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Sanford earns MVP honors

Berwick High School's Mitchell Sanford, left, was named Most Valuable Player for the West Team May 17 in the first of two games last weekend as part of the Louisiana High School Coaches Association's East-West All-Star game at Louisiana College in Pineville. The East swept the two games, winning 7-1 Friday and 9-6 Saturday. With Sanford is Friday's East MVP, Jacob Bernard of Lakeshore.

Bowling report

PROGRESSIVE BOWLING LEAGUE May 21 – Week 34 Final Standings W L Bowling Stones 82½ 53½ Gutter Cleaners 66½ 69½ Putt’s Honky Tonk 62 74 Wild Ones 61 75 High scratch series and game of 1024 and 383 were bowled by Gutter Cleaners. High handicap series and game of 1276 and 462 were bowled by Bowling Stones. High scratch bowlers were Vickie Hebert 546 (177, 204, 165) and Angela Fields 483 (191, 141, 151). One split was accomplished by Lillian Rebardie, 5-7-9. ...

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Horseshoe Spring League Week 8 report

Bayou Horseshoe Pitchers Association Spring League Week 8 W L Fab 4 48.5 23.5 Corn Holes 43.5 28.5 Swamp Dogs 41.5 30.5 STAG 36 36 Blue Suede Shoes 35.5 36.5 High scratch point average: (30’) Tim Gilmore 84.3, Al Dodson 76.4 and Dudley Michel 64.1; and (40’) Clyde Landry 51.0, Dwain Arceneaux 46.5 and Jimmy Percle 45.2. High individual ringer percentage: (30’) Gilmore 63.5, Dodson 50.2 and Michel 43.5; and (40’) Landry 31.8, Arceneaux 27.1 and ...

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Get it Growing: It is blueberry time

Louisianans are fortunate to live in a state that supports blueberry growth. Blueberries are easy to grow and one of the most nutritionally dense foods on Earth. They are a significant source of vitamins and secondary metabolites that are widely studied for health benefits.
Blueberries are one of the richest sources of ascorbic acid and is an excellent source of antioxidants. Blueberries contain natural compounds called anthocyanins, procyanidins, chlorogenic acid and flavonoid compounds. Anthocyanin is the main antioxidant found in blueberries.
Antioxidants provide cancer-fighting power, help with cataracts and macular degeneration, have anti-diabetic properties and have been shown to decrease both blood pressure and cholesterol, thereby reducing the incidence of atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease risk.
Hippocrates, the ancient Greek physician and “Father of Medicine” said, “Let food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food.”
Find local growers in Louisiana at the website www.pickyourown.org/LA.htm. And consider growing your own at home.
Rabbiteye blueberry is a deciduous shrub native to the southeastern United States. It has been named a Louisiana Super Plant because of its reliability as an excellent performer in gardens and landscapes, and it also does great in containers.
Fruit ripens over a 4- to 6-week period so harvest can occur for several weeks. Well-maintained, mature rabbiteye blueberry bushes can be expected to yield more than 10 pounds per bush, and sometimes up to 30 pounds per bush.
Rabbiteye blueberries grow in USDA hardiness zones 8 to 10 and require acidic soils with a pH of 4.2 to 5.5. For the best fruit, a minimum of six to eight hours of full sun are required, and bushes will have the best production in full sun all day. The shrubs grow 8 feet tall and 6 feet wide and should be planted while they are dormant during fall or winter with a 4-to-6-foot spacing between plants.
Rabbiteye blueberries produce best through cross pollination, and at least two to three varieties should be planted together to provide adequate pollination.
Ensure proper moisture, especially during drought periods or in sandy soils. Apply 3 to 4 inches of mulch around bushes. Fertilizer should be divided into multiple applications each year and applied at low rates.
Heavy pruning is not necessary; however, some pruning may be desirable to keep the fruit within easy reach and to encourage new growth.
Choose a variety that has a chilling requirement compatible with your location. The southernmost areas of Louisiana may not get enough chill hours for consistent fruit production in all varieties. Traditional varieties like Premier, Climax, Brightwell, Tifblue and Powderblue remain well-suited to most areas of Louisiana.

U.S. diabetes cases fall as obesity rises

NEW YORK (AP) — The number of new diabetes cases among U.S. adults keeps falling, even as obesity rates climb, and health officials aren’t sure why.
New federal data released Tuesday found the number of new diabetes diagnoses fell to about 1.3 million in 2017, down from 1.7 million in 2009.
Earlier research had spotted a decline, and the new report shows it’s been going on for close to a decade. But health officials are not celebrating.
“The bottom line is we don’t know for sure what’s driving these trends,” said the lead author of the new report, Dr. Stephen Benoit of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Among the possibilities: Changes in testing and getting people to improve their health before becoming diabetic.
The report was published by the journal BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care. The statistics run through 2017. Last year’s numbers are not yet available, Benoit said.
Diabetes is a disease in which sugar builds up in the blood. The most common form is tied to obesity, and the number of diabetics ballooned as U.S. obesity rates increased.
But other factors also might have pushed up annual diabetes diagnoses from 2000 to 2010, and they may partly explain why the numbers have been going down since, some experts said.
First, the diagnostic threshold was lowered in the late 1990s. That caused more people to be counted as diabetics, but the impact of that may have played out.
“We might have mined out a lot of the previously unrecognized cases” and so new diagnoses in the last several years are more likely to be actual new illnesses, said Dr. John Buse, a University of North Carolina diabetes expert.
Meanwhile, doctors have increasingly used a newer blood test to diagnoses diabetes. It’s much easier than tests that required patients to fast for 12 hours or to undergo repeated blood draws over two hours.
The American Diabetes Association recommended the new test, known as the hemoglobin A1C blood test, for routine screening in 2010. Because it’s easier to do, it would be expected to lead to more diagnoses. But some experts say it may miss a large proportion of early cases in which people aren’t showing symptoms. “You may be missing people that would have been diagnosed” with older tests, Benoit said.
Another possibility: Increasingly, more doctors have been diagnosing “prediabetes,” a health condition in which blood sugar levels are high but not high enough to hit the diabetes threshold. Physicians typically push such patients into exercise programs and urge them to change their diet.
“Prediabetes is becoming a more accepted diagnosis” and may be causing an increasing number of patients to improve their health before becoming diabetic, said Dr. Tannaz Moin, a UCLA expert.
The new report is based on a large national survey conducted by the government every year. Participants were asked if they had been diagnosed with diabetes, and also if the diagnosis was made in the previous year.
It found the rate of new diabetes cases fell to 6 per 1,000 U.S. adults in 2017, from 9.2 per 1,000 in 2009. That’s a 35 percent drop, and marks the longest decline since the government started tracking the statistic nearly 40 years ago, according to the CDC.
The decrease was mainly seen among white adults, the researchers said.
Meanwhile, the overall estimate of how many Americans have diabetes — whether the diagnosis is recent or not — has been holding steady at 80 per 1,000 U.S. adults. That translates to about 21 million Americans.
Diabetes has continued to become more common among young adults and people who are black and Hispanic, the report noted.

Girlfriend competes for time with man still living with ex

DEAR ABBY: I have been dating my boyfriend for two years. He is 10 years older, in his mid-40s. He is wonderful, kind, smart and treats me well. There is only one issue: He still lives with his ex-girlfriend from 10 years ago. She and I do not get along. She infringes on my time with him — has him run her errands, drive her around, etc. when I am at his (their) house. He also ends calls with me at night to talk with her, and his texts abruptly stop. Later I’ll find out she was in his bedroom ...

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Flood woes all too familiar for many in Basin

Routine flooding has become the new normal for many residents and business owners in the Atchafalaya Basin.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ New Orleans District held a meeting Wednesday at Morgan City High School to discuss with the public the effects of the opening of the Morganza Spillway on the area.

State leaders, through the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority, have committed to fully funding the roughly $7 million project to install a temporary floodgate on Bayou Chene to prevent additional backwater flooding in the Atchafalaya Basin caused by the Morganza opening. Closure of Bayou Chene should be finished by June 5.

This year the eastern United States has seen its wettest year of the past 124 years, which made diverting flow from the Mississippi River through the Morganza structure necessary, said Maj. Jordon Davis, deputy commander for the New Orleans District.

Authorities will begin with a “slow” opening of Morganza June 2, meaning that the amount of water released will gradually increase over multiple days until the total flow reaches 150,000 cubic feet per second, said Maj. Jordan Davis, the Corps’ deputy district commander.

Officials expect water levels on the Atchafalaya to rise from June 12 to June 15 with a projected 10-foot crest June 18. The river was sitting at roughly 8 1/2 feet Wednesday, Davis said.

Those affected by high water in the area expressed their concerns during Wednesday’s meeting.

Steve Bergeron owns a storage facility on the unprotected side of the floodwall along Front Street in Morgan City.

A portion of that building has flooded each year since 2011. And for the past three to five years, the facility has been inundated with water, Bergeron said.

Flood waters have caused significant damage to the building and carried away the dock.

“There’s nothing we can do about it, because we have no recourse from either the Corps of Engineers or the federal government,” he said.

Bergeron is considering relocation and mitigation “that would help us relocate it as well as all the other business owners on Front Street,” Bergeron said.

“We’re still paying taxes on the building. Everybody pays those taxes, and we’re looking for something back that would help us,” Bergeron said.

Jim Waskom, director of the Governor’s Office Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, said a federal emergency declaration must be issued before individuals can receive hazard mitigation flood relief assistance.

Later Wednesday, Gov. John Bel Edwards announced that President Donald Trump approved his request for a federal disaster declaration for Louisiana’s flooding issues.

The temporary Bayou Chene closure this year should keep the backwater flooding in lower St. Martin Parish from getting any worse and provide some relief for residents, St. Martin Parish President Chester Cedars said.

Lakeside Subdivision resident Terry Guarisco expressed concern and frustration over this area of Morgan City not yet being protected by the levee system.

“It’s like we don’t exist. They’ve done all the other levees except the one at the lakefront of Lakeside,” Guarisco said.

Guarisco has heard some explanations for why Lakeside, which is located on the banks of Lake Palourde, isn’t receiving flood protection. But he and others were concerned whether the community would need protection again from sand-filled Hesco baskets as was done in the 2011 flood.

Tim Matte, executive director of the St. Mary Levee District, said authorities don’t anticipate needing to place Hesco baskets along Lakeside Subdivision. However, if the need does arise to place those baskets to protect Lakeside, “we could easily mobilize some protection across there,” Matte said.

Officials are still trying to determine the proper way to provide permanent protection for Lakeside. Lack of funds has also stalled progress on that project, Matte said.

All of the levees except in Lakeside were raised substantially since 2011 as part of the Morgan City Levee Improvements Project. Also, the Bayou Chene closure should alleviate any flooding issues in Lakeside, Matte said.

The Siracusaville area just outside of the Morgan City limits should be well protected from flooding, too, with completion of a project to raise levees protecting that community.

Carol Aucoin lives and operates a bed and breakfast in Belle River in Assumption Parish. Her yard has over a foot of water in it, and the road leading to her business has more than 1 1/2 feet over it. Flooding has been an issue for that area since February, Aucoin said.

Flooding has become a major issue for residents to even be able to travel in higher vehicles, such as trucks, Aucoin said.

Aucoin is worried about how much backwater flooding the Morganza opening will cause once it’s opened to the maximum projected 150,000 cubic feet per second level in the next couple of weeks.

The St. Mary Levee District, which installed temporary floodgates on Bayou Chene in 2011 and 2016, is again managing this year’s closure. Officials said they weren’t able to make a decision sooner to install a temporary floodgate, because they had to first make sure the state would commit to funding the project.

By summer 2021, officials hope to have the $80 million permanent floodgate in place. At that point, officials will be able to make a decision to close the permanent gate and make the closure within half a day, said state Sen. Bret Allain, R-Franklin.

Thomas Olander, chairman of the Louisiana Shrimp Association, said the Atchafalaya River to the west part of Vermilion Bay is inundated with freshwater, which has been catastrophic for the shrimping industry. Olander asked what’s being done to help commercial fishermen in St. Mary, Vermilion and Iberia parishes.

Allain said state Department of Wildlife and Fisheries officials are aware of the situation and working with the governor to determine what can be done to help commercial fishermen.

Levee board to hold special meeting Thursday

The St. Mary Levee District Commission will hold a special meeting at noon Thursday at the Port of Morgan City's Government Emergency Operations Center to discuss matters related to flooding.

The agenda includes discussion and action necessitated by the 2019 flood event, renewal of a resolution passed March 14 to authorize Commission President Bill Hidalgo to declare an emergency in connection with record flooding on the Mississippi and Atchafalaya rivers. Other business to be discussed are action on ratification of the intergovernmental agreement with the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority relative to CPRA's funding of the Bayou Chene emergency closure and action on retaining law enforcement agencies to provide additional patrols.

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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