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Lois “Marguerite” Os-borne Stallworth

Lois “Marguerite” Os-borne Stallworth, 91, a resident and native of Franklin, La. passed away peacefully on Tuesday, April 21, 2020 at 10:50 p.m. at Leonard Chabert Hospital in Houma, La.
Memories of Lois will forever remain in the hearts of her children, Ernest (Fayette) Stall-worth of Columbia, SC, Laura S. McClarty of Franklin, La., Linda S. Diaz of Washington, DC, Nina Stallworth, Lawrence Stallworth, and Lois Y. Stallworth all of Atlanta, GA; eleven grandchildren, twenty-two great-grandchildren, two great-great grand-children, two nephews, one niece and a host of other relatives and friends.
Lois was preceded in death by her husband, her son, her parents, and a sister.
Jones Funeral Home of Morgan City-Franklin-Houma-Jeanerette in charge of arrangements.

James “Jimmy” Barnes

James “Jimmy” Barnes, 77, a resident and native of Franklin, La., passed away on Tuesday April 21, 2020 at 8:05 a.m. at Franklin Foundation Hospital in Franklin.
Memories of James will forever remain in the hearts of his two sons, Vernon Barnes and Lorne Barnes both of Aurora, IL; two sisters, Evelyn Daniels of New Orleans La. and Myrtle B. Williams of Berkeley, CA and a host of nieces, nephews other relatives and friends.
James was preceded in death by his parents, six sisters and two brothers.
In an effort to comply with the CDC recommendations to cancel-postpone events with 10 or more people, and state officials imploring people to stay home and limit social interaction, a private graveside service will be held. James will be buried in the Special Providence Cemetery in Baldwin. Graveside Services will be accessible by viewing the Jones Funeral Home Facebook page upon time of the services.
Jones Funeral Home of Morgan City-Franklin-Jeanerette-Houma in charge of arrangements.

Streets closed in lower St. Martin because of high water

From the St. Martin Parish Sheriff’s Office:

Due to rising water, effective immediately, Adell Street, Edna Street, and Landry Road, in lower St. Martin Parish will be closed to vehicular traffic until further notice.

Please do not sight-see or attempt to go around barricades and/or signage that have been put in place, and please be respectful of those who live in these affected areas. We appreciate your patience and understanding.

Please do not attempt to drive through standing water on the roadway, by doing so, it can lead to deadly consequences.

Morgan City will distribute masks Friday

The Morgan City government will distribute free protective masks Friday.

The distribution will begin at 10 a.m. Friday at the Municipal Auditorium parking lot under the police tent.

One pack of five masks will be given per car to Morgan City residents. The distribution will continue as long as the supply lasts.

Berwick sets mask distribution

Berwick Police Department patrol officers are handing out protective masks Thursday to people in public without them, Mayor Duval Arthur said.

And 9 a.m. -3 p.m. Friday, Berwick residents can come to the Town Hall to pick up a mask.

Sheriff's Office releases details on mask distributions in unincorporated areas

Sheriff Blaise Smith announces the locations for the mask distribution in the unincorporated areas of St. Mary Parish.
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From 8 a.m.-noon Friday, or while supplies last at each location, deputies will be stationed at the locations listed below to hand out washable and reusable masks for the public.
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Keep in mind, the municipalities also have been given masks for their cities. These masks are for those living in the unincorporated areas listed below. Citizens are advised to go to the location that is in your community area. If you live in a city, refer to their plan as to when and where their distribution will take place for your masks.
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The five locations for distribution will be:
--Amelia Fire Department
--Bayou Vista Fire Department
--Centerville Fire Department
--Four Corners Fire Department
--Siracusaville Recreation Center
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Citizens are asked to simply drive up, stay in your vehicle, and the deputy will give you a package of five masks. One package per vehicle will be distributed.

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These masks have been divided up and disseminated by David Naquin and the employees of the Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness to the municipalities and to the SMPSO to be distributed in their respective areas. Smith thanked them for their hand in this mask distribution.

More than 900 new jobless claims in St. Mary

Another 903 St. Mary workers filed initial claims for unemployment benefits in the week ending April 18, the Louisiana Workforce Commission reported Thursday.

Since economic restrictions designed to slow the spread of COVID-19 took hold during the week ending March 21, 3,881 St. Mary people have filed initial claims. That’s more than one of every six people working before the pandemic began.

In St. Martin, 909 people sought jobless benefits for a five-week total of 3,979.

Another 393 Assumption residents filed initial claims for a total of 1,787 during the pandemic period.

Statewide, 92,039 peopled filed initial claims last week. Since the week of March 21, 445,120 Louisiana people have filed claims.

The economic sectors that include most employees of the energy industry are mining and manufacturing.

The mining segment accounted for 1,321 initial claims last week, the commission said. Manufacturing accounted for another 3,888. Together, those two sectors account for 22,080 initial claims since the week of March 21.

That number may be going up even more after this week’s plunge in the oil prices, when some crude oil futures contracts closed with a negative price.

Prices have since stabilized and have even shown signs of moving up because of renewed tensions in the Middle East, according to media analysts. But West Texas intermediate crude was going for only $16.32 a barrel in Thursday afternoon futures trading in New York.

The economic sectors hit hardest by layoffs have been accommodation and food services, which generated 101,582 claims in the last five weeks, and retail trade, where 52,567 people have filed new
claims in the same period.

The U.S. Labor Department reported Thursday that 4.4 million U.S. workers filed initial unemployment claims last week.

Legislative committees approve emergency election plans

BATON ROUGE — House and Senate committees on Wednesday approved an emergency plan that delays the state’s presidential primary until July 11 and limits efforts to expand the use of absentee ballots because of the coronavirus.
The plan, prepared by Secretary of State Kyle Ardoin, reduces the list of reasons that he had proposed last week for voters to qualifyto vote by mail.
Ardoin shortened the list after the Republicans on the Senate and Governmental Affairs Com-mittee rejected his earlier proposal in a party-line vote.
Under the new plan, voters can still seek absentee ballots if they are at higher risk from the virus because of serious medical conditions or are subject to a medical quarantine order. People with symptoms of COVID-19 or caring for someone subject to a quarantine order also may seek absentee ballots.
The rules also would apply to state and local elections Aug. 15. The plan must still be approved by the full House and Senate and by Gov. John Bel Edwards.
No changes have been considered for the presidential and congressional elections in November.
Ardoin’s original proposal also would have extended the early-voting period from seven to 13 days to allow for less concentrated groups of people gathering to cast their votes. It would have lowered an age threshold for requesting absentee ballots to 60 and older from 65 and older and allowed anyone who was worried about health risks to vote absentee.
Ardoin, a Republican, dropped those provisions after legislators complained last week that anyone could claim they had health concerns and qualify for an absentee ballot, potentially increasing the risk of some fraud.
“It seems like we are opening ourselves to more risk and fraud than ever,” Sen. Barry Milligan, R-Shreveport, said then.
His comments echoed concerns expressed by President Trump, who claimed recently that “mail ballots are a very dangerous thing for this country, because they’re cheaters.”
Most political experts, however, say that vote-by-mail is trustworthy and effective and that there have been few signs of voter fraud in states using such systems.
Additionally, Louisiana has a ballot tracking system in place for absentee ballots.
Ardoin assured lawmakers on Wednesday that “I have not given up any precautionary measures that we operate under.”
Catherine McKinney, an LSU student who started an initiative to advocate for more mail-in bal-lots, added that “in a vote-by-mail method, you have paper ballots and a paper trail that you don’t get in a typical voting method. Everything is the same, if not better.”
Ardoin also has said that he was trying to avoid the problems that occurred in Wisconsin, which was criticized for forcing voters to turn out in person for its presidential primary in the midst of the virus outbreak.
Ardoin has described the images of voters standing in lines in Wisconsin week as “shocking.”
Louisiana was the first state to adjust its presidential primary in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The primary was scheduled for April 4, but Gov. Edwards then postponed it to June 20 and again to July 11.
Rep. Stephanie Hilferty, R-Metairie, was among the lawmakers who supported these actions. She said that going ahead with the election earlier would have had a more severe impact on voter turnout since residents would have been hesitant to go out and vote.
Hilferty added that a substantial number of election-day commissioners are over the age of 65 and, therefore, more at risk for COVID-19.
Some question if the primary election even worth it at this point.
Bob Mann, a professor at LSU’s Manship School of Mass Communication of LSU, does not think so. Since Bernie Sanders dropped out of the Democratic race and President Trump and Vice President Joe Biden are the de-facto nominees, “the outcome has already been determined,” he said.
But Sanders remains on the official ballot, and Ardoin said the election is still needed to decide how to allocate Louisiana’s delegates.
Ardoin’s final plan came after days of debate and discussion. He said that his office has thought of every possibility to ensure the right to vote in both elections. One of those ideas was to implement a drive-thru voting method to prevent the spread of COVID-19, though that is not being implemented now.
In his closing statement before the House committee on Wednesday, Ardoin became emotional as he encouraged the committee to pass the legislation.
“I have watched my colleagues work hours and hours and hours, plan after plan after plan, to deliver democracy to the people of Louisiana,” he said. “It takes true dedication to do that, because the pay is not great.”

La. COVID-19 cases may have reached plateau

Louisiana may have reached the long-sought plateau in new COVID-19 cases, Gov. John Bel Edwards said in his daily press briefing Wednesday. And we may be halfway toward the progress required for easing economic restrictions called for in federal guidance.
But, as usual, the good news was tempered by caution.
“Nobody should think we’re in the clear today,” Edwards said. “We’re not even close.”
The Office of Public Health reported 404 new COVID-19 cases in the 24 hours before noon Wednesday, significantly fewer than the daily reports up until the last week.
Another 68 deaths were reported Wednesday, but hospitalizations and ventilator use were down, far short of the levels at which public health officials had feared the state’s health care resources would be overwhelmed.
The downward trend is important both for public health and economic health.
The Make America Open Again guidelines put forward by the Trump administration describe a Phase One with slightly easier social distancing rules. Schools would remain closed, but some nonessential travel would be permitted, employers could allow more employees to return to offices and restaurants could resume indoor dining.
But COVD-19-positive people would still be required to quarantine themselves, and public venues would have to institute social distancing measures.
To reach Phase One, the state would have to see progress toward a health trajectory in both individual and statewide COVID-19 statistics for two weeks.
In response to a reporter’s question, Edwards estimated that the current positive trajectory is about seven days old.
Edwards and Dr. Alex Billioux, the assistant secretary of the Louisiana Department of Health, said the state is looking at what would happen if the positive trend continues, it stagnates or it begins to be reversed.
One big need is for more testing. The state has a goal of testing 140,000 people in May.
Widespread testing followed up with contact tracing is widely held to be the best way to limit the spread of the disease by people who are infected but who haven’t displayed symptoms.
Currently, only about 142,000 tests have been performed in Louisiana since the pandemic began.
A lack of swabs for sample collection, transport media for preserving samples headed for the lab and reagents needed for testing have limited the availability of tests.
The state government is working on ways to produce those items in Louisiana, Edwards said.
The governor also encouraged people to wear masks in public to help prevent the spread of COVID-19.
“Think of wearing a mask in public as being polite, like opening a door for someone,” Edwards said.
The limited number of reporters allowed to attend the press briefings in person will be required to wear masks beginning Thursday.
People shouldn’t fear being tested, the governor said.
“There is no stigma for being tested for COVID-19,” Edwards said. “There is no stigma for having COVID-19.”
The disease doesn’t result from behavior to which some people might object, the governor said. COVID-19 patients have included the UK’s prime minister.
“If we’re going to be more successful, we need to have more testing …,” Edwards said.
“If you have symptoms, if you have been exposed and have symptoms, or if you get a recommendation from a health care professional, I ask you to get tested.”

Six new COVID-19 positives in St. Mary

Another six St. Mary COVID-19 positives were reported Thursday by the Louisiana Office of Public Health, raising the parish's total to 168.

The OPH also reported another COVID-related death in the parish, raising the official total to 18. St. Mary Coroner Eric Melancon said Wednesday that 21 deaths have been reported to his office.

In all, 654 COVID-19 tests have been performed on St. Mary residents.

Another coronavirus death was reported Thursday in Assumption, the parish's second. Another four positives bring the total to 158 after 227 tests.

In St. Martin, eight more COVID-19 positives to bring the parish total to 210 after 698 tests. The death toll there remains at 13.

Statewide, the number of new cases remained relatively low at 481, raising the total to 25,739. But the number of newly reported deaths remains high at 67 for a total of 1,540.

The number of hospitalizations dropped by 20 to 1,727, and 13 fewer patients are on ventilators. That total is 274.

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
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