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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,"

Remembering Mike Foster: Locals say former governor's work will live on

Former Gov. Murphy James “Mike” Foster Jr. may have been a businessman for much of his life before entering politics later than most, but in the state’s legislative and executive branches, the St. Mary Parish resident is being lauded for his numerous contributions in areas that still positively impact Louisianans today.
Foster, who was the grandson of a Louisiana governor, was key in the creation of the Louisiana Community and Technical College System, was commended for his backing of the creation of the TOPS program and is remembered for his critical role in the founding of the Louisiana Workers’ Compensation Corp.
“A veteran, a businessman and a sportsman, Gov. Mike Foster was a true Louisianan who served his country, his state and his community with honor throughout his life,” Gov. John Bel Edwards said in a statement about the former governor, who passed away Sunday at his home in Franklin at age 90. “As governor, one of his most lasting legacies is in education, especially his support for the creation of the TOPS program, which, more than 20 years later, still helps thousands of Louisiana students attend colleges and universities and achieve their goals.”
As for the Louisiana Community and Technical College System, Foster is the “Father of Louisiana’s community and technical colleges,” Louisiana Community and Technical College System President Monty Sullivan said.
“He had a profound impact on the people of our state on many fronts,” Sullivan said in a news release. “One of his most impactful accomplishments was the creation of our system of colleges, which continues to educate and skill Louisiana’s workforce. With each of the more than 30,000 students that graduate annually, the legacy of Governor Foster grows.”
Foster also was critical in workers’ compensation as a senator, said Tim Matte, who served as Morgan City mayor during a portion of Foster’s administration.
Through legislation, he essentially formed Louisiana Workers’ Compensation Corporation, which Matte said offered competition in the workers’ compensation arena.
“I think that was a pretty bold move on his part that really played out well for all of the community, not just the one’s here in St. Mary but all over,” Matte said.
Matte also noted the completion of the four-lane U.S. 90 and the hiring of Jack Caldwell as the state Department of Natural Resources secretary, who, along with Foster, formed the Atchafalaya Basin Program.
“We still benefit from some of the work that’s been done through that particular program … mainly the improvements out at Lake End Park, which we call the parkway, and of course the golf course (The Atchafalaya at Idlewild),” Matte said. “Here for St. Mary Parish, that was a big grasp on our part.”
Foster’s contributions extend beyond politics.
St. Mary Parish President David Hanagriff said Foster was a “respected businessman for many, many years” and was a job creator in the private sector.
Hanagriff said that Foster is “one of the best governor’s we’ve ever had in the state of Louisiana.”
The parish president said there is pride in St. Mary Parish with Foster having represented the area.
“We’re all very proud of Mike Foster and what he did for this area, not only private sector but also politically,” Hanagriff said. “He was someone that’s going to be remembered for a long time.”

Morgan City police radio logs for Oct. 2-5

The following are the radio dispatch logs from the Morgan City Police Department. To report unlawful or suspicious activity, call the police department at 985-380-4605.
Friday, Oct. 2
1:51 p.m. 1100 block of Birch Street; Disturbance.
1:58 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Telephone harassment.
2:04 p.m. 600 block of Terrebonne Street; Complaint.
2:21 p.m. 5000 block of Railroad Avenue; Animal complain..
3:18 p.m. 1200 block of David Drive; Hit and run.
4:10 p.m. 1400 block of Ellzey Street; Animal complaint.
4:21 p.m. 300 block of Sixth Street; Telephone harassment.
4:34 p.m. 1000 block of La. 70; Arrest.
4:42 p.m. 100 block of Oak Street; Disturbance.
4:46 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Complaint.
5:02 p.m. 2400 block of Cypress Street; Complaint.
5:29 p.m. 600 block of Terrebonne Street; Harassment.
6:12 p.m. 2400 block of Cypress Street; Animal.
6:20 p.m. Maryland Street; Complaint.
7:03 p.m. 700 block of Belanger Street; Complaint.
7:15 p.m. 6300 block of La. 182; Mentally ill person.
7:31 p.m. 600 block of Fourth Street; Juvenile problem.
11:39 p.m. Ochsner St. Mary; 911 hang up.
Saturday, Oct. 3
1:15 a.m. 6000 block of La. 182; Alarm.
2:26 a.m. 7500 block of La. 182; 911 hang up.
2:39 a.m. 2000 block of Allison Street; Medical.
2:49 a.m. 600 block of Terrebonne Street; Complaint.
10:49 a.m. La. 70/U.S. 90; Crash.
12:42 p.m. 900 block of Birch Street; Telephone harassment.
2:04 p.m. 900 block of Seventh Street; Shoplifting.
3:18 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.
8:23 p.m. 400 block of Bush Street; Complaint.
8:38 p.m. 1000 block of Ninth Street; Complaint.
9:01 p.m. 7400 block of La. 182; Arrest.
9:11 p.m. 1000 block of Ninth Street; Juvenile problem.
9:24 p.m. La. 70; Juvenile problem.
9:51 p.m. 6800 block of La. 182; Battery.
10:02 p.m. Ellzey Street; Alarm.
10:06 p.m. Levee Road area; Sound of gunshots.
10:35 p.m. 200 block of Leona Street; Loud music.
10:52 p.m. 400 block of Garber Street; Medical.
Sunday, Oct. 4
1:01 a.m. 5000 block of Railroad Avenue; Harassment.
7:35 a.m. 7700 block of La. 182; Theft.
8:13 a.m. 1100 block of Victor II Boulevard; Alarm.
10:03 a.m. U.S. 90 West; Complaint.
10:51 a.m. 1500 block of Victor II Boulevard; Animal complaint.
11:44 a.m. 300 block of Levee Road; Disturbance.
12:04 p.m. 700 block of Belanger Street; Medical.
3:15 p.m. 2000 block of Keith Street; Disturbance.
3:58 p.m. 500 block of Leona Street; Loud music.
5:30 p.m. 7200 block of La. 182; Disturbance.
5:48 p.m. 7700 block of La. 182; Animal.
6:30 p.m. Federal Avenue and General MacArthur Street; Arrest.
6:58 p.m. La. 70; Reckless driver.
8:04 p.m. 400 block of Leona Street; Juvenile problem.
8:19 p.m. 1100 block of Second Street; Complaint.
10:24 p.m. 400 block of Fifth Street; Patrol.
11:13 p.m. Palm Street; Juvenile problem.
11:45 p.m. 2400 block of Cypress Street; Medical.
Monday, Oct. 5
1:04 a.m. Brownell Homes; Utilities.
2:41 a.m. 1000 block of Brashear Avenue; Alarm.
3:14 a.m. 200 block of Pecos Street; Suspicious vehicle.

Police: Woman used false documents at OMV

Staff Report
An Amelia woman faces a fraudulent documents charge after trying to use phony papers to get a driver’s license, Morgan City Police Chief James F. Blair said.
—Bessy Carolina Gomez, 25, Lake Palourde Road, Amelia, was arrested at 12:03 p.m. Friday on a charge of unlawful production, manufacturing or distribution of fraudulent documents for identification.
Officers were called to the Office of Motor Vehicles in Morgan City about an individual attempting to obtain a driver’s license with fraudulent documents.
They learned Gomez produced fraudulent documents in an attempt to obtain a Louisiana driver’s license. She was placed under arrest and transported to the Morgan City Police Department for booking and incarceration.
—Cole Zephren Fruge, 28, Saturn Road, Bayou Vista, was arrested at 4:34 p.m. Friday on a warrant for two counts of failure to appear.
Officers located Fruge at an address on La. 70 and placed him under arrest on active warrants held by the 16th District Court. He was transported to the Morgan Police Department for booking and incarceration.
—Savana White, 21, River Road, Berwick, was arrested at 3:05 p.m. Friday on a warrant for three counts of failure to appear.
White was located at the Morgan City Police Department and was placed under arrest on active warrants held by the City Court of Morgan City and the 16th District Court. She was booked and incarcerated.
—Shane Eugene Richard, 26, Gabriel Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 9:14 p.m. Saturday on charges of disturbing the peace-intoxicated, simple escape and battery on a police officer.
—Mary Toups, 40, La. 182, Morgan City, was arrested at 9:14 p.m. Saturday on a charge of disturbing the peace-intoxicated.
Officers were called to the area of La. 82 and Martin Luther King Boulevard about two intoxicated individuals causing a disturbance. They came into contact with Richard and Toups.
Officers observed they were in an intoxicated condition. They were placed under arrest and transported to the Morgan City Police Department. Once at the Morgan City Police, Richard escaped from officers while being escorted from the olice unit to the jail.
He was apprehended before exiting the jail property. He was escorted into the jail and, while being placed into a holding cell, he struck an officer. Richard was additionally charged with simple escape and battery on an officer.  Richard and Toups were booked and incarcerated in the Morgan City Jail.
—Claudia Domingo, 26, La. 182, Morgan City, was arrested at 10 p.m. Saturday on a charge of simple battery.
Officers were called to an address on La. 182 for a disturbance. They learned Domingo committed a battery on an individual at the address. She was placed under arrest and transported to the Morgan City Police Department for booking and incarceration. 
—Brennan Paul Cenac, 31, Bowman Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 6:37 p.m. Saturday on a warrant for disturbing the peace and criminal damage to property less than $1,000.
An officer conducted a traffic stop for a traffic violation in the area of Federal Avenue and Gen. MacArthur Street. The driver was identified as Cenac.
A warrant check revealed the Morgan City Police Department held an active warrant for his arrest. He was placed under arrest and transported to the Morgan City Police Department for booking and incarceration.
St. Mary Parish Sheriff Blaise Smith reported these arrests:
—Shannon Gail Wright, 30, Pecan Street, Patterson, was arrested at 11:07 a.m. Friday on two warrants for failure to appear and one complaint warrant on the following charges: entry on or remaining in places or on land after being forbidden; disturbing the peace-offensive words; telephone harassment; resisting an officer; simple battery; and disturbing the peace by fighting.
 No bail has been set.
 —Niechelle D. Winley, 31, Egle Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 4:19 p.m. Friday on a charge of driving under suspension. Winley was released on a summons to appear Jan. 7.
—Robert Joseph Wells, 34,  Tango Lane, Church Point, was arrested at 4:28 p.m. Friday on a charge of probation violation-felony. No bail has been set.
—Kenneth Ray Levine, 55,  Knight Street, Baldwin, was arrested at 5:17 p.m. Friday on a warrant for failure to appear on the charge of public intoxication. Levine was released on a $600 bond.
—Gerald Tramond Sophus, 30,  Samuel Street, Franklin, was arrested at 2:05 p.m. Saturday on charges of improper lane usage and driving under suspension Sophus was released on a summons to appear Jan. 7.
—Juvenile male, 16, Franklin, as arrested at 8:35 p.m. Saturday on a charge of domestic abuse battery. The juvenile male was released into the custody of a guardian pending juvenile court proceedings.
—Alfred Broussard III, 54,  Prairie Road, Franklin, was arrested at 8:35 p.m. Saturday on a charge of domestic abuse battery and on a warrant for failure to appear on the charge of failure to give required signals.
No bail has been set.
—Reginald Kendell Sims, 39,  St. Joseph Lane, Franklin, was arrested at 11:55 a.m. Sunday for turning movements and required signals and driving under suspension.
Sims was released on a summons to appear Jan. 7.
 —Kentrelle Beasley Jr., 18, Joseph Street, Jeanerette, was arrested at 3:32 p.m. Sunday on charges of aggravated flight from an officer, resisting an officer, off-road vehicle-authorization of use and reckless operation-no accident.
Beasley was released on a $4,500 bond.
 —Oscar Omed Hernandez, 29,  River Road, Berwick, was arrested at 3:40 p.m. Sunday on charges of stop signs and yield signs and no insurance.
Hernandez was released on a summons to appear Jan. 7.
 —Jamarkus Anthony James, 29,  Ceco Town Road, New Iberia, was arrested at 6:50 p.m. Sunday on a charge of off-road vehicles-authorization of use.
James was released on a summons to appear Jan. 7.
Assumption Parish Sheriff Leland Falcon reported these arrests:
—Savanna Nacole White, 21, River Road, Berwick, was arrested Friday on a charge of probation violation.
A uniformed I.C.E. Unit deputy was working an assignment when he observed a vehicle pass him. As the vehicle went by, the deputy recognized White as the passenger and was aware that a warrant existed for White for a probation violation.
The deputy stopped the vehicle and arrested White.
According to the warrant, White was on probation resulting from multiple convictions in Assumption Parish. White, who was convicted Feb. 10 for possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine and simple burglary, was subsequently sentenced to a suspended prison term and placed on probation with special conditions.
White failed to comply with those conditions, resulting in Department of Corrections filing a warrant for her arrest April 16.
White was booked into the Assumption Parish Detention Center on Friday and is be held without bond.
—Davonta Clifton Herbert, 27, Greenbriar Street, Paincourtville, was arrested Sunday on two charges of resisting an officer (two counts), failure to appear for two counts of improper telephone communications, possession of marijuana (second offense and violation of probation or parole (two counts), and on warrant for battery on a dating partner.
Deputies went to the Greenbriar address to execute arrest warrants on Herbert on Sunday afternoon. As deputies approached, Herbert attempted to flee but was captured following a brief foot pursuit.
Davonta Clifton Herbert was arrested and booked into the Assumption Parish Detention Facility.
Herbert was on probation in Assumption Parish after his conviction for possession with intent to distribute marijuana.
Herbert violated the conditions of his probation resulting in a warrant being issued.
Herbert is also wanted on fugitive warrants in Ascension and St. James Parishes.
Herbert is currently incarcerated in Assumption Parish without bond.

Nicholls State nursing program wins honor

Submitted Photo
Nicholls State University has accepted a 2020 Nightingale Award for Best Graduate Nursing Program on behalf of the Intercollegiate Consortium for a Master of Science in Nursing. The member universities of the consortium are the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, McNeese State University, Nicholls and Southeastern State University. The Louisiana State Nurses Association and Louisiana Nurses Foundation use the Nightingale Awards to honor achievement and advancement in the field. Two of the concentrations prepare graduates for advanced practice licensure as a family nurse practitioner and a psychiatric mental health family nurse practitioner. A third concentration prepares the graduate to function as a nurse educator.

LSU players ranked among top freshman talents

LSU outfielder Dylan Crews and right-handed pitcher Ty Floyd are ranked among Baseball America magazine’s Top 10 college baseball incoming freshmen.
Crews is No. 4 on the list, and Floyd is No. 10. LSU joins Miami (Fla.) as the only schools with multiple players in the Top 10.
Crews is a 6-foot, 200-pound product of Longwood High School in Lake Mary, Florida.
“Crews wanted to be a part of the LSU baseball program so much that he removed his name from the draft the week before the event began, reaffirming his commitment to the Tigers,” Baseball America said in its scouting report on him.
Floyd is a 6-foot, 2-inch, 190-pound product of Rockmart High School in Rockmart, Georgia.
“Floyd is LSU’s top newcomer on the mound, and while breaking into the Tigers’ rotation this spring won’t be easy, he’s got the talent to pitch important innings,” Baseball America said in its scouting report on him.
“His electric fastball sits 92-95 mph to go with a big breaking ball and changeup.”
Baseball America ranked LSU’s 17-man class of incoming players No. 2 last month in its annual recruiting survey. The newcomers joined LSU’s returning players on Wednesday for the start of the Tigers’ six-week fall practice period, which continues through Nov. 10.

Lawmakers find money for public defenders, disabled

The Louisiana House of Representatives on Friday shifted about $32 million in Health Department spending to other needcluding public defense and centers for developmentally disabled residents.
Gov. John Bel Edwards’ administration already had set aside the money as part of a deficit avoidance plan, Appropriations Chairman Jerome Zeringue said. While officials had feared mid-year budget cuts would be needed amid the COVID-19-related economic uncertainty, Commissioner of Administration Jay Dardenne says cuts won’t be necessary.
The Louisiana Public Defender Board will get $15 million to build or purchase office space. Many of the state’s public defenders are operating out of rented spaces at a total cost of about $1.2 million per year; lawmakers hope to eliminate that expense so more resources can be put toward providing counsel for defendants who can’t afford to hire attorneys.
The Joint Legislative Committee on the Budget will have to approve the board’s plan to spend the money.
The next-largest item included in the supplemental spending bill is $6.2 million for centers that serve the developmentally disabled. Most have laid off employees and many may be about to shut down, Rep. Rick Edmonds says.
Other items include $7 million for cybersecurity, $2 million for the Pennington Biomedical Research Center, $3 million for the state’s major events fund used to attract major events like the Super Bowl, and $2.5 million for City Park in New Orleans, which despite its name is a state park.
The Louisiana Legislature on Monday began a special session which must end by 6 p.m. Oct. 27.

13 new COVID cases, no deaths in three parishes

Thirteen new COVID cases were reported in three local parishes for the 24 hours ending at midday Tuesday. No new deaths were reported locally by the Louisiana Office of Public Health.

St. Mary's case count was adjusted downward by two to 1,956.

Eight new cases were reported for St. Martin, raising the total since the pandemic began to 2,124.

Five new cases raised Assumption's case count to 772.

The death tolls remain the same: 78 in St. Mary, 61 in St. Martin and 24 in Assumption.

Statewide:

--506 new cases raised the total to 169,044.

--6 newly reported deaths make the total 5,402.

--20 more COVID-positive people are hospitalized for a total of 567.

--The number of people on ventilators stays at 71.

Governor Murphy James "Mike" Foster, Jr.

Governor Murphy James “Mike” Foster, Jr., a retired businessman and sugar cane farmer from St. Mary Parish, left this earth on Sunday, October 4, 2020, surrounded by family and close friends.
Mike Foster became Louisiana’s 53rd governor after running for office as a little-known senator to fix things that were broken. He served Louisiana as its chief executive from 1996 – 2004.
The first thing Governor Foster handed to his senior staff members were coins that read, “Do the Right Thing.” That was the mantra that he lived by, the standard that he held his staff to, and that to which he insisted Louisiana government aspire.
He began his construction company, Bayou Sale, so his farm employees would have work during the off season. He was also an avid outdoorsman who loved fishing along the Louisiana coast and hunting in southwest Louisiana on Pecan Island.
Governor Foster was first elected to the state senate in 1988 at the age of 58. He was an Eagle Scout, a veteran who served as a Captain of the United States Air Force in the Korean War, and grandson of former Louisiana Governor Murphy J. Foster (1892 - 1900). He became the first GOP governor since Reconstruction to serve two terms as the state’s chief executive.
One of his most significant accomplishments as a legislator, the creation of the Louisiana Workers’ Compensation Corporation, lives on today and has saved Louisiana employers tens of millions of dollars.
As Governor, Mike Foster brought honesty and integrity to state government. He restored fiscal sanity by balancing budgets, running surpluses, ending the repeated pattern of budgeting by crisis, and making massive new investments in infrastructure and education, both K-12 and Higher Ed, to position Louisiana more competitively for the future.
He called a special session early in his first year in office and successfully pushed the legislature to restore balance to Louisiana’s legal system. He created the Louisiana Workforce Commission and then persuaded legislators and voters to catch Louisiana up with the rest of the country by creating the Louisiana Community and Technical College System — which has been Louisiana’s fastest growing workforce development system ever since. He fought fraud, abuse, and runaway spending in the Medicaid program, ensuring money was available for the Children’s Health Insurance Program, and brought the Charity Hospital system under the supervision of LSU Medical School.
Governor Foster paid down state debt more than any other Governor while investing hundreds of millions of dollars into new university buildings and deferred maintenance and reimagining the entire state government complex which rebuilt and revitalized downtown Baton Rouge.
He made restoring Louisiana’s coast a national issue as well as a statewide priority, passing constitutional amendments that required new federal funding dedicated to coastal restoration.
In 2002 in a special session, he not only ensured the Saints would stay in New Orleans, but that Louisiana would secure an NBA franchise, while planting the seeds for economic development successes to come by modernizing the Quality Jobs Act, expanding the film and video production incentives, and creating the research and development and technology commercialization tax credits. He also guided $100 million in investments in biosciences and information technology to build Louisiana’s capability in the industries of the future.
In K-12 education he passed teacher pay raises, created charter schools, the LA-4 pre-K program and the school and district accountability framework that has led to dramatic increases in student academic performance and high school graduation rates. To retain Louisiana’s most talented high school students, he created the TOPS scholarship program that has provided scholarships to tens of thousands of students in the past two decades.
Governor Foster also spearheaded the building of the renowned New Orleans Center for the Creative Arts, giving New Orleans the finest performing, visual, literary, and culinary arts programs in any secondary school in the nation.
When he left office in 2004, Louisiana was in a dramatically better place financially and the foundation had been laid for future success in all other areas of state government. He credited his success as a legislator and as Governor to his non-partisan approach, always putting Louisiana’s needs and priorities first.
Governor Foster graduated from Louisiana State University in 1952 with a Bachelor of Science in chemistry and he also managed, while in office, to complete his courses at the Southern University Law School and graduated with a juris doctorate in 2004. He was never happy with lawyers telling him he couldn’t accomplish his objectives in state government because it “was against the law” and sought to change those laws by further understanding how it could best be done.
In 2003, Governor Foster was inducted into the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame.
His curiosity and commitment to learning new things that were practical always drove him. Always looking to learn a new craft, Governor Foster was also a certified welder, had fixed wing and helicopter pilots’ licenses, loved riding his motorcycles, had a 20-ton boat captain’s license, and completed EMT courses.
Above all, Governor Foster was a loving husband to his wife, Alice, and father to his son, Murphy J. Foster, III (Diane) and daughter Ramelle Foster, and sons Paul West (Lisette) and Troy West (Sandra). Governor Foster’s legacy includes nine grandchildren (Murphy J. Foster, IV, Clark Foster, John West, Jennifer Harding, Michelle Eunice, Christopher West, Zachary West, Spencer West and David West) and five great-grandchildren (Murphy J. Foster, V, Charles Foster, Matthew West, Hudson West and Graham West).
He is also survived by his devoted employees, friends, and caregivers, Ann Cortez and Leslie Braud, and his dear friend, confidant, and CPA, Randy Battaglio. He is preceded in death by his parents, Murphy J. and Olive Robert Foster, and his brother, William Prescott Foster.
We are a better people and a better state because Murphy J. “Mike” Foster, Jr. came our way.
The family extends its heartfelt gratitude to Beverly Broussard and Heart of Hospice for their assistance and care.
Private services will be held at Oaklawn Manor on Wednesday, October 7 at 11 a.m. followed by a public military graveside service at 12:30 p.m. at Franklin Cemetery. Pallbearers will be his grandsons. Honorary pallbearers are Randy Battaglio, Charlie Billodeau, Bernie Boudreaux, Leslie Braud, Dr. Tom Kramer, Donnie Stiel and Dr. C. T. Stirling. Please observe normal guidelines for face coverings and social distancing. In lieu of flowers, contributions to St. Mary’s Episcopal Church in Franklin or the Coastal Conservation Association of Louisiana (CCA) are appreciated.
Arrangements have been entrusted to Ibert’s Mortuary, Franklin, LA.

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