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All eyes on eagles: Expo set for Feb. 13-15

Cajun Coast’s Eagle Expo is settling into a different place this year.
The event, scheduled Feb. 13-15, will center on the Cajun Coast Visitors Center in Morgan City.
The Atchafalaya Basin is the favorite home turf for bald eagles in Louisiana, which boasts more than 300 nesting pairs a half-century after the species was near extinction.
The boat tours have become an excellent way to see bald eagles and other species in the wild.
Speakers will be back on the agenda this year, including the author of a book on birding in Louisiana.
And there’s a new boat tour.
Registration is $40 for those who choose a boat tour other than the Bayou Black tour with Capt. Greenwood of Greenwood Gator Farm and Swamp Tours. Registration for that tour is $80.
Here’s a look at the events:
—There will be a Wings to Soar presentation featuring live raptors Feb. 13 at the Patterson Civic Center.
Wings to Soar is a non-profit environmental education organization founded by John and Dale Stokes. Their lively informative presentation features a variety of raptors, including owls, hawks, a falcon, a very funny vulture and a bald eagle.
—A Friday Night Social at Cajun Coast will feature Mary Beth Lima, author of “Adventures of a Louisiana Birder: One Year, Two Wings, Three Hundred Species.”
—Lima will also be among the speakers. She is a professor in biological engineering at LSU and an avid birder (in passion and interest, if not talent).
Somewhere in between viewing red-tailed hawks from above in Letchworth State Park in upstate New York at age 8, and learning the calls of Carolina wrens and red-bellied woodpeckers while running in south Louisiana at age 30, Lima caught the birding bug. She was a casual birder at first, but has managed to become totally hooked and is now a lister.
She will discuss her book.
Also speaking will be Delaina Leblanc, migratory birds coordinator, Barataria Terrebonne National Estuary Program, Red Knot Research; Stacy Ortego, outreach coordinator, Louisiana Wildlife Federation, Gardening for Wildlife; and Erik Johnson, director of bird conservation, Audubon, Louisiana-Coastal Louisiana.
—The boat tours:
Boat Tour 1: Atchafalaya Basin Tour with John Burke
Capt. Caviar will tour into the Atchafalaya Basin to view the American bald eagle. The Atchafalaya Basin is the largest overflow swamp in the U.S. covering over 850,000 acres. The basin includes 10 distinct aquatic and terrestrial habitats ranging from large rivers to backwater swamps.
The basin is most noted for its cypress-tupelo gum swamp habitat and its Cajun heritage. The basin is home to over 170 bird species and is an important wintering ground for the birds of the Mississippi Flyway. The tour will be in a flat-bottom boat with a cover. A bathroom will be on board.
The tour maximum is 20 people.
Boat Tour 2: Bayou Black Tour with Billy Gaston (available for Saturday afternoon only)
Billy Gaston, swamp tour operator of Cajun Man’s Tours, will journey into the backwater of Bayou Black, adding his special Cajun touch.
This tour will meander through the old oil and gas canals where you will have the opportunity to see several birds of prey including, of course, bald eagles, ospreys and various species of hawks. Other birds that are likely to be encountered include various species of ducks, wading birds and some song bird species. Great tour for families or groups.
Covered flat-bottom boat. Bathroom on board. Maximum 40 people.
Boat Tour 3: Turtle Bayou Tour with LUMCON
Journey into Turtle Bayou to view bald eagles and get a glimpse of an eagle nest. This tour will also ride through natural bayous that provide for fantastic views and local wildlife.
Other birds likely to be encountered include anhingas, double-crested cormorants, red-shouldered hawks, white ibis, yellow-rumped Warb-lers, Carolina chickadees and various species of terns and gulls. Two boats. Maximum six people on each boat.
Boat Tour 4: Bayou Long Tour with Capt. Ivy
The Bayou Long Tour includes various waterways including Lake Verret, Bayou Magazille, Four Mile Bayou, Grassy Lake, Bayou Cheramie, Bayou Milhomme and Lake Palourde.
On this tour you will be able to view bald eagles and their nests, blue heron, great egret, belted kingfisher, white ibis and various other species of birds. One boat. Maximum seven people
Boat Tour 5: Bayou Black Tour with Captain Greenwood of Green-wood Gator Farm and Swamp Boat Tours will take you deep in the back swamps. The 30-foot boat is covered.
Guests will view a wide selection of local birds including the American bald eagle, the great blue heron, egrets, double-crested cormorants, red shouldered hawks and many more.
One boat. Maximum 19 people. Departs Greenwood Gator Farm, 125 Gator Court, Gibson.
—A photography workshop with CC Lockwood, Feb. 14.
Minimum of 10 students and maximum of 16. Photography workshop with a field trip to Bayou Black. Requires separate registration. 225-245-5008, 227-763-1259, cactusclyd@aol.com.
For more information, 985-380-8224 or info@cajuncoast.com.

Patterson council has second thoughts about hunting lease

PATTERSON — A deal for a hunting lease on a little-used tract south of the railroad tracks took a complicated turn Tuesday, when the City Council learned that the property has attracted attention.
Also Tuesday, the council learned that the city government budget needs an adjustment after the numbers for some big-ticket projects came in. A change in meeting times is in the works, and so is the city’s participation in the 2020 Census.
The property at issue is about 170 acres south of the gas plant. The marshy land, inaccessible by road, has belonged to the city government since it was purchased from William Kenney in 1975, according to a proposed lease prepared by City Attorney Russel Cremaldi.
If the city had plans for the land, they’ve been lost in the passage of 45 years. But David Vicknair hopes to lease the land for hunting. The proposed lease agreement presented to the council Tuesday called for an annual payment of $800. The city would be able to end the lease with 45 days’ notice.
But as the proposed lease moved toward council approval, other people began to express interest in using or acquiring the land, Mayor Rodney Grogan said.
One of those people is Scott Green, who is part of the new Green Community Foundation.
Green said the foundation’s purpose is to provide recreation for kids, veterans and senior citizens. The plans include fishing, learning to cook and a leadership program.
“One of the things we’d like to do is introduce them to hunting,” Green told the council.
Green has land bordering the city property. He said a deer stand on the edge of the city property points toward his land, raising concerns about safety.
Vicknair, who was also present Tuesday, was polite in response, even saying at one point that the city might want to consider providing the land for a good cause.
“I’ll do whatever is best for the city,” Vicknair said.
The proposed lease was tabled for further deliberation.
The amendment to the 2019-20 budget proposed by City Accountant Reginald Weary results in part from spending the city government knew would be necessary but for which the final numbers weren’t known when the budget was developed last spring. There was also unforeseen spending of $130,000 on Hurricane Barry and $17,000 for a gas leak.
The added spending amounts to a little more than $300,000. It also included about $137,000 to run the new natural gas line to Patterson Healthcare Center and other land in the area south of the railroad tracks, $57,000 to deal with an undersized water line under Hurst Street, and $200,000 for the new water plant.
Some of the additional spending will be offset by revenue that is exceeding the budgeted amount.
Also Tuesday:
—As he has done frequently at recent meetings, Grogan made a pitch for participation in the 2020 Census.
He said a more accurate count in the 2010 Census might have resulted in an Opportunity Zone designation in Patterson. The Opportunity Zone program, created by the same 2017 federal legislation that resulted in income and corporate tax cuts, establishes a tax incentive for investing capital gains in low-income areas, according to the Louisiana Economic Development website.
St. Mary Parish currently has four Opportunity Zones.
“If we don’t get it right,” Grogan said, “it’s going to hurt us.”
Bonnie Sherman, who is directing St. Mary’s Census efforts, said potential Census employees can attend a recruiting event 8 a.m.-noon Jan. 31 at the Patterson Community Center, 1101 Church St.
The event will also offer general information about the Census.
Potential Census workers can apply at 2020census.gov.
—Grogan asked the council to consider a change in the starting time of the monthly council meetings. The meetings are now at 6:30 p.m. every first Tuesday. He’s suggesting a change to 6 p.m.
—The council voted to enter a lease agreement with Joseph Casso for the use of land next to the new water plant on Main Street.
The land will be available for trucks, water tanks and a possible plant expansion.
The agreement may result in an outright purchase of the land if funding becomes available. —The council approved the permit for the Martin Luther King Jr. Day march scheduled for Jan. 20.
—The Patterson Police Department got a round of applause.
Councilman Joe Russo said he recently had to be away from home and was concerned about his family.
His daughter told him, “Every time I look across I see a car on patrol.”
—A routine part of council meetings took on added meaning Tuesday.
Council meetings open with an invocation and the Pledge of Allegiance. On Tuesday, the mayor announced the pledge by mentioning recent events in Iraq.
Audience members joined in the pledge less than an hour after The Associated Press reported that an Iranian airstrike hit a base housing U.S. troops in Iraq.

This story has been edited to correct the date of the Census event in Patterson. It will be Jan. 31.

Patterson residents may see higher trash bills

PATTERSON — City residents may be paying more for trash collection soon.
A proposed ordinance raising the garbage pickup fee is in the works. The proposed amount hasn’t been determined, but an additional $1.90 was kicked around at Tuesday’s Patterson City Council meeting.
Patterson has signed on to a deal worked out by parish government with Pelican Waste & Debris for parishwide trash collection.
Mayor Rodney Grogan and City Accountant Reginald Weary told the council that the city government is currently losing about $3,500 per month on trash service.
Part of the loss comes from a fee for billing utility customers that live outside the city, Grogan said. The city is allowed 65 cents to process each bill based on an old charge of $6.50.
Now the charge is $17, but the bill fee is still 65 cents.
Bears complicated matters further.
Some Patterson residents are required to have bear-proof trash cans, which latch to discourage late-night feeding expeditions by bears.
But the latches make trash collection more labor-intensive and affect both cost and service.
“We haven’t received the best service from Pelican,” Grogan said.
The bear-proof cans have helped push the monthly cost of trash collection to just over $18 per month.
And there have been indications that the bear-proof-cans requirement may be expanded.
City Attorney Russel Cremaldi was asked to develop a proposed ordinance calling for a trash fee hike.
Under the normal course of legislation, the ordinance would require consideration during at least two monthly meetings, plus a public hearing.

Louisiana farmers explore hemp as a cash crop

Industrial hemp is gaining interest as farmers explore the potential for increased profits from growing hemp varieties used for fiber, seed and cannabidiol, or CBD, oil.
“This crop will have its growing pains through the first couple of years due to so many unknowns, particularly labor costs, market risks and production variables,” said LSU AgCenter economist Michael Deliberto.
Deliberto was among several AgCenter experts who spoke on hemp production at the Louisiana Forage and Grassland Council annual conference at the AgCenter DeWitt Livestock Facility near Alexandria.
Acreage expansion in the U.S. is currently driven by the interest and potential profit of CBD oil; however, CBD prices have come down in recent months because of increased supply and lack of processing facilities, Deliberto said.
“This highlights one of the many risks associated with hemp production,” he said.
Other risk factors that may reduce the attractiveness of hemp production include labor and chemical variables that are currently unknown, regulatory expenses that vary according to end use and general uncertainty regarding the direction of the hemp market.
Fiber production is one end use that offers the best long-range sustainability, Deliberto said, as a fast-growing market is developing for use in various industrial manufacturing applications.
CBD oil is the most expensive end use of the crop when compared to fiber and seed, largely because of greater production costs per acre attributed to fertilization, irrigation and transplanting, he said.
AgCenter plant pathologist Raj Singh said industrial hemp production concerns mirror most other Louisiana crops that are influenced by the state’s hot, humid environment and long growing season.
“This is a susceptible crop, and we have several important pests and pathogens in Louisiana that plague hemp production in other states,” he said. “Management is the key, not control, so it is very important to consider the economic threshold to reduce economic loss.”
Restrictions on the use of chemical pesticides and herbicides along with a lack of seed certification in the U.S. are other issues producers should consider before moving forward with industrial hemp production, Singh said.
Singh urged growers to use AgCenter diagnostic services to identify crop pest and disease issues and reminded them to consult their local AgCenter agent for assistance in transporting plant samples to the lab.
“You can’t just put hemp plants in your car and drive to Baton Rouge,” he said, adding that producers must obtain a permit to move hemp plants for diagnostic purposes.
More information on industrial hemp production is available on the AgCenter website at https://www.lsuagcenter.com/topics/crops/industrial-hemp.
Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry seed program director Lester Cannon said hemp is a unique plant, and challenges in seed acquisition and some regulatory hurdles lie ahead. But the state’s regulatory program is expected to be in place by February 2020.
Regulatory information is available on the LDAF website at http://www.ldaf.state.la.us/industrial-hemp/.
Grower experiences with Sunn hemp provided producers firsthand insight on what could prove to be a viable forage alternative for late summer-early fall grazing.
Sunn hemp is a nitrogen-fixing legume used for fodder and as a cover crop. It is a different plant species unrelated to industrial hemp.
It is not ideal for seed production in Louisiana because of climate and pollinator issues. But as a summer annual legume, Sunn hemp is drought tolerant and can provide nutrition for grazing cattle until the first frost, said AgCenter ruminant nutritionist Guillermo Scaglia.
Sunn hemp grows best in sandy, well-drained soil, and plants should not be grazed shorter than 12 inches to prevent killing the plant, he said.
“It would be another effective component, without a doubt,” said cattle and forage producer Cooper Hurst. “It provides a lot of cattle feed, and it would be wonderful because we do not have a summer legume that is a prolific nitrogen fixer.”
Other presentations included a look at plants toxic to livestock in spring production by LSU veterinarian Dr. Matt Welborn and an overview of the new beef sustainability framework developed by the U.S. Roundtable for Sustainable Beef by Chad Ellis, of the Noble Research Institute in Ardmore, Oklahoma.

M C Bank recognizes Hooper's service

Bookkeeping Clerk Ann Hooper was recognized for her 10-year anniversary at M C Bank. Pictured from left are Jeremy Callais, AVP/Bookkeeping Supervisor Pat Aucoin; Hooper; Richard; and Larry Callais. Hooper began her tenure at M C Bank in 2009.

M C Bank employee recognized

Top Right Photo: Pictured from left presenting Lisah Gagneaux with her 10-year anniversary gift: Larry J. Callais; Amelia Branch Assistant Vice President/ Branch Officer Pam A. Patureau; Gagneaux; and Richard. Gagneaux joined the M C Bank team in 2009. She is a full time teller at the full service Amelia Branch location.

30 years of service at M C Bank

Submitted Photos
M C Bank recently recognized Terri S. DiMatteo for her 30 years of service. DiMatteo joined M C Bank in 1990 and is now in the new accounts department as a customer service representative. Pictured from left are M C Bank’s Executive Vice President/COO Travis Richard; DiMatteo; CEO Larry Callais and President Jeremy Callais. M C Bank’s board, officers and employees thanked Di Matteo not only for her 30 years of service but also for the professionalism she brings to the financial industry.

PSB's President's Award

Submitted Photo
Patterson State Bank presents the President’s Award to an employee who has shown tremendous work values and compassion for fellow employees. This year’s recipient is Assistant Vice President and Controller Jennifer Blanchard. She is pictured receiving her award from Bill Marin, left, chairman of the board and CEO, and Pete Lipari, executive president.

Louisiana Politics: Name tags will be the height of Baton Rouge fashion

Someone around the state Capitol should invest in name tags, because they would certainly make a killing during the new term that begins next week.
While your mind may want to gravitate towards the incoming Legislature, where there will be 18 new senators and 46 rookie representatives, lawmakers will not be only fresh faces floating around Baton Rouge.
Within the administration of Gov. John Bel Edwards you’ll find a few new names as well. Dr. Rebekah Gee, for example, will be vacating her post as Edwards’ health secretary at the end of the month.
Prior to Gee, and just since November, Erin Monroe Wesley left her position as Edwards’ special counsel and Jennifer Steele walked away from her job as Medicaid director. Maj. Gen. Glenn Curtis, head of the Louisiana National Guard, likewise announced his retirement recently and will leave behind his own vacancy.
Curtis will be replaced by Brig. Gen. Keith Waddell, currently the major general’s chief of staff. A national search is being conducted to replace Steele, meanwhile, and Gee’s replacement process will be watched with great interest.
Former health secretary Fred Cerise has been rumored as being in the running to succeed Gee, and take over his old job, and so has Texas Health and Human Services Executive Commissioner Courtney Phillips.
But for now those names are speculative and nothing more.
Over at LSU, F. King Alexander served his final day as president on Dec. 31, and is headed to Oregon State University to take on the same job there.
While the LSU campus and the Capitol are roughly 10 miles apart, there’s obviously still a great deal of political overlap.
For starters, the president will be selected by the LSU Board of Supervisors, which is appointed by the governor. The board is conducting its own national search for Alexander’s replacement.
LSU Law Center Dean Thomas Galligan is filling in for Alexander in the interim, but Jay Dardenne, Edwards’ commissioner of administration, has expressed interest in the job.
Much like the search for the state’s new health secretary, this selection process will be watched closely.
What the Edwards administration is going through is quite normal, as there are traditionally some staffing and personnel changes from one term to the next.
The real question is whether more resignations are on the way.
More than likely, based on historical turnover and the chitchat bouncing around Baton Rouge, a few other high-level modifications may be coming, maybe even on the cabinet level.
How the public and Louisiana’s political class will respond to the hires to come represents another question of note.
Gee’s replacement, for one, will have to be confirmed by the state Senate, just like any other new secretary hire.
In the past, the Senate has served as a backstop for governors, offering very little resistance to major asks.
The incoming Senate, however, is going to be a little different this go around.
Prognosticators are expecting a more conservative body and the Republican membership will be more organized than ever.
Depending on how the new Senate leadership wants to stack the body’s committees, GOP members could cause headaches for Edwards come confirmation time.
But it’ll be several weeks until we see the upper chamber in action, so that’s just more speculation for now.
Aside from freshmen members and what will be a new House speaker and Senate president — following internal elections next week — both sides of the Capitol’s Memorial Hall are slated for major changes on the staffing side. After decades of guidance from House Clerk Butch Speer and Senate Secretary Glenn Koepp, both men are retiring from their jobs with their respective chambers.
While their positions may be a little too “inside baseball” for rank-and-file voters, their jobs are nonetheless important to the Legislature — from directing traffic during busy sessions to offering lawmakers legal advice.
The Senate hasn’t selected a new secretary since 2004, and the current clerk of the House was installed in 1983.
It has been so long since senators and representatives voted to fill these jobs that a new precedent could very well be set. Will the jobs become more political? Will non-attorneys be selected? We’ll know for sure on Jan. 13.
From cabinet positions and the state’s flagship university to both the House and the Senate, we’re all in store for a new look in state government beginning next week.
Politically, adaptation will be critical for long-timers who ply a trade at the Capitol — and there’s not much even name tags could do to help with that transition.
For more Louisiana political news, visit www.LaPolitics.com or follow Alford onTwitter@LaPoliticsNow

MYRNA 'MIDGE' BEST BOUDREAUX

January 4, 1935 — January 5, 2020
Myrna Best Boudreaux passed away at the age of 85 in the early afternoon hours of Sunday, January 5, 2020, with her family at her side at the Franklin Health Care Center.
Midge, as she was affectionately known, was born on January 4, 1935, in Coon, Louisiana, a small community in Pointe Coupee Parish, and was one of seven children born to Leroy and Belle Best. On January 26, 1952, she married the love of her life, Paul Boudreaux. Eight years later they settled in Patterson and laid down roots. Midge was a loving wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother and great-great-grandmother who absolutely adored her family and treasured spending time with them, especially her precious grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Many will remember her from her and her husband’s 31 years as the owners and operators of Boo’s Kwik Stop in Patterson, where you could always get the best boudin in town and fresh fish. She had a love for playing card games, especially Rummy, as well as fishing with her husband. She could often be found sitting outside feeding and watching her squirrels and birds. She truly lived a simple life and enjoyed the simple things it had to offer. She will be deeply missed by all who knew and loved her.
Those she leaves to cherish her memory include her five children, Paul Boudreaux Jr. and wife Kathy, Sherry B. Lester and husband Vincent, Lynn B. Hebert and husband David, Lonnie B. Boudreaux and wife Angie, and Janet B. Rink; 12 grandchildren, Katie B. Paige, Vincent P. Lester, Erica C. Suire, Micah Crochet, Chris Hebert, Christina Hebert, Casey Hebert, Lorie B. Bergeron, Clay Boudreaux, Emily B. Montgomery, Tysie Rink and Scott Rink; 24 great-grandchildren; 10 great-great-grandchildren; two sisters, Joan Kile, and Daisy Landry and husband Patrick; her beloved dog, Wendy; as well as numerous nieces, nephews, in-laws, cousins and friends.
She was preceded in death by her beloved husband, Paul “Boo” Boudreaux; her parents, Leroy Best and Belle Conrad Best; son-in-law, Kenny Rink; grandson, Bradley Boudreaux; great-granddaughter, Kyrsten McMullen; three brothers, Jerry Best, Kenneth Best and Ronnie Best; and an infant sister, Elmira Best.
Visitations will be held at Ibert’s Mortuary in Patterson on Thursday, January 9, from 6 p.m. until 9 p.m. and again Friday, January 10, from 9 a.m. until time of funeral service at 11 a.m. Following the service she will be laid to rest with her beloved Boo in Ibert’s Memorial Park Cemetery. The Rev. Michael Holloway will officiate the services.
Serving as pallbearers will be Vincent P. Lester, Clay Boudreaux, Jeff Suire, Cade Suire, Scott Rink and Aidan Bergeron. Honorary pallbearers will be Vincent Lester Jr., David Hebert and Kenny Thompson.
The family would like to express their sincerest gratitude to the staffs of Heart of Hospice and Franklin Health Care Center for the loving care and compassion given to Ms. Boudreaux during her final days.
Family and friends may view the obituary and express their condolences online by visiting www.iberts.com.
Arrangements have been entrusted to Ibert’s Mortuary, Inc., 1111 Lia Street, Patterson, LA 70392, (985) 395-7873.

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
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Phone: 337-828-3706
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Phone: 985-384-8370
Fax: 985-384-4255