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Louisiana Spotlight: Rispone campaign giving few details

BATON ROUGE — Republican businessman Eddie Rispone is asking Louisiana voters to choose him in the November runoff election without telling them much about what he wants to do if he wins the job.
Founder of a Baton Rouge industrial contracting company, Rispone is running mainly as a conservative supporter of President Donald Trump. He thinks Democratic incumbent John Bel Edwards has done a poor job. And he suggests his experience as a “job creator” would make him a good leader of Louisiana.
Ask what he wants to accomplish, and Rispone gets vague.
He’s criticized Edwards for championing a bipartisan criminal sentencing law rewrite in 2017. But Rispone hasn’t said what he would change, just that he’d “look at it again” with district attorneys and sheriffs, many of whom were involved in crafting what passed.
Rispone says taxes are too high and road conditions too poor. He’s said he wants to slash tax hikes enacted during Edwards’ tenure, while covering the growing cost of the TOPS college tuition program and increasing spending on early childhood education. He opposes raising Louisiana’s gas tax, but says he’ll boost road and bridge work.
Rispone doesn’t explain how the math works, to both cut taxes and increase spending. Instead, he says he’ll hire capable Cabinet leaders, eliminate waste and prioritize spending.
“We’re going to go out and recruit good, talented people over these agencies. We’re going to run these agencies like they should be run, like we do in business,” Rispone said at one forum. “We’re going to respect our citizens’ tax dollars, and we’re going to be efficient and effective.”
That doesn’t really tell much to people who depend on the state for services. And that might just be the point. Stake out a specific position and a candidate could alienate pockets of voters in a head-to-head Nov. 16 runoff where no one appears to be the favorite.
Edwards hasn’t described a sweeping agenda for the next four years either, but voters know the Democratic incumbent’s priorities from how he’s governed, so they have an idea of what they’d see in a second Edwards term.
Running against an incumbent who still has solid approval ratings, Rispone’s strategy involves nationalizing the race, talking about Trump and reminding Louisiana voters that Edwards is a Democrat in a state that tends not to elect them statewide anymore.
When pressed on a subject, however, Rispone sometimes responds in a way that suggests he has more ideas than he’s sharing with the public.
He’s said the Board of Regents, the top higher education policymaking board, should have more authority over the university systems, and he’s talked of restructuring “how higher education is done.” He’s said the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education that oversees K-12 education should have more power over local school boards.
As he talks of holding a constitutional convention, Rispone targets areas involving the budget, taxes, state employee pensions, education and local government. Those don’t seem selected at random, indicating he likely has ideas for what he’d like to change.
Rispone only sporadically attended public forums leading into the Oct. 12 primary. Those appearances are even fewer ahead of the runoff.
He’s attended two public events since the primary and agreed to one debate against Edwards, on Wednesday. He’s skipping other forums where he’s been invited to square off directly with his opponent.
Rispone didn’t attend an economic development summit in Baton Rouge that arguably would have been home turf, an audience of business leaders.
Edwards appeared and rebuked Rispone’s absence: “Nobody has a clue what this man would do if he were governor. That’s reason enough to make sure he doesn’t get that opportunity.”
While Rispone is making his first run for office, he has one record that voters can review: years of political donations. He’s supported former U.S. Sen. David Vitter, former Gov. Bobby Jindal and Attorney General Jeff Landry. He’s financed organizations and candidates that support charter schools and the voucher program that sends children to private schools with taxpayer dollars. He’s given contributions to business PACs.
Rispone mainly seems to want voters to know he supports Trump, hoping those coattails can help him reach the governor’s mansion.
Melinda Deslatte has covered Louisiana politics for The Associated Press since 2000. Follow her at http://twitter.com/melindadeslatte

KRISTI CANTRELL LINER

Kristi Cantrell Liner, 51, a resident of Patterson, died Friday, Oct. 25, 2019.
Visitation will be Friday, 6-8:30 p.m., at Hargrave Funeral Home and Saturday at Holy Cross Catholic Church from 7:30 a.m. until services at 9 a.m.
Private graveside services will be held at a later date.
Hargrave Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

DAVID LaCOSTE

January 31, 1935 — October 25, 2019
David LaCoste, 84, a resident of Berwick, passed away Friday, October 25, 2019, at Tulane Medical Center in New Orleans.
David was born on January 31, 1935, in Bayou Chene, the son of Clarence LaCoste Sr. and Cecelia Aucoin LaCoste.
David’s family was first in his life and they always came before anything else. He was a man of few words, but he always had the right words to say for any situation. He loved to cook and his weenie spaghetti was a favorite among his grandchildren. You could oftentimes find David outdoors enjoying a boat ride or camping at Hideaway Ponds, but in his younger years he was hunting, fishing or trapping. David never met a stranger and was a true jokester.
He will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his wife, Kathleen Cavalier LaCoste of Berwick; three children, Crystal LaCoste Kidder and husband Chris of Patterson, Brian David LaCoste and wife Jodie of Bayou L’Ourse, and Jason Paul LaCoste and wife Shanna of Thibodaux; nine grandchildren, Taylor Marie LaCoste, Sadie Marie Theriot, Joseph David LaCoste, Kaylee Renee’ Kidder, Tori Beth LaCoste, Brendan Christopher Kidder, Marlee Jae LaCoste, Laynee Rae LaCoste and Ethan James LaCoste; one great granddaughter, Ivy Rae on the way; and two brothers, Burlin LaCoste and wife Mable of Berwick and Alfred LaCoste and wife Barbara of Patterson.
David was preceded in death by his parents, Clarence and Cecelia Aucoin LaCoste; one great-granddaughter, Riley Renee’ LaCoste; seven brothers, Clarence LaCoste Jr., Elmer LaCoste, Sylvester LaCoste, Adam LaCoste, Nelson LaCoste Sr., Ellis LaCoste and Arthur Donald LaCoste; and two sisters, Elvenia Holt and Ellen Falls.
Funeral services were held at 11 a.m. Monday, October 28, 2019, at Twin City Funeral Home with Pastor Den Hussey officiating. A visitation was held from 5 p.m. until 9 p.m. on Sunday, October 27, 2019, at Twin City Funeral Home with the visitation resuming Monday morning from 9 a.m. until the time of the services. Following services David was laid to rest in the Morgan City Cemetery.

Wheel House for Oct. 28

OCTOBER FEST
At Mt. Pilgrim Baptist Church, 113 Federal Ave., Morgan City, 6-8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 31. Children ages 2-13 welcomed. For info call 985-384-6800.

FAMILY FUN
Festival at St. Joseph Catholic Church, 1011 First St., Patterson, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 2. Features food, music, fun jumps, slides, dunking booth, cake walk, 50/50 raffle, cemetery and church tours, silent auction and free games and activities for children. Music by Gone Pecans with Jeff Cardinale from 1-3 p.m.

BETHLEHEM
Church of God in Christ, 401 Martin Luther King Ave., Patterson, celebrating Pastor Clifton C. Tate Sr.’s anniversary at 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 3. Guest speaker Superintendent Donald Lanceslin Sr., Hines Memorial Temple Church of God in Christ. Public invited.

BHS PLAY
Berwick High School Drama Club presents “The Trial of the Wicked Witch,” a fresh, sassy take on fairy tales and turns them on their heads, at the Berwick Civic Complex Nov. 15, 7 p.m. and Nov. 16, 1 p.m. Tickets: $5, early bird and children 12 and under, and $8 at the door.

'Grim' season inspires new tactics for oyster bars

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — People queued up as usual outside Acme Oyster House in the French Quarter one recent day, while inside the aroma of oysters bubbling on the grill filled the dining room and servers whisked past with trays of po-boys.
But at the marble-topped oyster bar, something was starkly amiss: No one was slurping raw oysters.
Facing a dramatic plunge in the supply of Louisiana oysters, Acme has temporarily stopped serving raw oysters at all seven of its regional restaurants.
“If we can’t get Louisiana oysters, we’re not going to serve raw oysters at all,” Acme CEO Paul Rotner said.
“Every oyster we get in, we’re directing them to the grill so we can at least keep that product available,” he said. “And I’m not sure how long we can even keep doing that.”
Acme is not alone. Drago’s Seafood, another major player in the local oyster business, made the same decision.
Restaurateur Tommy Cvitanovich said that, for now, none of his four Drago’s locations is serving raw oysters, instead reserving whatever flow of in-shell oysters the business can cobble together for the grill.
“The charbroiled oyster is my signature dish. We have to keep that going, and it’s taking all we have,” said Cvitanovich. “It’s just that bad.”
Dire predictions for this year’s oyster season have been stacking up since the spring, when an unprecedented influx of freshwater from the Mississippi River began washing through many of Louisiana’s prime oyster growing grounds. Now the results are showing up at oyster bars.
Oysters are scarce, and restaurants are paying through the teeth to scrounge whatever they can. It’s forced some unusual calculations for a traditional local pleasure and brought foreboding for the future.
Fall is when Louisiana normally begins harvesting a torrent of oysters. This year, the torrent is barely a trickle.
Restaurants have resorted to rationing. They’re reaching far beyond their normal local supply chains to get whatever boxes and sacks of oysters they can find, revising menus and tapping stockpiles of frozen product to keep fried oysters on their po-boys and seafood platters.
Many in the business are calling the shortage the worst they’ve ever seen, worse than the aftermath of hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005 or the BP oil spill disaster in 2010, both of which devastated the local industry.
“It’s never been this bad in my lifetime,” said Carolina Bourque, oyster program manager for the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.
Louisiana is the heart of the U.S. oyster industry, historically producing a third of the nation’s total harvest. In 2017, the state landed 13.3 million pounds of them, according to federal commercial fishing data. The abundance is shipped to restaurants and markets across the country and fuels a robust oyster culture around Louisiana dining tables.
Oysters thrive in the state’s coastal estuarine environment, with its mix of freshwater and brine. But this year that mix was thrown off radically by an extraordinary influx of freshwater.
Heavy rainfall across the Midwest led to months of high water levels on the Mississippi River and through the Atchafalaya Basin, testing the region’s flood control systems. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers twice opened the Bonnet Carre Spillway, which protects New Orleans and downstream communities from river flooding.
The spillway’s freshwater outflow barreled through Lake Pontchartrain toward the Gulf of Mexico and straight across some of the state’s best oyster growing areas, a swath of fertile estuary known as the Biloxi Marsh.
All that freshwater combined with high water temperatures in the Gulf to turn a normally nurturing environment against the oyster.
“Oysters are very resilient, they’re amazing really, but when you have these combinations of events, they can only hold on so long,” Bourque said. “For some of these areas, they’re producing close to zero oysters.”
Everyone in the local seafood business says November can’t come soon enough. By the middle of next month, oyster experts believe production will increase in areas farther to the west of the Mississippi River that saw less freshwater flowing through them. Oysters from Texas may pick up some of the slack for southeast Louisiana’s missed production as well.
Still, there’s no missing that the state’s normally prodigious oyster supply is scraping bottom this season.
Ed McIntyre, who runs five locations of Mr. Ed’s Oyster Bar & Fish House, has been able to keep a limited supply of oysters in his shuckers’ hands each day. But they run out early, so he’s had to redeploy idle shuckers to other duties in the kitchens.
“I’m trying to keep the team together to get guys through this,” McIntyre said.
In the fall, his restaurants usually go through 500 to 600 sacks of oysters a week. Lately he’s been lucky to get 200 sacks, assembling the haul from different dealers.
“Anything we get, it’s 10 sacks here, five there, five there. I’m constantly on the phone trying to make it happen,” McIntyre said.
The impact will likely be felt nationally, said Raz Halili, executive vice president of Prestige Oysters. His Texas-based company is one of the largest private leaseholders of Louisiana oyster beds and supplies restaurants across the country. These days he doesn’t have good news when his customers call.
“To be honest, it’s grim. I don’t see a good season for Louisiana at all,” he said. “We really got killed by that freshwater inflow.”
There are other options to keep oysters on the menu, including so-called “pillow packs,” or cases of packaged frozen oysters. These are suitable for frying and other cooked preparations. Seeing warning signs of a bad season to come, some restaurants began stocking up on frozen supplies.
But oysters on the half shell, the fullest and most delicate expression of the local oyster, require fresh, in-shell product. That’s why the shortage has shown up most noticeably at oyster bars.
While Louisiana has struggled, fresh oysters remain available from other parts of the Gulf. That includes the specialty farmed oysters that have established a niche at some New Orleans restaurants.
Sometimes called “off bottom oysters” or “cultivated oysters,” these are grown in floating enclosures, rather than harvested from reefs like traditional Gulf oysters. At anywhere from two to three times the price of the familiar Gulf oyster, they’re prized for the diversity of flavors they bring.
At Peche Seafood Grill, for instance, the oyster bar is serving a changing array of three or four different types of these specialty oysters, mostly from Alabama producers. Supply has remained steady, said Ryan Prewitt, the restaurant’s chef, but the conventionally grown oysters Peche normally serves beside them are often absent.
“It kills me to run an oyster list that doesn’t have Louisiana oysters on it,” Prewitt said. “The experience is supposed to be the diversity of flavors we can experience across them all.”
What’s more worrisome, he said, is the long-range prognosis for the state’s oyster production. The industry may be dealing with the havoc of this year’s freshwater influx long into the future.
“We’ve been hearing the warning bells on this all summer when the spillway was open,” he said. “What if they have to open the spillway next year too?”
This year marked the first time the Bonnet Carre Spillway was opened twice in the same year, and it set a new record for the number of days it was kept open. It was also the first time the spillway had been opened in two consecutive years.
Experts have attributed the increasing rain and rising water levels that led to its use to climate change.
“If this continues, we’ll still have oysters, but we won’t have the volumes that we shipped out for years and years and years,” said Jim Gossen, a veteran of the local seafood business and chairman of the Gulf Seafood Foundation.
Gossen has been an advocate of nascent efforts to develop more “off bottom” oyster cultivation in Louisiana, where several farms now operate around Grand Isle. He sees the potential for oyster farmers to diversify their business, and in theory, this method could also allow producers to move their oyster crop as water conditions change. Still, he said, that is far from a quick fix.
“One of the advantages of aquaculture is you can go where the water is best, but you can’t just up and go. It can take years to get the leases in order,” Gossen said.
The state has initiatives in place to help replenish oyster stock, transferring oysters from other areas to induce spawning and restart reefs. But it can take up to two years for Gulf oysters to grow to market size.
Bourque, with the state’s oyster program, said it is too soon to predict what a future season might bring for the areas that are struggling now.
“One thing we have to do is watch closely to make sure the areas that are producing don’t get depleted,” she said. “There’s a lot of demand for oysters now, but you have to leave enough to keep the populations going.”
Prices for oysters have spiked. Cvitanovich said he’s paying 20 percent more for oyster sacks compared to this time last year.
“We haven’t passed that increase on the customer, we’re absorbing it still, but I don’t know how long we can do it,” he said. “I am very concerned that the price of oysters has reached the ceiling and that they’ll stop being what they’ve always been, something everyone can enjoy here. You’re starting to get to the price of lobster and prime steak.”
Still, Cvitanovich said he tries to keep this season’s woes in context. If the spillway hadn’t diverted all the water it did, he points out, New Orleans might have faced more than an oyster shortage.
“Whatever we’re dealing with now,” he said, “all of these problems are better than if I have water in front of my restaurant.”

Scott displays carvings during PGC meeting

Wood carver Cleo Scott was guest speaker at the Patterson Garden Club Oct. 24 meeting.
He shared his carvings with the garden club including his lifelike birds, ducks and flowers. Each realistic piece is carved by hand with a special knife. Tupelo wood is used then painted with acrylics.
Treasurer Iris Roy presented Scott a gift of appreciation at the conclusion of his presentation.
Plans were made for a swamp tour on Nov. 16 and the Blue Star Veterans Service on Nov. 7 at Patterson Junior High School.
Cohosts for the meeting were Ginger Griffin and Sharon Larson.

Retailers pull Johnson’s baby powder after recall

Walmart, CVS and Rite Aid have pulled some or all 22-ounce bottles of Johnson’s baby powder from shelves to avoid confusing consumers, after a minuscule amount of asbestos was found in one bottle.
Johnson & Johnson recalled all 33,000 bottles from the same lot as that bottle on Oct. 18, a day after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration notified the company that routine testing discovered the asbestos in one bottle bought from an online retailer. The 22-ounce bottle came from a lot distributed in 2018.
Baby powder bottles in other sizes are still available from retailers.
The recall comes as J&J is fighting thousands of lawsuits alleging the talc in its iconic baby powder was contaminated with asbestos and gave plaintiffs ovarian cancer or mesothelioma. The company has insisted that tests of its product over 40 years have not found asbestos contamination.
Johnson & Johnson is working with the FDA to investigate how the asbestos got into the single bottle, including whether it was tampered with. J&J advised consumers to stop using any bottles from the lot, #22318RB.
“As a safeguard, we’ve pulled all 22-ounce bottles until Johnson & Johnson” finishes investigating, Rite Aid spokesman Chris Savarese said Friday, adding the bottles were put in storage.
A Walmart spokeswoman said it had removed all 22-ounce bottles bearing the same UPC barcode as the recalled lot, but other 22-ounce bottles are still available.
Walmart and Rite Aid noted they set up computer system blocks to prevent customers from buying the product in case any was still on a shelf.
CVS Health said it’s removed all 22-ounce bottles from both its pharmacies and CVS.com.
“This is a normal protocol we follow out of an abundance of caution and to help prevent customer confusion in our stores,” CVS said in a statement.
It added that customers who purchased the product from a CVS pharmacy can return it for a refund.
Walgreen’s didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

Mom in dating game ponders trading attraction for security

DEAR ABBY: I’m a 40-year-old mom of two girls who has been single for five years. In that time, I’ve dated a few men, but haven’t found one who fulfills my “wish list.” The last man I was interested in seemed like he had possibilities. There was a strong mutual attraction. We spent a lot of time together, went on dates and were physically intimate. However, because of his recent divorce and subsequent emotional struggles, it became apparent that we wouldn’t work out in the long term. It was disappointing, but we are still good friends and talk daily. In the ...

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