RSS Feed

Matriarch uses inheritance to keep her family in line

DEAR ABBY: For the last 12 years, we have been traveling 7½ hours to see my husband’s grandparents. This happens several times a year. Each time I pray it will be the last visit. Invariably, when we return home, I am sick for about a week, and it’s getting worse. At 96, Grandma isn’t cleaning the house (Grandpa died four years ago). She lives on her own in the country. Grandma has fallen, can’t cook for herself and still drives. The closest family member lives seven hours away. Grandma has always been a manipulator, and I’m tired of how she ...

PLEASE LOG IN FOR PREMIUM CONTENT. Our website requires visitors to log in to view the best local news from St. Mary Now. Not yet a subscriber? Subscribe today!

Morgan City 9s, 11s begin state tourney action Friday

The Morgan City 9-year-old and 11-year-old All-Stars both will compete in the state tournaments for their respective age groups in Jonesboro, beginning Friday.
In 9-year-old action, Morgan City will begin play in the 10-team tournament with a 3 p.m. contest Friday against Monroe in pool play.
Saturday, the tournament’s teams will compete in single-elimination bracket play.
The tournament field features Morgan City, Monroe, Gonzales, Ponchatoula, Jackson Parish, Union Parish, Ruston, Oakdale, and the District 8 Champion and District 8 Runner-Up, who are not identified on the bracket.
In 11-year-old action, Morgan City will compete in Pool A with Monroe and the District 8 Runner-Up and the District 8 Third-Place finisher, who both are not identified.
Morgan City will meet the District 8 Runner-Up Friday at 3 p.m.
Saturday, Morgan City will play the District 8 Third-Place team at 9 a.m. and Monroe at 5 p.m.
The top two teams from Pool A and Pool B will compete in the single-elimination championship bracket.
Pool B features Gonzales, Jackson Parish and the District 8 Champion, who is not identified.

Elite Redfish Series coming to Morgan City next weekend

Morgan City will be the host city when the Elite Redfish Tournament Series event comes to town July 12-13.
The upcoming tournament will be the second leg of the Check-it Stick Team Tournament division, where anglers compete for cash, prizes and points for an opportunity to fish in the Tidewater Team Championship on South Padre Island, Texas, Oct. 4-5-6.
The July event in Morgan City is one of three tournaments on the team series schedule. The first event was held in Slidell in April and the third is scheduled for Port Lavaca, Texas, Aug. 30-31.
“In this event, we limit the field size, and we’re hoping to get pretty close to that 50-team mark of 100 anglers and come in here and have a really good showing for our first time in Morgan City,” said Pat Malone, host, emcee and producer of the Elite Redfish Tournament and Television Series.
One of the tournament’s partners for the local event is Cajun Coast Visitors & Convention Bureau. The Cajun Coast has had previous experience hosting major fishing events in years past like the FLW, BASS MASTERS and more recently, the Bass Nation High School State Tournament.
“We have certain goals, and one of them is to try and fill the hotels,” Cajun Coast Executive Director Carrie Stansbury said. “Usually, fishermen coming into the area for an event also have practice days prior, so these tournaments help to fill some of those rooms and help the local economy.”
One of the things the Elite Redfish Tournament Series brings to the table is Discovery Channel programming. Malone says more than 93 million homes will have an opportunity to watch the series when it airs on television in the fall.
“The Discovery Channel reaches across the country and the world,” Malone said. “We hope to get just a small fraction of that. We can make a pretty large economic impact for the area without doing any environmental damage, so that’s always our goal. We try to bring as much money as we can by bringing our anglers, who are all staying in hotels for the event and also while practicing, where they’re buying fuel, food and all that stuff.”
“When we show the series during the fourth quarter of the year and first quarter of the following year, when there’s snow over 80 percent of the country,” Malone continued, “we’re showing them a place they can plan to go. They can come to a place like Morgan City and have a good time, good weather, good fishing and good food, too.”
Like BASS MASTERS, there are recognizable names on the Elite Redfish Tournament Series, according to Malone, like Kevin Broussard and Bill Broussard, Mike Frenette and his son Michael Frenette, and Dwayne Eschete, who is one of the Elite Redfish tour’s top money earners during the past 5 years.
Mike Frenette teamed with BASS MASTERS ELITE angler Shaw Grigsby, a household name when it comes to bass fishing, at last year’s Battle on The Boardwalk Check-it Stick tournament in Kemah, Texas.
One of the concerns tournament organizers have had leading up to next week’s event has been the local flood waters.
“We initially thought we might have to cancel the tournament, but once they decided not to open the Morganza Spillway, we’ve been monitoring it closely,” Stansbury said. “There was concerns that with all of the high water the landings would be unsafe, making it difficult to launch. There are a couple local guys, Bradley Matte and Bubba Corbin, who fish the tournament and have been watching the water for us and volunteered to pressure wash the landings to help make sure no one will slip and hurt themselves.”
Malone says though sign ups were slow initially, as the tournament approaches and the water conditions have stabilized, they are catching up now.
Competitors will check in and launch at the Amelia Boat Launch between 5:30 a.m. and 7 a.m. Friday and Saturday. Weigh in will take place under the bridge at the barbecue festival at Greenwood and Front streets in Morgan City.
The top 25 teams who score enough points from the three Check-it Stick events will get a chance to compete for a fully-rigged Tidewater Bay Boat with a Yamaha Outboard in October.
For those interested, there still is time to sign up for the tournament, as long as it’s prior to the Monday before the scheduled event. For more information, visit www.theredfishseries.com.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Flores is The Daily Review’s Outdoor Writer.

SMC 8s will begin state tourney play Thursday

The St. Mary Central 8-year-old All-Stars will begin play at the 2019 AA State Tournament in Ruston Thursday.
St. Mary will begin play in bracket A where it will compete with DeQuincy, East Ouachita Recreation District and Minden.
St. Mary Central will meet DeQuincy Thursday at 5 p.m.
Friday, St. Mary Central will play East Ouachita at 9 a.m. and Minden at 1 p.m.
Following pool play, bracket play will begin Saturday and conclude Sunday with the crowing of the state champion.
The tournament, which features 24 teams, will conclude Sunday.
St. Mary Central advanced to the state tournament after finishing 3-0 in the District 3 Tournament last weekend at Peltier Park in Thibodaux with wins against Morgan City, Thibodaux and Franklin.

To kick up chicken salad, turn to your spice rack

To apply some modern tricks to old-school chicken salad, we turned to our spice rack. Most spices boast an impressive portfolio of phytonutrients — often the very same compounds that give them such potent flavor.
Mild, creamy chicken salad was an ideal canvas. First, we found we could replace two-thirds of the mayonnaise with low-fat yogurt (and use less dressing overall) and still deliver enough creamy tang to keep everyone happy. To spice up our dressing, we added turmeric and black pepper.
Long used as a medicinal spice in India, turmeric is associated with many health benefits. Black pepper — commonly paired with turmeric — may boost the potency of turmeric, especially in the presence of a little heart-healthy fat.
With our dressing ready, we poached chicken breasts to perfection by heating them just until the water reached 170 F, then removing the pot from the heat and letting the chicken cook through slowly and gently.
For add-ins, we opted for dried cherries and toasted walnuts to provide crunch.
Instead of a whisper of herbs, we stirred in 1/3-cup parsley leaves (herbs, like spices, contain concentrated nutrients), which added a pop of green color and an herbal back note. Two cups of tender baby spinach provided a fresh finish to our updated chicken salad sandwiches.

TUMERIC CHICKEN SALAD SANDWICHES
Start to finish: 1 hour
Salt and pepper
2 (4- to 6-ounce) organic boneless, skinless chicken breasts, no more than 1 inch thick, trimmed of all visible fat
1 tsp. cold-pressed extra-virgin olive oil
½ tsp ground turmeric
Pinch ground cinnamon
¼ cup organic plain low-fat yogurt
2 Tbsps. mayonnaise
2 tsps. lemon juice
½ tsp. Dijon mustard
1 garlic clove, minced
1/3 cup walnuts, toasted and chopped coarse
1/3 cup fresh parsley leaves
¼ cup unsweetened dried tart cherries
1 shallot, minced
12 slices hearty 100% whole-grain sandwich bread or your favorite wrap
2 ounces (2 cups) baby spinach
Dissolve 1 tablespoon salt in 6 cups cold water in Dutch oven. Submerge chicken in water. Heat pot over medium heat until water registers 170 F. Turn off heat, cover pot, and let stand until chicken registers 165 F, 15 to 17 minutes.
Transfer chicken to paper towel-lined rimmed baking sheet and refrigerate until cool, about 30 minutes.
Combine oil, turmeric and cinnamon together in bowl and microwave until fragrant, about 30 seconds; let cool slightly. In large bowl, whisk oil mixture, yogurt, mayonnaise, lemon juice, mustard, garlic, ½ teaspoon pepper, and ¼ teaspoon salt together until smooth.
Pat cooled chicken dry with paper towels and cut into ½-inch pieces. Add chicken, walnuts, parsley, cherries and shallot to bowl with yogurt mixture. Toss to combine and season with salt and pepper to taste.
Divide chicken salad evenly over 6 bread slices, then top with spinach. Top with remaining 6 bread slices. Or use your favorite wrap. Serve.
Servings: 6
—Nutrition information per serving: 485 calories; 141 calories from fat; 16 g fat (2 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 31 mg cholesterol; 762 mg sodium; 70 g carbohydrate; 17 g fiber; 10 g sugar; 25 g protein.

Lines are drawn in family feud over recovering addict

DEAR ABBY: My stepbrother “Pete” is a recovering addict who did significant prison time for possession and gang affiliations. He has also had multiple DUI convictions. He’s been out for two years and is holding a job and taking care of his kids part-time. My parents think he’s completely rehabilitated, but I think he’s using again, based on his behavior. He has tried to get my husband to give him some of a prescription medication he takes, and jokes about “acting good” when with family but not at home. I decided I no longer want to be around Pete, particularly ...

PLEASE LOG IN FOR PREMIUM CONTENT. Our website requires visitors to log in to view the best local news from St. Mary Now. Not yet a subscriber? Subscribe today!

Mayor: Patterson needs a flood plan

PATTERSON — The City Council heard more Tuesday about the possible factors that worsened two floods in two months: too much mown grass blown into streets, inadequate culverts, low-lying lots, trash in the ditches and construction that changes the runoff flow.
What the city needs before another big rainfall, Mayor Rodney Grogan said, is a plan in case money starts raining down from Washington.
Also at Tuesday’s regular monthly meeting, the council passed ordinances to let the St. Mary Community Action Agency and the Council on Aging use city facilities; appointed a new prosecutor for the mayor’s court; considered changing the speed limit on Red Cypress Road; and heard that bear-proof trash cans may actually be working too well.

Flood plan for flood plain
Patterson, like other Tri-City communities, struggled with high water in two one-day downpours in April and June.
Red Cypress Road resident Pat Wiggins, who appeared earlier this year to say cane trucks were making her life miserable, was back Tuesday to report that the June flooding put 1-1/2 feet of water on her property. Water didn’t get into her mobile home, which is raised.
But “I don’t know what to do,” Wiggins said. “But something has to be done.”
She said after the meeting that she didn’t feel she got much help.
But Grogan made a pitch for a comprehensive flood control plan for Patterson, based on discussions he attended recently in Washington.
Grogan was one of 25 mayors from Gulf Coast states and Arkansas who were invited to talk with federal officials. Flood control was an important topic.
Grogan learned that $1.6 billion in federal money is headed to Louisiana, including $60 million to be shared by agencies in Louisiana’s eight watersheds after the state takes a $20 million cut.
One big boost for Patterson seems unlikely, and a citywide flood fix would be expensive. Fixing problems south of the railroad tracks alone is known to require $3 million, the mayor said.
“But if we have a plan to do it in increments, we can get some things done,” Grogan said.
One place to start may be gauges placed at strategic points to measure differences in water levels, City Engineer Clay Breaud said. Those differences would help pinpoint blockages.
The need for grants makes the 2020 Census important, Grogan said. Government grants often rely on population totals and factors such as median household income, all tracked by the U.S. Census Bureau.

New prosecutor
The council confirmed the nomination of Erica Rose, an assistant district attorney in the 16th Judicial District Attorney’s Office, as the mayor’s court prosecutor.
State law governing cities originally allowed the mayor or the mayor’s representative to serve as both judge and prosecutor in city courts, which handle alleged violations of city laws. But that system has come under fire for creating an impermissible conflict of interest.
So the council recently passed an ordinance creating the city prosecutor position.
Rose already serves in the same role for Franklin.
“My job is to protect the city of Patterson and make sure the laws are enforced,” Rose said. “But I have to make sure the laws are enforced equitably."

CAA and COA
The council unanimously approved ordinances authorizing lease agreements with the Community Action Agency and the Council on Aging.
The CAA will use space in the new Community Center at the old junior high school site. The Council on Aging will lease the old city hall.
From the CAA, the city will receive the consideration required by the lease in the form of the Head Start program, feeding programs, housing counseling for residents, health transportation for the needy and a residential energy program.
The consideration received from the Council on Aging will be services for seniors including meals at the site and for the home-bound, a wellness program, arts and crafts, civic information, and day trips.

What the
market will bear
Bears are stirring up more than old coffee grounds when they dig through trash cans to look for a nighttime snack.
Residents south of the railroad tracks use trash pickup containers with latches to keep the bears from spilling the garbage. According to the council discussion, bears that can’t find grub on one side of the tracks are foraging on the other.
That creates a problem. Like other companies, Pelican Waste & Debris, which picks up trash in Patterson, has gone to automated trash pickup.
Public Works Director Steve Bierhorst said the bear-proof cans require more effort to empty because they’re latched.
The company already factors the extra labor in for its south-of-the-tracks routes. But if the use of bear-proof containers becomes more widespread, costs will go up for Pelican and ultimately for Patterson residents.
Bierhorst threw out an idea for the Shady Grove area near U.S. 90 and north of the tracks, and it may not prove popular: asking residents to unlatch their containers after daylight but before 7 a.m.
The bears clear out after dawn, and the unlatched containers could be emptied into the trucks without adding manpower.
Change
in speed?
Without taking final action, the council talked briefly about changing the speed limit on Red Cypress Road, which had been the source of Wiggins’ cane truck problems.
But there are other problems as well, Grogan said, including young people driving to and from school and a lack of shoulders and good lighting on the road.
The speed limit is currently 35 mph from U.S. 90 to Martin Luther King Avenue, and 45 mph from MLK to La. 182.

Pages

ST. MARY NOW

Franklin Banner-Tribune
P.O. Box 566, Franklin, LA 70538
Phone: 337-828-3706
Fax: 337-828-2874

Morgan City Review
1014 Front Street, Morgan City, LA 70380
Phone: 985-384-8370
Fax: 985-384-4255