm Surge Watch means there is a possibility of life-
threatening inundation, from rising water moving inland from the
coastline, in the indicated locations during the next 48 hours.
For a depiction of areas at risk, please see the National Weather
Service Storm Surge Watch/Warning Graphic, available at
hurricanes.gov.

A Hurricane Warning means that hurricane conditions are expected
somewhere within the warning area. A warning is typically issued
36 hours before the anticipated first occurrence of
tropical-storm-force winds, conditions that make outside
preparations difficult or dangerous. Preparations to protect life
and property should be rushed to completion.

A Tropical Storm Warning means that tropical storm conditions are
expected somewhere within the warning area.

A Tropical Storm Watch means that tropical storm conditions are
possible within the watch area.

For storm information specific to your area, please monitor
products issued by your national meteorological service.

DISCUSSION AND OUTLOOK
----------------------
At 1000 PM CDT (0300 UTC), the center of Hurricane Delta was located
near latitude 22.5 North, longitude 90.9 West. Delta is moving
toward the west-northwest near 17 mph (28 km/h). A generally
northwestward motion with a reduction in forward speed is expected
through early Thursday. A north-northwestward motion is expected by
late Thursday, and a faster northward to north-northeastward motion
is forecast on Friday and Friday night. On the forecast track, the
center of Delta will move over the southern and central Gulf of
Mexico through Thursday, and approach the northern Gulf coast within
the hurricane warning area on Friday. Delta is forecast to move
inland within the hurricane warning area by late Friday or Friday
night.

Maximum sustained winds are near 90 mph (150 km/h) with higher
gusts. Strengthening is forecast while the hurricane moves over the
southern and central Gulf of Mexico through Thursday, and Delta is
expected to become a major hurricane again. Some weakening is
forecast as Delta approaches the northern Gulf coast on Friday.

Hurricane-force winds extend outward up to 35 miles (55 km) from the
center and tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 140 miles
(220 km).

The estimated minimum central pressure is 972 mb (28.71 inches).

HAZARDS AFFECTING LAND
----------------------
Key messages for Delta can be found in the Tropical Cyclone
Discussion under AWIPS header MIATCDAT1, WMO header WTNT41
KNHC, and on the web at www.hurricanes.gov/text/MIATCDAT1.shtml.

STORM SURGE: The combination of a dangerous storm surge and the
tide will cause normally dry areas near the coast to be flooded by
rising waters moving inland from the shoreline. The water could
reach the following heights above ground somewhere in the indicated
areas if the peak surge occurs at the time of high tide...

Pecan Island to Port Fourchon, LA including Vermilion Bay...7-11 ft
Cameron, LA to Pecan Island, LA...4-7 ft
Port Fourchon, LA to the Mouth of the Mississippi River...4-6 ft
Mouth of the Mississippi River to Ocean Springs, MS...3-5 ft
Lake Borgne, Lake Pontchartrain, and Lake Maurepas...3-5 ft
Ocean Springs, MS to MS/AL border...2-4 ft
High Island, TX to Cameron, LA including Calcasieu Lake...2-4 ft
MS/AL border to the AL/FL border including Mobile Bay...1-3 ft
Sabine Lake...1-3 ft
Port O'Connor, TX to High Island, TX including Galveston Bay...1-3
ft

The deepest water will occur along the immediate coast near and to
the east of the landfall location, where the surge will be
accompanied by large and dangerous waves. Surge-related flooding
depends on the relative timing of the surge and the tidal cycle,
and can vary greatly over short distances. For information
specific to your area, please see products issued by your local
National Weather Service forecast office.

WIND: Hurricane conditions are expected within the hurricane
warning area by Friday evening, with tropical storm conditions
expected within this area earlier on Friday. Tropical storm
conditions are expected within the tropical storm warning areas on
Friday.

RAINFALL: Delta is expected to produce an additional 1 to 3 inches
of rain over the far northwestern Yucatan Peninsula through early
Thursday. The additional rainfall may still result in areas of
significant flash flooding.

Friday through Saturday, Delta is expected to produce 4 to 8 inches
of rain, with isolated maximum totals of 12 inches across portions
of the central Gulf Coast north into portions of the Lower to Middle
Mississippi Valley. These rainfall amounts will lead to flash,
urban, small stream and minor to isolated moderate river flooding.
As Delta moves farther inland, 1 to 3 inches of rain, with locally
higher amounts, is expected in the Ohio Valley and Mid Atlantic this
weekend.

TORNADOES: The risk of a few tornadoes will increase late Thursday
night into Friday over portions of southern Louisiana, southern
Mississippi, and southwest Alabama.

SURF: Swells from Delta will begin to affect portions of the
northern and western Gulf coast on Thursday. These swells are likely
to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions. Please
consult products from your local weather office.

NEXT ADVISORY
-------------
Next intermediate advisory at 100 AM CDT.
Next complete advisory at 400 AM CDT.

$$
Forecaster Pasch/Berg

Berwick, Patterson to play football games Wednesday

The Tri-City Area will get an early start to week two of the high school football season as games have been adjusted due to projected impacts from Hurricane Delta.
Three of the area’s four games have been moved up.
Wednesday, Berwick will travel to face Rayne, while Patterson will host South Terrebonne Wednesday.
Thursday, Central Catholic will travel to Beekman Charter. Morgan City’s contest at home with Hanson Memorial Thursday is the lone unchanged game.
Berwick and Rayne and Central Catholic and Beekman Charter each originally were supposed to play Friday, while Patterson initially was to travel to face South Terrebonne Thursday night.
Below is a preview of the action
Berwick vs. Rayne
The Berwick Panthers will be looking for their first win of the season when they travel to face Rayne Wednesday.
While Rayne (1-0) enters Wednesday’s contest after defeating Welsh 19-6 a week ago, Berwick (0-1) fell to Vandebilt Catholic 49-7 in Houma.
In Rayne’s win at Welsh, the Wolves totaled 305 yards of offense (236 rushing and 69 passing).
Ron Charles led the offense with 29 carries for 152 yards and two touchdowns, while quarterback Colin LaCombe completed six passes for 69 yards.
Berwick coach Mike Walkers said Rayne runs a multiple offense that utilizes spread and I-formation looks.
“So it’s a little bit of everything,” he said.
Defensively, Rayne limited Welsh to 144 yards of offense.
“They’re pretty good defensively,” Walker said. “They run a 3-4 scheme, and they’re fairly athletic. They do a pretty good job of running to the football, but I think our key is going to be no turnovers and limit the penalties, and I think we’ll be alright.”
Patterson vs. South Terrebonne
The Patterson Lumberjacks will host their second straight home game Wednesday when South Terrebonne comes to Patterson.
South Terrebonne (0-1) fell to Terrebonne 41-34 in Houma last week, while Patterson (0-1) fell 41-3 to Lafayette at Patterson.
South Terrebonne had a balanced attack with 407 yards of offense (227 rushing and 180 passing).
Patterson coach Zach Lochard said the Gators are multiple in their offensive scheme.
“They’re going to look to establish a rushing attack against us and also be able to move the pocket and get some easy throws,” he said.
Quarterback Christian Arceneaux completed 17-of-29 passes for 180 yards with two touchdowns and one interception, while Javon Ricks had 16 carries for 120 yards. Colby Chelette recorded 17 carries for 71 yards and two touchdowns.
Kaden Chauvin had 10 catches for 79 yards and two touchdowns for South Terrebonne.
Meanwhile, the Gators surrendered 393 yards of offense (316 rushing and 77 passing) to Terrebonne.
Defensively, Lochard said South Terrebonne runs a 3-4 scheme and it utilizes pressure.
“They got a lot of talented defensive players up front and at the skill positions,” he said. “They really run around and fly to the ball.”
Lochard said the Lumberjacks are working to correct their mistakes from week 1.
“We are coaching them hard,” he said. “We’re holding them accountable. We’re practicing hard, but we’re really kind of focusing on us, and we believe that if we handle us and be the best that we can be, we’ll be a tough team to beat also.”
Central Catholic vs. Beekman Charter
Entering this season, Central Catholic and Beekman Charter were not supposed to play each other.
The Eagles were set to play at St. Stanislaus, while Beekman Charter was to play an Arkansas team.
However, with COVID-19 delaying the start of the season in Louisiana, it ended the chance for the Louisiana teams to play their out-of-state counterparts. Instead, the Eagles will take the 4-plus hour trip north to meet the Tigers Thursday in Bastrop after Minton learned through the Louisiana High School Athletic Association database that Beekman Charter had an open date.
“It ain’t the closest, but it’s a game, and this early in the year you want to play,” Minton said.
Minton said Beekman, a Class 2A school, uses plenty of offensive formations.
“They’re trying to keep the ball in the quarterback’s hands a good bit,” he said. “He’s a very good athlete, and he’s a weapon for them.”
On defense, Beekman will utilize a 4-2-5 look and also will play a five-man front.
“They’re not as big as Loreauville up front, which is a plus for us,” Minton said. “They have some size, but they don’t have the overall size that Loreauville had. Numbers wise, they’re a 2A school, so their numbers are a little bit better than us as far as size of school, getting kids out, but I feel like we match up well with them.”
Morgan City vs.
Hanson Memorial
The Morgan City Tigers will play a rare Thursday night game this week when they host Hanson Memorial in nondistrict action.
Hanson (1-0) defeated Westminster Christian 28-22 last week, while Morgan City (0-1) fell to Erath 55-6 in Morgan City last week.
First-year coach Bruce Hoffman is leading Hanson this season.
“He’s doing a great job,” Morgan City coach Chris Stroud said. “They don’t have a lot of kids on their roster, but they’re very well coached. They run a different scheme at you on offense and defense that wasn’t on film last year, so it’s something different that our kids have to get ready to play in one week, and it’s a tough scheme to adjust to.”
On offense, Hanson is using an old-school approach.
“They run the Single Wing, the Notre Dame box on offense,” Stroud said. “It’s what Knute Rockne ran years ago. You don’t see it much in high school anymore.”
Stroud said Hanson’s offense uses Wing-T principles and plenty of misdirection.
Defensively, they are in a goal line front or a seven-man front playing man-to-man defense.
Stroud said sometimes Hanson will play zone defense.

Delta's latest shift not good for St. Mary Parish

While Hurricane Delta’s final destination could shift, the current track that was released in the National Weather Service’s 4 p.m. briefing puts it in an unfavorable situation for St. Mary Parish, local Office of Emergency Preparedness Director David Naquin said.
The track moved west in its latest forecast, and, if it stays on its current trajectory, it will make landfall as either a category 2 of 3 storm sometime in the late hours Friday or early morning Saturday in Pecan Island, which is located between Lake Charles and New Iberia.
“Now it could move a little bit further west tomorrow,” Naquin said Wednesday. “It could come back to the east tomorrow. We’re going to just have to play that by ear.
“Pecan Island landfall gives us storm surge, it gives us rain and it gives us the wind from the storm, which is all three,” Naquin added. “We could probably put up with the wind and the rain, but the storm surge and the rain are some things that it’s just going to be a little bit more difficult for us to handle.”
The good news is the National Weather Service’s current track has been made with “only a medium confidence level,” Naquin said.
“Let’s give it tomorrow, and then after tomorrow, we should know maybe a little bit more about where it’s going to pass and then we’ll start discussing impacts and tidal surge,” he said.
As for projected Atchafalaya River levels, Naquin said the parish probably won’t get a good indication of what type of rise Delta would cause until probably Wednesday or Thursday.
In the meantime, the Morgan City Council met Tuesday afternoon at City Hall to declare a state of emergency in anticipation of the storm.
Mayor Frank “Boo” Grizzaffi said the city already has begun its hurricane preparations with some floodgate closures and has sand available for residents under the U.S. 90 overpass at David Drive.
Grizzaffi said the likely culprit in the storm for Morgan City will be the wind.
“I don’t think we have a threat from the water, but we’re going to have a threat from the wind and from power outages,” he said.
In Berwick, Mayor Duval Arthur said the town has ordered sand, and it likely will be available Wednesday under the U.S. 90 bridge at Town Hall. He said the town likely will close their floodgates at Pacific and Lima streets, while the Berwick Civic Complex is being prepared in case it has to be used as a shelter.
“Berwick is taking the normal hurricane protection measures,” Arthur said.

St. Mary-Vermilion area is likely site for Delta landfall, at least for now

The National Weather Service has settled on the St. Mary-Vermilion parish area as the likely site of Hurricane Delta's landfall, at least for now.

One comment from the National Weather Service at Lake Charles turned up on the agency's Facebook page after the 4 p.m. update from the National Hurricane Center showed a western movement of the five-day forecast cone. "The forecast track has been nudged to the west once again (because of course it has) with landfall now expected across St Mary parish late Friday," said the post with a touch of dark humor.

A westward movement along the Louisiana coast would bring Delta closer to the Lake Charles area, which was hammered by Hurricane Laura in August.

On a Tuesday afternoon Facebook livestream, NWS meteorologist Donald Jones identified the Vermilion area as the likely landfall site.

Experts warn that the forecast path of Delta, which was raging toward the Yucatan Peninsula as a Category 4 hurricane with 145 mph wind at 4 p.m., is subject to wide variation this far out.

Delta is expected to weaken as it approaches the coast because of wind shear and cooler water close to land.

But "I wouldn't hang my hat on that as a certainty," Jones said in a 10:30 a.m. Facebook livestream. "It wouldn't surprise me at all to see a stronger storm than [Category 2] when it makes landfall."

A Category 2 storm has winds of 96-110 mph. A Category 3 storm, considered a major hurricane, has winds of 111-130 mph. Delta intensified to Category 4 strength, 131-155 mph, Tuesday morning as it approached the Yucatan from the southeast.

National Weather Service graphics give St. Mary a 70-80% chance of experiencing tropical storm-force winds of at least 39 mph.

Rain of 4-8 inches, with maybe twice that in isolated areas, is possible. The storm surge is considered potentially dangerous and could reach 8-10 feet in this area.

So it's fortunate that local water levels are low. At 3 p.m. Tuesday, the Atchafalaya at Morgan City was at 2.35 feet, or more than 3.5 feet below the minor flood stage. Lake Palourde was at 3.35 feet, or more than 1.5 feet below the minor flood stage.

The St. Mary Parish Levee District is preparing do work near the La. 317 overpass that would prevent water from the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway from flowing into Bayou Sale area. The Franklin, Hanson and Yellow Bayou canals are expected to be closed along with flood wall gates below 8 feet in Berwick and Morgan City.

St. Mary Superintendent Teresa Bagwell said classes will be in session Thursday. Friday and Monday are scheduled days off.

St. Martin Parish released this list of sandbag sites. Please limit the amount of sandbags to no more than 25 bags per vehicle. It only takes approximately six bags to secure each door.

ST. MARTIN PARISH
Wednesday – 8:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Thursday – 8:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Friday – TBD
Ruth Bridge-1035 Ruth Bridge Hwy
Clayton Boudreaux Memorial Park-1028 Catahoula Hwy
Paul Angelle Park (Cecilia)-2458 Cecilia Sr. H.S. Hwy
South Barn-1011 Capritto 40 Arpent Road
LOWER ST. MARTIN PARISH
Wednesday – 8:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Thursday – 8:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Friday – TBD
Bus turn-a-round on East Stephensville Road
Stephensville Park
Across the road from the Belle River Fire Station
BREAUX BRIDGE
Wednesday – 8:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Thursday – 8:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Friday – TBD
Public Works Annex (end of Refinery Street near Berard Street)
ST. MARTINVILLE
Wednesday – 8:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Thursday – 8:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Friday – TBD
Old Wal-Mart Parking Lot (2310 North Main Street)
HENDERSON
Wednesday – 8:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Thursday – 8:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Friday – TBD
Henry Guidry Park Pavilion (behind City Hall)-1007 Amy Street

Both St. Mary Parish President David Hanagriff and Gov. John Bel Edwards have both declared states of emergency.

“Hurricane Delta is an incredibly dangerous storm that will bring heavy winds, rain and life threatening flooding and storm surge to coastal Louisiana. Everyone in South Louisiana should pay close attention to the weather in the coming days and heed the advice and directions of their local officials. Now is the time to make preparations for Delta’s impacts,” Edwards said in a press release. “All of Louisiana’s coast is in the tracking cone, and we are well aware that impacts can be felt outside of the track.”

“We have seen an active hurricane season already, with a devastating hit in Southwest Louisiana from Hurricane Laura. It would be a mistake for anyone in Louisiana to let down their guard. Be prepared,” Edwards said.

Louisianans can get updates from the Governor’s office via text by texting "HurricaneDelta" to 67283.

If flash flooding becomes a problem due to heavy rainfall, never drive on flooded roadways. Check out the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development’s website www.511la.org for updated road closure information.

Finalize an emergency communications plan with your family and co-workers.

Check your emergency supplies. Remember to include any items needed to sustain each family member for at least 3 days.

Supply kits should include:

A three to five- day supply of water (one gallon per person per day) and food that won't spoil
A supply of face coverings, hand sanitizer and disinfectant wipes due to COVID-19 concerns
One change of clothing and footwear per person, and one blanket or sleeping bag per person
A first aid kit that includes your family's prescription medications
Emergency tools including a battery-powered radio, flashlight and plenty of extra batteries
An extra set of car keys and a credit card, cash or traveler's checks
Sanitation supplies
Special items for infant, elderly or disabled family members
An extra pair of glasses
Important family documents in a portable, waterproof container
Mess kits, paper cups, plates and plastic utensils, paper towels
Paper and pencil
Books, games, puzzles or other activities for children
Infant formula and diapers
Pet food and water

The Governor’s office will share updates about Delta, Hurricane Laura response and recovery and COVID-19 through its texting system. People may opt-in by texting 'HurricaneDelta' to 67283 and sign up for phone calls by going to Smart911.

Remembering Mike Foster: St. Mary businessman was one-of-a-kind leader

It was Monday, Jan. 8, 1996, and the headline in the Banner-Tribune, as well as virtually all media in Louisiana and beyond, was “Foster new Louisiana governor.”
Nowhere more jubilantly than here in St. Mary Parish: Our own native son had risen to the highest office in the state.
Murphy J. “Mike” Foster was a well-known businessman and unlikely politician. But he charged into a seat in the state Senate and announced his candidacy for governor.
He died Sunday at his home, Oaklawn Manor.
Foster was an Eagle Scout, a member of Troop 1 in the 1940s. Fellow Eagle Scout Dr. Thomas Kramer described him as “an excellent Boy Scout who lived up to the oath and the laws of scouting in every way. He was an asset to the scouting movement.”
Foster was born on July 11, 1930, in Shreveport, Louisiana. Shortly thereafter, his family moved to Centerville where he attended public school as a child.
“A crowd of about 5,000 braved today’s cold temperatures to see the new governor sworn into office,” the Banner reported.
When not in Baton Rouge, Foster was usually at his home, Oaklawn Manor, or often as not, in the duck blind, as he was an avid hunter.
Foster attended public high school in Franklin, graduated from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge in 1952 with a bachelor of science in chemistry, and Southern University Law Center with a juris doctorate in 2004, the year he left the governorship. He became an Eagle Scout in the Boy Scouts of America in 1946 and is a recipient of the Distinguished Eagle Scout Award. He was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity (Zeta Zeta chapter) and The Friars. He joined the Air Force and served in the Korean War. His paternal grandfather, Murphy J. Foster Sr., was governor of Louisiana from 1892 to 1900 and thereafter served as U.S. senator from 1900 to 1913. By the time Mike Foster entered politics, he had already become a wealthy sugar planter and owner of a construction firm.
He was a sugar cane farmer, founder of Bayou Sale construction firm, president of Sterling Sugars Inc. and president of St. Mary Parish Farm Bureau.
A life in politics never appealed to Mike Foster; however, in 1986, after “becoming frustrated with the non-responsiveness of state government, he ran for a seat in the State Senate. After fulfilling two very active terms in the Senate, then Senator Foster decided that he could get more accomplished as governor.
On Jan. 8, 1996, after mounting a successful campaign as a Republican candidate, M.J. “Mike” Foster Jr., was inaugurated as Louisiana’s 49th governor since the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. After a very successful first term, Governor Foster ran for a second term and won in a landslide in the first primary. This was the first time in many years that anyone has won the governorship outright without a runoff election. He was inaugurated in January 2000 and that term expired in 2004.
When he was not running the state, Gov. Foster enjoyed spending his free time at his home, Oaklawn Manor, in Franklin. While family, fishing and hunting occupied the bulk of his free time; his thirst for knowledge and education led him to take motorcycle and helicopter-flying lessons.
Foster entered politics at the age of 57. He was the state’s first two-term Republican governor. In 1987, then-Democrat Foster unseated liberal Democratic state Senator Anthony Guarisco Jr. of Morgan City, by a large margin. Foster is said to have run for the state Senate because Guarisco would not return his telephone calls. Guarisco was a vocal supporter of the defunct Equal Rights Amendment. Foster served two terms in the state Senate and then ran for governor. Foster worked to re-organize the state’s community college system by creating the Louisiana Community and Technical College System, and expanded the Tuition Opportunity Program for Students (TOPS), a brainchild of the New Orleans oilman Patrick F. Taylor, so that students were eligible based on merit, rather than income. In the 2002 legislative session, Foster credited freshman Representative Tom Capella of Jefferson Parish with saving TOPS from the budget axe. Foster instituted mandatory standardized testing for grade advancement in a move described by his administration as an effort to make public schools more accountable. He made increasing teacher salaries a major priority, at one point promising to stop cashing his paychecks until teachers’ salaries reached the Southern average.
Foster was instrumental in the completion of the four-lane stretch of U.S. 90 between Lafayette and New Orleans.
He was also instrumental in the building of the new Franklin Foundation Hospital.
In his inaugural address, Foster denounced “hogs at the trough” who exploited political connections to secure state contracts and jobs, and he pledged to conduct state business in a forthright manner without favoring political insiders. Foster stacked his administration with such results-oriented managers as Commissioner of Administration Mark Drennen, Chief of Staff Stephen Perry, and Health and Hospitals Secretary Bobby Jindal (who would later become a congressman and then governor), and under Foster’s leadership the team effectively restored a sense of integrity to the operations of state government while putting the state’s finances on more stable footing. Meanwhile, Foster made improvements in public education a priority of his administration. In six of his eight years in office, teachers received salary increases, which raised their total annual pay by about $10,000. The Taylor Opportunity Program for Students (TOPS) was established, using state funds to provide scholarships to Louisiana residents who attended public universities in the state. The system for channeling state money to local school boards for classroom needs was fully financed, and his administration increased salaries, construction, and maintenance at state universities.
As governor, he balanced his conservative, “he’s-not-a-politician” persona with moderate policies during his first term. Foster won support from the left because he raised salaries for K-12 teachers and university professors — and refurbished crumbling buildings at LSU and other universities — and from the right by winning legislative approval to make it harder for injured people to sue businesses.
Upon finishing his second term, Foster reflected, “The most important thing is we changed the whole culture of doing things, not based on politics. We don’t have to worry about how somebody’s brother-in-law was getting a good deal.”
But in the weeks ahead, columns that he was writing for weekly newspapers throughout the state for Louisiana State Newspapers — in which he offered common-sense solutions for knotty political issues — began to connect with voters hungry for change. Following the advice of his political consultant Roy Fletcher, Foster staked out the most conservative positions of any candidate on social issues, pitching himself as a gun toting and anti-abortion Christian.
In an interview with “64 Parishes” he said, “They had a real hissy when I went to law school. All I did was go one or two hours a week. I figured I could afford that kind of time. It was helpful. I’ve always enjoyed the law. In fact, when I got out of being governor I continued going to school and got my law degree. I never will forget when I was first elected, I went to both chancellors. I said, ‘Can I take a couple of courses?’ ‘No, we can’t do that.’”
"The second time I went to LSU to the chancellor, they said no. And the Chairman of Southern said, ‘We’re supposed to have a part-time program and…[if] you [are] going to take the LSAT and pass it, we’ll start a part-time program.’ And we did! And they still have a part time program, which is one of the things I’ve gotten a lot of thanks for from students that have been there."
“Then they had a little hissy when I went and learned to fly the helicopter. But I’ve been a pilot all my life. I was flying around with one pilot. One had had open heart surgery. The other had kidney stones.
"I thought, if he keels over, I’m dead. So I went out and about an hour or two a week learned to fly the helicopter and my answer was look, look at it this way, if one my pilots keels over I’ll save the state $2 million for a new helicopter,"

Pages

ST. MARY NOW

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