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Chamber of Commerce award
The St. Mary Chamber's Non-Profit Award goes to ARC of St. Mary at Thursday's Chamber banquet at Cypress Bayou Casino and Hotel. Kristal Hebert accepted the award on behalf of the training center for the disabled, joined by friends Marci, left, and Winter. Patterson State Bank received the Business of the Year Award, and outgoing Chamber board Chairman Scott Berry was named Citizen of the Year. Franklin Mayor Eugene Foulcard received the Virginia Taylor Guillotte Award, which annually goes to a member of the community willing to accept any challenge to improve the parish's quality of life. Lacey Fonseca, the interpreter at the Chitimacha Museum, won the Outstanding Hospitality Employee Award, and the President's Award went to former Franklin Mayor and state Rep. Sam Jones.
The Daily Review/Bill Decker
Patterson Junior High has new acting assistant principal
Ronica Lapoint has been appointed acting assistant principal at Patterson Junior High after the resignation of Dequinda Ligon, the St. Mary Parish School Board said Thursday.
Ligon resigned to accept an administrative position at Breaux Bridge High School.
Lapoint served as curriculum facilitator at Patterson Junior High and Hattie Watts Elementary before her appointment as administrator.
Also Thursday, Ashley Clark was selected to serve as acting principal of West St. Mary High School, replacing Dr. Derrick White, who resigned to accept a position at Algiers Charter Schools. Clark previously served as the school’s assistant principal.
"Both appointments, in an acting capacity, will afford the schools the ability to seamless transition while maintaining a consistent leadership approach for students and teachers," the School Board said in a news release.
Franklin police investigating courthouse bomb threat
The St. Mary Parish courthouse in Franklin was evacuated at midday Thursday after the Franklin Police Department took a bomb threat call, the department said.
The call came in about 11:45 a.m., Franklin police said. They immediately contacted courthouse officials about the threat. Then Franklin police, the Franklin Fire Department and the St. Mary Parish Sheriff's Office began work on the evacuation.
The building was searched for any suspicious devices by law enforcement officials. In addition, the Chitimacha Tribal Police Department assisted in search efforts by deploying their K-9 bomb dog.
The detectives division of the Franklin Police Department worked throughout to locate and identify the caller. At 4:30 p.m. Franklin police said the building had been cleared and the investigation efforts continued into the caller of the bomb threat.
Lawmakers weigh land rights vs. recreation
Louisiana officials are looking for ways to promote recreational access to waterways while protecting the rights of property owners and minimizing the costs to state taxpayers of any changes.
It’s a tricky balancing act in a state where property rights are highly valued along with Louisiana’s self-proclaimed status as a “sportsman’s paradise.”
Under Louisiana law, navigable waterways generally are considered public. But due to climate change, rising sea levels and erosion, areas that previously were dry land or marsh are being submerged by water, making them navigable and potentially attractive to recreational use. The result can be “dual-claimed” land or water bottoms, where both a private landowner and the state have legitimate ownership claims.
Landowners in 2018 pushed back against proposed legislation to give fishing boats access to waterways that flow over private land. After voting that bill down, lawmakers created the Public Recreation Access Task Force to study the issue.
In a draft version of its final report, due to legislators Feb. 1, task force members declare that any solution to “the challenges faced by recreation sportsmen” must also “respect landowners’ legitimate interests in managing the use of their land and in the development of mineral rights associated with that land.”
They also stress the need to minimize the fiscal impact on state and local governments. Though the report does not include cost estimates, it notes two factors that could impact government revenue (and by extension taxpayers): potential lost mineral revenue and the cost “to administer new access regimes that may result from [new] pathways.”
But there are significant risks if lawmakers do nothing, the draft report says. As more land is submerged, excluding recreational access will become more difficult to enforce. Recreational sportsmen and women will continue to be frustrated and confused about where they are allowed to be, and the uncertainty could hurt the state’s fishing industry, which advocates say is worth $1.5 billion annually and supports 15,000 jobs.
Landowners might decide to relinquish their claims to dual-claimed land, deciding that the cost of managing the land and paying property taxes outweighs the value of the title, the report suggests. Recreational fishing access would improve, but local tax bases would shrink, and the state would face the cost of managing those water bottoms without new sources of revenue.
The report lays out several possible ways to deal with the problem proposed by various stakeholders, some of which likely would require state constitutional amendments.
“The general goal throughout the entire [report] was to try to make every constituency’s argument and proposal as clear as possible,” said John Lovett, a task force member appointed by the Louisiana State Law Institute.
What follows are some of the proposals discussed in the draft report, which essentially is the final version pending some minor tweaks and formatting changes. State agency representatives say some of these approaches could be combined into a single proposal.
— As a result of a 2017 Louisiana House of Representatives resolution, the Louisiana Sea Grant College Program studied the issue and offered a number of options. Those include having state government buy recreational access servitudes from landowners and/or giving private landowners tax incentives to allow recreational access. Lawmakers could “strengthen landowner immunity” to lawsuits in exchange for allowing recreational use of their properties.
—The Louisiana Landowners Association suggested allowing the state to negotiate permanent boundary settlements, which theoretically could apply to dual-claimed land or land that might become submerged in the future, in exchange for permanent access for recreational use.
—The Louisiana Sportsmen Coalition fears the landowners’ proposal doesn’t go far enough because memebers think it would likely only be used with dual-claimed land, which would not benefit freshwater fishing. The coalition would prefer to guarantee access to “all surface waters that ebb and flow with the tide.”
—A representative of the oil and gas industry prefers an approach that would let landowners donate surface ownership of a tract of land to the state while reserving its mineral rights in perpetuity.
—Another member who advocates for recreational fishing suggested raising taxes on landowners who don’t allow recreational access.
—Mark Davis, director of the Tulane Institute on Water Resources Law and Policy, outlined a “three-party agreement proposal” possible under existing law. Act 626, originally enacted in 2006 and since amended several times, allows coastal land surface rights to be donated in exchange for fixed mineral rights and commitments from conservation-minded landowners and donors to support local property tax bases and land management, the report says.
—The task force member representing the Nature Conservancy and the Louisiana Audubon Society urged lawmakers to consider creating more nature preserves where appropriate. These typically are managed by government agencies and often allow public access within limitations.
—Lawmakers might also require landowners who don’t want to allow public access to more clearly mark their property boundaries, which would at least ameliorate public confusion.
Parish Council: Dragna seeks answers on levee work
FRANKLIN — The chairman of a Morgan City drainage district wants to know what’s happening with the St. Mary Levee District’s portion of levee improvements. A Levee District board member promised answers.
Lee Dragna, who chairs the St. Mary Gravity Drainage District No. 2 board, spoke at Wednesday’s St. Mary Parish Council meeting.
The drainage and levee districts have shared responsibility for a series of levee improvements in Morgan City. The improvements are designed to protect the city not just from flooding but from skyrocketing flood insurance rates.
The Levee District’s portion of the work is along Lake Palourde Drive in front of Lakeside Subdivision. Much of Gravity Drainage District No. 2’s work is complete. The Levee District portion has been under study.
Dragna said he’s trying to find out what’s going on with the Lake Palourde Drive portion of the improvements but can’t find out anything.
“I’m at my wits’ end …,” Dragna told the council. “We do $22 million worth of work and we’ve got nothing.”
A Levee District board member, Norris Crappell, was in the audience. He joined Dragna at the speaker’s lectern and said the district has actually contributed to the project by helping with sheet piling.
But he said Dragna would have answers about the Lake Palourde Drive work Thursday.
Past public comments have accused the Levee District of being reluctant to spoil Lake Palourde access for a few Lakeside Subdivision homeowners. District Director Tim Matte has characterized the accusation as unfair.
Also at Wednesday’s meeting, the council heard the introduction of an ordinance that would merge Gravity Drainage District No. 2 with Gravity Drainage District No. 6.
Consolidating taxing districts has been a popular cause in St. Mary Parish in recent years.
At a Parish Council meeting Jan. 8, Dragna said he’s generally in favor, too.
But he also expressed concern that consolidation might complicate a planned $6.5 million pump station project.
Morgan City is protected from flooding by a series of pump stations. Gravity Drainage District No. 2 has been working to upgrade the pumping capacity for more than three years.
State tax return season will begin Monday
The Louisiana Department of Revenue will begin accepting 2019 state individual income tax returns Monday.
The date coincides with the date the Internal Revenue Service begins accepting 2019 federal income tax returns.
On Monday, Louisiana taxpayers can begin filing their state income tax returns electronically through Louisiana File Online, the state’s free web portal for individual tax filers. Louisiana File Online allows taxpayers to:
— File returns and pay taxes electronically
— Check the status of individual income tax refunds
— Amend current and prior-year tax returns
— Request a filing extension
Also on Monday, taxpayers can begin submitting returns to the state through commercially available tax preparation software; or they can download paper tax forms from the LDR website at www.revenue.louisiana.gov/Forms. Updated printed forms will not be available before Jan. 27.
The 2019 Louisiana Individual Income Tax returns and payments are due May 15.
LDR has implemented enhanced security measures to protect Louisiana taxpayers from identity theft and other types of tax fraud.
If returns do not trigger any fraud indicators, taxpayers due refunds can expect them within 45 days of the filing date if they file electronically and within 14 weeks if they file paper returns.
Taxpayers can minimize delays in receiving their refunds by updating their contact information with LDR, including name, address and telephone number.
If you have moved or changed your name since your last tax filing, update your contact information at www.revenue.louisiana.gov/AddressChange.
Morgan City High Students of the Month
Submitted Photo
The January Students of the Month at Morgan City High are, from left: sophomore Dylan Duval, senior Dillon Nguyen, freshman Hannah Ebbercke and junior Asia Washington.
KATHY MARIE O'PRIEN
Kathy Marie O’Prien, 66, a native of Morgan City and resident of Snellville, Georgia, died Friday, Jan. 3, 2020, at her residence.
Visitation will be Friday from 9 a.m. until services at noon at Jones Funeral Home in Morgan City.
She is survived by two daughters, Latrayl Carter of Snellville, Georgia and Karla O’Prien of Apple Valley, California; three grandchildren; a brother, Harry O’Prien Jr. of Baton Rouge; two sisters, Elizabeth Washington of Apple Valley, California and Mavis Windom of Houston; and a host of other relatives.
She was preceded in death by her parents, two brothers and her grandparents.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.
