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FRANCES MARINO BONNER

May 22, 1931 — May 19, 2019
Frances Marino Bonner, 87, a resident of Morgan City, passed away Sunday, May 19, 2019, at her home surrounded by her loving family.
Frances was born on May 22, 1931, in Morgan City, the daughter of Philip Marino and Marianna DiMiceli Marino.
She will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by one daughter, Pamala Bonner Vidos of Morgan City; eight grandchildren, Kimbal Bonner and wife Kristen, Torrie Catano and husband Miguel, Erica Pederson and husband Donovan, Sara Gierman and husband Rob, Philip Bonner and wife Ashleigh, Donald “D.J.” Christensen, Marci Berger and Shayne Berger; 15 great-grandchildren; and her loving fur baby, Pebbles.
Frances was preceded in death by her parents, Philip and Marianna Marino; husband, Donald C. Bonner; one son, Donald P. Bonner; two daughters, Karen Bonner Womack and Deborah Bonner Berger; one granddaughter, Jessica Berger; and two brothers, Carlo Marino and Andrew Marino.
The family would like to thank the staff of Journey Hospice for all of the care they gave Frances.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 11 a.m. on Friday, May 31, 2019, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church with Father Freddie Decal celebrating Mass. A visitation will be held from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. on Thursday, May 30, 2019, with a Rosary being recited at 7 p.m. at Twin City Funeral Home. The visitation will resume from 8 a.m. until 10:30 a.m. on Friday, May 31, 2019, at Twin City Funeral Home. Following Mass, Frances will be laid to rest in the Morgan City Cemetery.

SANFORD DALE ROSSON

Sanford Dale Rosson, 76, born in Morgan City, Louisiana, longtime resident of Atlanta and Athens, Georgia, passed away on Tuesday, May 21, 2019, at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia.
Sam was a loving husband, father, grandfather and friend. He was a warm and welcoming person with a great sense of humor, a talented craftsman, and a Navy veteran. He loved life and appreciated its many simple gifts. His family is heartbroken and feels the intensity of his loss.
He is survived by his wife, Myrna Brizzard Rosson; daughters, Saige and Hollis; granddaughter, Abra; and brother, David Rosson.
He was preceded in death by his son, Colby; and his parents, Dorothy Stansbury Rosson and Sanford Guest Rosson.
A memorial ceremony is planned at his home in Athens on June 2nd for family and friends. In lieu of flowers, please send a donation to your favored charity in his memory.

Wheel House for May 29

FEEDING PROGRAM
For needy and senior citizens at Mt. Pilgrim Baptist Church, 113 Federal Ave., Morgan City, at noon Saturday, June 1. For info call 985-384-6800.

VACATION BIBLE
Camp at Morning Glory Ministries, 1323 Railroad Ave., Morgan City, 6-8 p.m. June 3-6. Theme: “Fruit of the Spirit.” Features games, fun, craft, food and learning. Free and community invited.

VACATION BIBLE
School at Mt. Pilgrim Baptist Church, 113 Federal Ave., Morgan City, 6-8 p.m. June 3-7. Pre-school to adult welcome. Call 985-384-7512.

LARRY CRAIG FARIA

Larry Craig Faria, 61, a native of Shreveport and resident of Patterson died Tuesday, May 21, 2019, at Teche Regional Medical Center.
He is survived by a daughter, Katie Adams of Patterson; his mother, Geraldine Royer of Acushnet, Massachusetts; a brother, Tony Ebbs of Baton Rouge; and a sister, Karen Silvia of Massachusetts.
He was preceded in death by his father.
Twin City Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Five years of service at M C Bank

Consumer Lender Sonya Mitchell celebrated her five years of service recently. From left: M C Bank’s Executive Vice President and Chief Lending Officer Barton Blanco; CEO Larry J. Callais; Mitchell; and Senior Vice President Harold Smith.

40 years of service at M C Bank

Submitted Photos
M C Bank acknowledges its employee years of service at five-year intervals. Recently M C Bank’s AVP/supervisor of imaging, research & adjustments, Charlene Hall, reached her 40 years of service. On hand for the presentation of her anniversary gift are, from left: CEO Larry J. Callais; Hall; Vice President-IT Manager Jason Pye; and M C Bank President Jeremy Callais.

Louque joins TRMC staff

Meghan V. Louque, MD, has joined the medical staff at Thibodaux Regional Medical Center. She has joined the practice of the Children’s Clinic located at 807 Ridgefield Road, Thibodaux.
Louque received her medical degree from LSU Health Sciences Center in Shreveport, and completed a pediatric residency from Levine Children’s Hospital in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Louque is board certified by the American Board of Pediatric, and is a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Jim Brown: Forgiveness is a struggle when we're wronged

Louisiana Congressman Steve Scalise says he is still struggling over whether to forgive the man who shot him two years ago. “I’ve never, internally, formally forgiven the shooter from the baseball shooting,” he said. “It’s some-thing I’ve struggled with as a Catholic.”
It would be hard for many, including me, to forgive such a transgression. I’m still personally quite bitter over wrongs that happened to me some years back. So I understand the reluctance to forgive.
But what about turning the other cheek, and forgiving one’s enemies as we read in scripture throughout the New Testament? Can we suffocate our bitterness and a feeling that some form of retribution is unnecessary? Does continuing anger and hostility become tantamount to suffocating oneself emotionally? “The effects on one’s health from bottled up anger and resentment can range from anxiety and depression to blood pressure and increased risk of heart attacks,” says professor of medicine Amit Sood at the Mayo Clinic. “Forgiveness, by contrast, allows one to focus on more positive thoughts and relationships. It allows you to free up the real estate in your brain taken up by negative thinking.”
Forgive and forget, so goes much of the conventional wisdom. Move on with your life and just chalk it all up to tough lessons learned. But isn’t it possible to continue with the positive aspects in one’s life, learn from past mistakes, and continue to grow, putting aside the bitter feeling that you suffered a terrible wrong? Simply put, don’t maintain continuing anger, but don’t forget.
In the fall of 2015, Pope Francis sent the body of St. Maria Goretti on a limited U.S. tour. The youngest canonized Saint has a compelling story of suffering and forgiveness. St. Maria was born into poverty and raised in Corinaldo, a beautiful medieval village in central Italy. Maria, whose father died when she was nine, raised her five siblings when she was only eleven while her mother worked in the fields. One day, a twenty-year-old neighbor accosted her and, as she fought him, he brutally stabbed her repeatedly.
Maria died the next day, but her last words were, “I forgive Alessandro Serenelli (her attacker) and I want him with me in heaven forever.” Alessandro was so overcome that he lived the converted life of holiness in prison and eventually became a Franciscan lay brother.
One of the stops on St. Maria’s U.S. pilgrimage was Baton Rouge, where the coffin with her remains was to be displayed in veneration at Lady of Mercy Catholic Church for three days. Crowds of worshipers were expected to visit the Saint from a number of states. The pastor there, Father Cleo Milano, has been a good friend and I called him to see if there was a possibility of any quiet time with St. Maria. He suggested I come by the church close to midnight after the doors were locked down for the night.
As the sanctuary was about to be bolted and the lights were dimmed, I made my way down the center aisle of the church and sat beside the remains of St. Maria. I touched her coffin and prayed for my family. And then, I thought to myself, this beautiful child, now a Saint, was brave and open-hearted enough to forgive the cruel demon that took her life. Although I too was wronged in ways that I felt were so unjust, should I not be empathetic and compassionate enough to forgive those who so aggrieved me?
I thought about it for good while. I guess I even prayed over the decision. After much contemplation, I quietly got up from my pew and walked out of the church. So what was my decision? Could I forgive those transgressions?
Often, your adversaries, by their impertinence, bring themselves down and destroy their own reputations. In my case, I decided just to wait them out. They ended up destroying themselves. What’s the old saying: If you stand by the river long enough, your enemies will come floating by.
I’d urge the congressman to take his time and be sure that forgiveness is something he really wants to give. If not, just bide his time. After all, revenge is a dish best served cold.
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all of his columns at www.jimbrownusa.com.
Louisiana Congressman Steve Scalise says he is still struggling over whether to forgive the man who shot him two years ago. “I’ve never, internally, formally forgiven the shooter from the baseball shooting,” he said. “It’s some-thing I’ve struggled with as a Catholic.”
It would be hard for many, including me, to forgive such a transgression. I’m still personally quite bitter over wrongs that happened to me some years back. So I understand the reluctance to forgive.
But what about turning the other cheek, and forgiving one’s enemies as we read in scripture throughout the New Testament? Can we suffocate our bitterness and a feeling that some form of retribution is unnecessary? Does continuing anger and hostility become tantamount to suffocating oneself emotionally? “The effects on one’s health from bottled up anger and resentment can range from anxiety and depression to blood pressure and increased risk of heart attacks,” says professor of medicine Amit Sood at the Mayo Clinic. “Forgiveness, by contrast, allows one to focus on more positive thoughts and relationships. It allows you to free up the real estate in your brain taken up by negative thinking.”
Forgive and forget, so goes much of the conventional wisdom. Move on with your life and just chalk it all up to tough lessons learned. But isn’t it possible to continue with the positive aspects in one’s life, learn from past mis-takes, and continue to grow, putting aside the bitter feeling that you suffered a terrible wrong? Simply put, don’t maintain continuing anger, but don’t forget.
In the fall of 2015, Pope Francis sent the body of St. Maria Goretti on a limited U.S. tour. The youngest canon-ized Saint has a compelling story of suffering and forgiveness. St. Maria was born into poverty and raised in Corinaldo, a beautiful medieval village in central Italy. Maria, whose father died when she was nine, raised her five siblings when she was only eleven while her mother worked in the fields. One day, a twenty-year-old neighbor ac-costed her and, as she fought him, he brutally stabbed her repeatedly.
Maria died the next day, but her last words were, “I forgive Alessandro Serenelli (her attacker) and I want him with me in heaven forever.” Alessandro was so overcome that he lived the converted life of holiness in prison and eventually became a Franciscan lay brother.
One of the stops on St. Maria’s U.S. pilgrimage was Baton Rouge, where the coffin with her remains was to be displayed in veneration at Lady of Mercy Catholic Church for three days. Crowds of worshipers were expected to visit the Saint from a number of states. The pastor there, Father Cleo Milano, has been a good friend and I called him to see if there was a possibility of any quiet time with St. Maria. He suggested I come by the church close to midnight after the doors were locked down for the night.
As the sanctuary was about to be bolted and the lights were dimmed, I made my way down the center aisle of the church and sat beside the remains of St. Maria. I touched her coffin and prayed for my family. And then, I thought to myself, this beautiful child, now a Saint, was brave and open-hearted enough to forgive the cruel demon that took her life. Although I too was wronged in ways that I felt were so unjust, should I not be empathetic and compassionate enough to forgive those who so aggrieved me?
I thought about it for good while. I guess I even prayed over the decision. After much contemplation, I quietly got up from my pew and walked out of the church. So what was my decision? Could I forgive those transgressions?
Often, your adversaries, by their impertinence, bring themselves down and destroy their own reputations. In my case, nemeses that caused me harm have themselves been damaged and suffered humiliation. So what to do? Forgive them? In my case, I decided just to wait them out. They ended up destroying themselves. What’s the old saying: If you stand by the river long enough, your enemies will come floating by.
I’d urge the Congressman to take his time and be sure that forgiveness is something he really wants to give. If not, just bide his time. After all, revenge is a dish best served cold.
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all of his columns at www.jimbrownusa.com.

Morgan City declares emergency as precaution

Morgan City officials don’t expect any issues within the city from the high water that has caused backwater flooding in neighboring lower St. Martin Parish. But they aren’t taking any chances.

On Tuesday, the city council authorized city leaders to declare a state of emergency, so the city can get some reimbursement for any expenses incurred relating to the high water.

“We thought it was prudent to possibly put the city in a state of emergency like other areas around us that are in the direct path of the high water,” Mayor Frank “Boo” Grizzaffi said.

All landowners on the unprotected side of the floodwall have been getting regular updates from city officials on anything relating to the high water, the mayor said.

Morgan City leaders are confident that all homes and businesses protected by the floodwall should be fine during the high water event. But officials are being vigilant to ensure people and property remain protected, he said.

Also at the meeting, the council approved submitting requests for proposal to gauge interest on bringing a restaurant along Lake Palourde. That information will be put on the city’s website, cityofmc.com.

The idea to consider bringing a restaurant near the lake has been around for at least over a decade. But organizers with St. Mary Excel, a group that commissioned a recent economic development study for the area, are pushing to determine how to implement that idea.

In other business, the council

—Adopted the city’s millage rates for the 2019 tax year. Those rates will remain the same as the prior year. They are 14.75 mills for municipal expenses, 0.97 mills to pay interest on auditorium bonds and 2 mills for maintenance and other auditorium expenses.

—Approved the 84th annual Louisiana Shrimp & Petroleum Festival to be held Aug. 29 through Sept. 2 in downtown Morgan City. Officials will close the La. 182 bridge at Morgan City to vehicular traffic during the Blessing of the Fleet Sept. 1 from 9 a.m. to noon and for the fireworks display that will also be that day from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. Festival organizers and Kiwanis Club of East St. Mary members will serve liquor during the festival.

—Approve 5K run to be held Nov. 9 in Lawrence Park.

—Approved the finance committee’s recommendations to allocate $4,800 to the police department from the general fund to upgrade the computer server and software for the interview room.

—Authorized the mayor to accept the bid of $1,500 from Southern Sno & More to continue operating at Lake End Park for the next three years.

—Renewed The Daily Review as the city’s official journal starting July 1 through June 30, 2020, at a cost of $3 per column inch.

—Approved the 2019-20 Class A & B liquor license renewals.

Deploying new weapons for Stephensville flood fight

STEPHENSVILLE — It was Saturday, one of the season’s first days of muggy, 90-degree heat, and Gov. John Bel Edwards was due to be in Stephensville in an hour.
Nearby, a St. Martin Parish crew of six men and Sarah and Denny Blanchard were working on a couple of tall sand piles along La. 70. They weren’t there to see the governor.
They were were filling sandbags to protect homes and other property.
The battle against back-flooding, which started not long after Mardi Gras, continued as Memorial Day weekend arrived. Last week the news seemed to be getting worse with word that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers seemed sure to open the Morganza Spillway to deal with record rainfall in the Mississippi River’s immense basin.
But Saturday brought good news, too. Edwards made the official announcement that a barge would be sunk in Bayou Chene, a flood protection measure that proved effective in three previous foods. Edwards also said the state and federal governments will pay for it.
Edwards made the announcement near a new barrier system that promised to block water from La. 70 and keep the highway open.
The news will be welcome to people like the Blanchards, who are no strangers to filling sandbags. “We came here from Belle River,” said Denny Blanchard with a laugh.
No water has come into their new place on Stephensville Road. The home of Sarah Blanchard’s family on Susan Court in Bayou Estates also has escaped flooding, but not all the problems associated with it.
No water has come into her mother’s home. “Her house is high off the ground,” Sarah Blanchard said. “Their neighbors, yes. But they just couldn’t get to their house.”
The flooding causes other problems you might not think about.
“The transformers keep getting wet,” Denny Blanchard said, “and they keep shorting out or whatever and blow up.”
The governor’s appearance later Saturday offered hope that help is on the way, both immediately and for the future.
The St. Mary Levee District had been working to locate and move a barge that to placed in Bayou Chene near Morgan City in what some consider to be the most effective back-flood control measure not just for Lower St. Martin but also for Terrebonne, St. Mary, Assumption and Iberville.
The state will pay the $7 million required to sink the barge, Edwards said, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will provide $2 million worth of riprap, the loose stone used to shore up breakwaters.
“At this point we don’t intend to let money get in the way,” Edwards said.
Facebook pictures posted by local officials over the weekend showed the barge being pushed into place.
The Corps decision to open the Morganza Spillway came Sunday, sooner than expected. It raised the stakes by putting more water in the Atchafalaya River and creating more back-flooding in the Stephensville area.
Edwards said the Corps would “slow open” the Morganza Spillway over a few days in early June.
Also Saturday, Edwards asked for federal help with flood-fighting efforts. The governor issued a disaster declaration Feb. 27 because of river flooding. The rest is up to President Donald J. Trump and the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
In another flood control move, the state Department of Transportation and Development has been installing a product called Barrier Force along both sides of La. 70 just north of Stephensville, where the highway has been closed by high water.
The barriers should be installed along both sides of the highway by Sunday afternoon, the governor said. His office had predicted the road would be open soon.
For the long term, Edwards pointed to this spring’s announcement that a proposed permanent flood control structure that would eliminate the need for a sunken barge in Bayou Chene has been fully funded. The project has been estimated at about $80 million. The sunken barge approach was employed in 1973, 2011 and 2016.
The governor also said work to raise La. 70 in the affected area is also being considered.
Edwards said the state has already spent $2 million on flood measures such as added Louisiana State Police and Wildlife & Fisheries patrols to keep roads and waterways safe.

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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