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Port to request funds to address extreme shoaling

The Port of Morgan City is requesting emergency federal funds to combat extreme shoaling in the Atchafalaya River caused by massive amounts of sediment moved into the area by high water.

Officials anticipate the shoaling will only worsen as the river levels drop and more sediment is deposited. The Atchafalaya has been above the 6-foot flood stage for over three months.

Stouts Pass and Berwick Bay both have lots of sediment accumulation that is significantly impeding vessel traffic and preventing access to fuel docks in Morgan City, Port Economic Development Manager Cindy Cutrera said. Stouts Pass is located near the Berwick lock.

“We are pushing for emergency funding to remove all of the excess material that keeps moving down on us during this extensive flood event,” Cutrera said in an email.

Berwick Bay is experiencing severe shoaling on the Morgan City side all the way to the center line in some areas. The Berwick side of the bay doesn’t have sediment buildup issues, just high water.

Port Executive Director Raymond “Mac” Wade, addressed the Mississippi River Commission at a public meeting Friday in Baton Rouge and stressed the dire need for additional funding through the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to remove sediment from Berwick Bay along with other areas of the Atchafalaya River and Bayous Boeuf, Black and Chene.

In an email, Corps spokeswoman Pam Vedros said, "addressing the increased sediment in both Mississippi and Atchafalaya rivers is a significant, and costly, challenge following every high river event."

"At this time, Congress has not appropriated supplemental recovery funds in response to the current Mississippi River high water event," Vedros said.

Despite a significant increase in dredging funds for the port during the past year, port leaders say those funds aren’t enough to handle the large accumulation of sediment occurring near the port.

U.S. Coast Guard Lt. Timothy Veach, director of Vessel Traffic Service Berwick Bay, said mariners navigating the area’s waterways should proceed with caution during the next month as the water levels gradually fall.

High water has actually somewhat masked the impact of the shoaling.

“As we shift out of the high water and the river starts to fall, that shoaling is going to become more prevalent,” along with the associated risk, Veach said.

When the river current slows as the water level drops, a lot of the sediment that’s being “flushed out right now” will begin to deposit on the river bottom, he said.

Several shoaling advisories are in effect for the Morgan City area, including the triple span bridges in Berwick Bay, mile marker 99, 20 Grand Point, Stouts Pass and Bayou Chene.

In the past three months, the Coast Guard has responded to reports of 26 vessel groundings in the Morgan City area, Veach said. The Atchafalaya River stage at Morgan City is expected to stay over 7 feet for at least the next two weeks.

Any emergency dredging funds acquired would only be for areas in the vicinity of the Port of Morgan City and not farther down the river toward the Atchafalaya River Bar Channel.

Wife discovers digital trail left by husband

DEAR ABBY: My husband went to his 45th class reunion a state away and hooked up with a classmate. Over the next few months it went from talking and texting to her sending him nude pictures of herself. I found her emails professing her love to him. When I asked him, he swore nothing happened between them during the two weeks he was there other than a lunch date. After further investigation, I have discovered they had more than 30 hours of phone conversations, exchanged 4,000-plus texts and who knows the number of emails. Not only that, he bought another ...

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Running into the Quarterfinals: Central Catholic run-rules Vermilion Catholic 11-0

After splitting two close games in their District 7-1A contests this season, the final — and most important matchup — between Central Catholic and Vermilion Catholic Monday in Division IV Regional Round softball action was nothing like the first two.
Behind 12 hits, Central Catholic pounded its way to an 11-0 run-rule victory in five innings in Amelia Monday.
“That’s one of our best offensive performances,” Central Catholic Coach Linda Sanders said. “All the girls contributed from No. 1 to No. 9. … I’m pretty sure everybody got a hit or got on base, which is amazing. I’ve been telling them they need to play with intensity all game long, and this game they played with intensity all game long. They really stepped up, and I’m really proud of those girls.”
Facing the same Vermilion Catholic pitcher, Kelli Frith for the third time this season, the Lady Eagles adjusted and made contact with the ball.
“They know what she has,” Sanders said. “They know she had that good changeup, so a lot of them made some adjustments on that. Pitching batting practice, I kind of threw her same speed, so that they had that going in.”
The Lady Eagles set the tone early as leadoff batter Haley Fontenot began the game with a triple to left field and scored two batters later when she tagged on a foul-out by teammate Brooke Lipari.
Central Catholic scored its second run on an error for a 2-0 lead.
The Lady Eagles scored two runs in the second, including a run-scoring double by Fontenot that brought in teammate Emily Lipari. Fontenot later scored when she stole third base and a throw to try to get her out went into left field with nobody covering the base. She came home for the Lady Eagles’ second run of the inning.
Fontenot finished the game 3-for-3 with two doubles, a triple, three RBIs, two stolen bases and three runs.
The Lady Eagles broke the game open in the bottom of the third with seven runs.
Back-to-back doubles by Fontenot and Alanni Landry brought in two runs apiece for an 8-0 lead.
Landry scored on a passed ball, and Rylie Jeau Theriot doubled to left field to bring in two more runs for an 11-0 advantage.
While the Lady Eagles’ offense was hot, pitcher Hallie Crappell and the defense also turned in a solid day.
Crappell surrendered just two hits and fanned three in five innings. She threw just 60 pitches.
The Central Catholic defense also committed just one error.
“We’ve been struggling a little bit on our defense all year having errors,” Sanders said. “Today was a great day. I think we had one error as opposed to we’ve had multiple errors in games. They stepped up, and we played solid defense, which was key for us.”
Other top Central Catholic offensive contributors were Theriot, 1-for-2 with a double and two RBIs; Landry, 1-for-3, a double, two RBIs and a run; Bailee Lipari, 2-for-3, two runs; and Brooke Lipari, 1-for-2, an RBI and a run.
Frith suffered the loss. In four innings, she surrendered 11 runs — 10 earned — on 12 hits with three walks and three strikeouts.
Offensively, Rosie Hagle led Vermilion Catholic with a 1-for-2 performance with a double.
Central Catholic now will travel to face top-seed Ouachita Christian on Saturday at 1 p.m. in Monroe in the Division IV quarterfinals.

Healthier Berwick to get second shot at North Vermilion

Early in his tenure when he took the Berwick High School softball program over, Coach Joe Russo told his squad that they were not going to look back, only forward. That they would try to become the best team they could be. However, it would take a few years to build the program. “(Senior) Alyssa Gray stopped me when I said that and said, ‘Coach, we don’t want to wait a few years. We want it now for the seniors,’” Russo recalled Sunday. With Friday’s 5-3 first-round upset of No. 15 North Webster, No. 18 Berwick High School achieved one of its ...

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South Beauregard dominates Patterson 11-0

The South Beauregard nickname may be the Lady K’s as the school’s mascot is the Knights, but the nickname took on a different meaning in Monday’s 11-0 regional round playoff win against Patterson. South Beauregard (22-5) got another pitching gem from ace Karina Simpkins. The senior pitched a complete game no-hitter while striking out 10. She also threw a one-hitter with 10 strikeouts in the team’s 15-0 first round win against Baker. “She has been our horse all year, and we go as she goes,” South Beauregard Coach Brandon Bushell said. “And when she’s on, we’re hard to beat, and she was ...

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MCHS routs Madison Prep; Patterson wins at Westlake

Morgan City High School run-ruled Madison Prep 18-3 in four innings in nondistrict action in Morgan City Monday. Ahead 7-3 entering the bottom of the fourth, Morgan City scored 11 runs before the game was halted with one out and the Tigers ahead 18-3. Early on, Morgan City took a 3-0 lead in the bottom of the first, and after Madison Prep scored a run in the top of the third, Morgan City scored four runs in the bottom of the third for a 7-1 lead. Madison Prep scored two runs in the top of the fourth. Morgan City had nine hits and ...

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Louisiana Spotlight: Below-the-radar feuds brew in Legislature

BATON ROUGE — Beyond Louisiana’s never-ending budget arguments, some lower profile disputes over billboards and sales tax collection methods are churning in the legislative session, dividing lawmakers and creating conflicts with outside groups that hold sway at the state capitol.
Two lawmakers are proposing measures aimed at reining in the number of billboards along Louisiana roadways, and the effort has rankled Baton Rouge-based Lamar Advertising Co., one of the nation’s largest outdoor advertising firms with billboards in 45 states and with nearly 500 employees in Louisiana.
The legislation sponsored by Rep. Jack McFarland, a Winnfield Republican, is scheduled for its first hearing Tuesday. He’s seeking to stall the issuance of new state permits for billboards. Lamar has launched a campaign to sink the proposal, along with a similar measure by Sen. Conrad Appel, a Metairie Republican.
McFarland said he’s heard from many people who believe the billboards lead to distracted driving and often contain distasteful images or messages. Until three months ago, he rented space on his own land to companies displaying four billboards. But he had them removed three months ago.
“The perception of the billboards is not a positive. Yes, they do enable businesses to advertise and I’m not against the advertisement of local businesses. But when those billboards occur so frequently, we have to question: Are we creating distracted driving? Are we creating hazards? Are we taking away from the natural beauty?” McFarland said.
But the legislation, which McFarland said would require support from two-thirds of lawmakers to pass, faces a tough road to passage. Lamar Advertising, a powerful and large Louisiana company, is heavily fighting both measures, calling them “anti-business.”
“We consider it an assault on our Louisiana company and more importantly on the many Louisiana owned businesses that work with us every day,” Lamar spokeswoman Allie McAlpin said in a statement.
The company says Louisiana doesn’t rank in the top 10 of states when it comes to billboard inventory, and it says Lamar has cut its number of billboards in Louisiana over the last five years.
While that sparring is intensifying, Rep. Tanner Magee has launched an even larger fight, putting himself at odds with many local elected officials across Louisiana, over their oversight of the state’s sales tax collections.
In Louisiana, parish officials handle sales tax collections. Magee, a Houma Republican, is trying to start the process of a constitutional change to centralize those collections instead, saying Louisiana is one of only two states with a fragmented system.
Magee said the tax collection method doesn’t make sense anymore as businesses have grown larger across multiple parishes and states and do more sales online.
Remitting sales tax collections individually to multiple parishes is “ridiculous. It’s just overly complex,” he said. “What does that tell those businesses about Louisiana? We’re saying we’re backward. We’re saying we’re difficult. We’re saying it’s too complex to do business in Louisiana. We make things way more difficult.”
Several business organizations are backing Magee’s proposal, describing Louisiana’s numerous sales tax collectors as cumbersome, confusing and expensive for compliance.
But local government entities are lining up to oppose the measure, saying improvements have been made in e-filing and other efficiencies while still keeping the power in the hands of local authorities who don’t necessarily trust the state to properly collect and timely allocate the dollars owed to municipalities.
“Local taxing authorities possess the best knowledge and experience to properly collect their own taxes and have a proven record of proactive advancements in the areas of enforcement, audit coverage, dispute resolution, reporting technology and successful litigation,” the Louisiana Municipal Association said in a recent newsletter.
Magee acknowledges the fight he’s picked might not be winnable this session. That’s particularly true in an election year where lawmakers often rely on the support of local elected officials to help them gain voter support.
But Magee’s not giving up.
“I don’t want to fight all the local government entities, and I think there’s a trust issue, which I understand,” he said. “It may take multiple attempts at it, but it’s time to start the conversation and start pushing the ball up the hill.”
Melinda Deslatte has covered Louisiana politics for The Associated Press since 2000. Follow her at http://twitter.com/melindadeslatte

Central Catholic picks three for Hall of Fame

The Central Catholic High School Hall of Fame Committee has selected three people for induction.
Warren Landry will be inducted for Meritorious Service. Jamarr Garrett and Quincy Verdin will be inducted for Athletic Achievement.
The induction will take place prior to the Alumni Association Chef’s Supper on April 28 at NicoBella.
From the committee:
—Landry was involved in supporting Catholic education for many years. He served on the school board of the former Sacred Heart Elementary and was chairman of the CCHS fair committee. He served two terms as president of the CCHS school board and also served as chairman of the school auction.
The Kaplan native is a graduate of Northwestern State University and is former owner and executive vice president of Paul’s Agency. He was a member and past president of the local Kiwanis Club, past president of the Morgan City Rotary Club, and a Paul Harris fellow.
—Garrett, during his time as a student at CCHS, was a multisport athlete. In 2004 and 2005, he was selected first team All-State in football. In basketball he was voted honorable mention All-State during his sophomore, junior and senior years. In 2005 he was selected first team All-State in baseball and was a member of the state champion baseball teams in 2004 and 2005.
Garrett played football at Southeastern University as a wide receiver for two years. He is a graduate of the University of Louisiana Lafayette.
He coached the CCHS girls basketball team for three years, including the 2014 state championship season and was 1A Coach of the Year.
—Verdin was a multisport athlete during her tenure at CCHS having played volleyball, basketball and track. She was selected first team All-State in volleyball in 2004 and 2005 and led the 2004 team to the only state championship in school history. Verdin played volleyball at Long Beach State University and following graduation played volleyball professionally in Europe. She currently is the head volleyball coach at Lutcher High School.
Verdin also had many accomplishments in track and field. She was a five-year letter winner. Verdin won district titles and advanced to the state meet her sophomore, junior and senior years. As a sophomore she competed at State in the discus (seventh), high jump (fourth) and triple jump (third).
In her junior year she competed at the state meet in the shot put (sixth), and she was state champion in the javelin. Her senior year brought a runner-up finish in the shot put and a state championship in the discus.
Verdin finished her track career at Central Catholic holding school records in the high jump, triple jump and discus.

RUTH R. JACKSON

Ruth R. Jackson, 89, a native of Morgan City and resident of Humble, Texas, died Sunday, April 14.
She is survived by five children, Ken Jackson of Richmond, Texas, Nancy Davezac of Baton Rouge, Carol Croyle of Bethesda, Maryland, Mike Jackson of Humble, Texas and Jennifer Dozier of Mandeville; numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren; and one sister, Alice Boudreaux of Kingwood, Texas.
She was preceded in death by her parents, husband and two sons.
Visitation will be Tuesday, 6-8 p.m., and resume Wednesday at 8 a.m. until services at 10 a.m. at Hargrave Funeral Home, who is in charge of arrangements. Burial will follow in Morgan City Cemetery.

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