RSS Feed

Mardi Gras Madness is set

Gulf State Wrestling will hold Mardi Gras Madness March 9 at Morgan City Junior High School. Doors will open at 5 p.m. with bell time at 6 p.m. Tickets are available for purchase in the school office or by calling 985-518-0433. All concession proceeds and a portion of ticket sales will benefit Morgan City Junior High's Beta Club.

Lady Panther Classic set for this weekend at Berwick Civic Complex

The annual Berwick High School Lady Panther Softball Tournament will begin Friday and continue Saturday. Six teams will compete on two fields at the Berwick Civic Complex. In addition to host Berwick, Patterson, Central Catholic Hanson Memorial, Assumption and E.D. White each will compete. Two games involving local teams will be held Friday as Assumption meets Berwick on Field 1 at 6 p.m., while Patterson and Central Catholic will play on Field 2 at 4 p.m. Saturday, local action on Field 1 features Patterson meeting Assumption at 10, Berwick and E.D. White squaring off at noon, Assumption and Central Catholic playing at 2 ...

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!

(Updated) Sheriff: Missing woman found, booked on drug charges

A Morgan City woman, who had been reported missing, was found Thursday in Franklin and arrested on drug charges, St. Mary Parish Sheriff Blaise Smith said in a news release.

—Kimber Dugas, 29, of Myrtle Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 9:12 p.m. Thursday on warrants charging her with possession of heroin, methamphetamine, cocaine, zolpidem and drug paraphernalia, along with three counts of possession of a Legend Drug without a prescription.

While following up on a missing person’s complaint, Dugas was located at a home in Franklin. She was jailed with no bail set. The sheriff reported that Dugas had previously last been seen Feb. 17 in the Patterson area.

Smith reported that deputies responded to 40 complaints in the parish and reported the following arrests in east St. Mary Parish:

—Anthony Harris, 23, of Arizona Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 3:29 p.m. Thursday on charges of remaining where forbidden and resisting arrest.

Harris was located at a Marguerite Street business, which he refused to leave. Upon the deputy attempting to make an arrest, Harris attempted to flee from the deputy, Smith said. He was jailed with bail set at $3,000.

—Juan Manuel Martinez Pizano, 25, of Village Lane in Amelia, was arrested at 9:29 p.m. Thursday on charges of reckless operation of a vehicle and disturbing the peace intoxicated.

A deputy was dispatched to the area of Village Lane in Amelia in reference to a vehicle stuck in the yard. Upon arrival, the suspect vehicle had left the scene.

The suspect arrived back on the scene consuming alcohol. Pizano was identified as the driver by a witness. A strong odor of alcohol was observed coming from Pizano, the sheriff said. He was jailed with bail set at $1,500.

Morgan City Police Chief James Blair reported that officers responded to 37 calls and reported the following arrests:

—Quentin Kade Henry, 32, of High School Drive in Deridder, was arrested at 4:30 p.m. Thursday on a warrant charging him with failure to appear for trial.

—Meagan Elizabeth Henry, 28, of High School Drive in Deridder, was arrested at 4:30 p.m. Thursday on a warrant charging him with failure to appear for trial.

Quentin Henry and Megan Henry were transported from St. Mary Parish jail to the Morgan City Department. They were booked on city court warrants.

—Jeremy J. Walker, 38, of Federal Avenue in Morgan City, was arrested at 11:54 p.m. Thursday on a warrant charging him with failure to appear for arraignment.

Officers came into contact Walker on La. 70. Officers learned of a warrant for Jeremy Walker through 16th District Court. He was placed under arrest and transported to Morgan City Police Department for booking in incarceration.

Berwick Police Chief David Leonard Sr. reported the following arrest:

—Reuben Robicheaux, 48, of Francis Street in Berwick, was arrested at 7:08 p.m. Thursday on charges of two headlights required and driving under suspension. He posted $252 cash bail.

Patterson Police Chief Garrett Grogan reported no arrests.

From the Editor: School board meets to pick superintendent; random acts of courtesy

The St. Mary Parish School Board will meet at 5 p.m. Thursday to interview the four candidates for superintendent. If all goes according to plan, the board will then pick the person who will succeed Leonard Armato as chief of the public schools, all in the same night.
Each interview is expected to take a little less than an hour. So a school board meeting, which seldom lasts much longer than an hour, is likely to go to at least 10 p.m. There will be some yawns at St. Mary workplaces Friday morning.
But that wasn’t the sleep that board member Kenny Alfred was worried about missing.
When the time was set last week, board President Michael Taylor suggested a 3 p.m. Feb. 28 meeting. Other days and times had been discussed, including a Saturday interview session followed by selection at a special meeting on another date. Armato, who is retiring June 30, was selected that way in 2015.
Taylor said he had talked to other board members, and found the 3 p.m. Feb. 28 date to be convenient. Vice President Pearl Rack was evidently not among them.
“You talked to other board members,” Rack told Taylor. “You didn’t talk to me.”
Rack planned to attend a conference and couldn’t make the 3 p.m. start time. Board member Joseph Foulcard couldn’t make it, either. But the board voted to have the special meeting at 3 p.m. Feb. 28.
Anyone who has tried to get more than two people together for anything will be inclined to cut the board some slack. The phrase “herding cats” usually comes to mind.
But a meeting time that excludes two members would have been an important matter. Each of the school board’s 11 members represents something like 4,500 residents. If Rack and Foulcard don’t get a voice in the superintendent selection, neither do the 9,000 St. Mary people they represent.
It doesn’t help that both Foulcard and Rack represent west end districts in a parish where there is sometimes an east-west split on major issues. Both members represent districts with substantial African-American populations.
But that seemed to be the way things were going to be until, as the meeting drifted along, Alfred asked the board to reconsider.
“I couldn’t sleep at night knowing we voted two of our members out of the selection process,” Alfred said.
The board talked it over and discovered the 5 p.m. meeting time would work. The motion to make the switch to 5 p.m. passed on a voice vote with no objections.
“Thank you very, very much for making that motion,” Rack told Alfred.
The four candidates for superintendent are:
—Clyde Washington, executive assistant superintendent of administration in Rapides Parish with 22 years’ experience.
—Dr. Teresa Bagwell, assistant St. Mary superintendent with 37 years’ experience.
—Dr. Glen Barnes, the only out-of-state applicant, a principal in Cleveland, Texas, with 20 years’ experience.
—Dr. Buffy Fegenbush, St. Mary instructional supervisor of secondary education, with 27 years’ experience.
You may not get the superintendent you would have chosen. But it won’t be because your school board representative was blocked from taking part in the process.
As this is written, the news is reporting that President Donald Trump’s former lawyer has called the president a racist, a liar and a cheat. A Republican congressman has publicly told that attorney, in language familiar to anyone who watches mob movies, that it would be a shame if something happened to his family
A young man, who I’m told is a celebrity, is charged with making up a lie about a homophobic attack.
That’s what the news is like these days. So it’s good to be able to report news about an act of public-spirited decency.
Bill Decker is managing editor of The Daily Review.

Louisiana Spotlight: Harassment policies draw lawmaker attention

BATON ROUGE — As they work on policies to combat sexual harassment, Louisiana state lawmakers are grappling with questions of what’s appropriate in a state where people regularly greet each other with hugs and kisses and where strangers often call each other “honey.”
Lawmakers on a task force reviewing compliance with a newly passed anti-harassment law and working on another round of legislation found themselves dissecting their own actions and questioning whether they need to change behavior.
“It’s certainly an eye-opening discussion for me, but I’m trying to learn. I think everybody’s trying to learn,” said Sen. Rick Ward, a Port Allen Republican, as task force members last week discussed how to define appropriate and inappropriate conduct.
The issue is a thorny one that female legislators pushed to the forefront last year amid the national #MeToo movement. Louisiana has seen two high-ranking government officials exit their jobs this term because of sexual harassment allegations.
Tom Schedler resigned in May as secretary of state after being accused of sexual harassment in an employee’s lawsuit. Johnny Anderson, a former top aide to Gov. John Bel Edwards, left his position in November 2017 amid claims he sexually harassed a woman in the governor’s office. Schedler and Anderson denied the allegations, which were resolved with taxpayer-financed settlements.
Amid the high-profile claims, lawmakers passed Louisiana’s first government-wide policy against sexual harassment, which took effect in January. The law requires agencies to enact policies that include a process for handling complaints, a ban against retaliation when someone files a complaint and mandatory annual prevention training. Agency heads will have to compile annual reports starting in February 2020, documenting the number of sexual harassment complaints received over the prior year and the number that resulted in disciplinary action.
Before passage of the new law, female lawmakers had been talking more openly about disrespectful behavior in the Legislature. They objected when a male lawmaker brought a birthday cake shaped like a body in a bikini to a committee hearing and when another male lawmaker made jokes about strippers’ age and weight during a debate. They’ve complained about the tone of discussions.
Lawmakers on the task force, both male and female, said they will be tracking whether agencies are following the new anti-sexual harassment requirements, looking for gaps in the law and searching for ways to strengthen policies.
Sen. Karen Carter Peterson, the New Orleans Democrat whose legislation created the task force and who is chairing it, said she wants to establish “the gold standard.”
But lawmakers also acknowledged the discussions are complex.
Sen. Gerald Long, a Winnfield Republican, offered an example to a state government lawyer who specializes in employment law issues.
“If I walk on the Senate floor and I see (Sen.) Beth Mizell, I’m going to hug her in a respectful, appropriate way. Now if I hug her three times in one week, have I?” he trailed off, wondering if that could be seen as improper.
Mark Falcon, special counsel for the Division of Administration, said whether the hug was appropriate involved whether Mizell deemed it acceptable or had objections.
“It’s the participant’s perspective,” Falcon said.
Long replied: “It’s awfully hard sometimes to navigate.”
Mizell, who suggested she didn’t object to the hugs, noted different interpretations of behavior can be cultural.
“When I’ve been in conferences with legislators from around the country, they can’t believe that other colleagues would call one another ‘honey’ or whatever, and that most of the Southern legislators are fine with that or that we do hug as a greeting,” said Mizell, a Franklinton Republican.
Peterson offered a simple test, saying the conduct should stop “once the person is made aware that the behavior is offensive to the person.”
Ward said he’s tried to become more mindful of how other people see his actions.
“You have to look at it from the other person’s perspective and really get a feel for how that other person wants to interact on a daily basis,” he said. “I know there are some people, I walk up to them, they want a hug. There’s other people that clearly want me to shake their hand.”
Melinda Deslatte has covered Louisiana politics for The Associated Press since 2000. Follow her at http://twitter.com/melindadeslatte

Magician will appear in Morgan City

Magician Johnny Magic will appear in the next Community Concert Association event at 7 p.m. March 19 at Morgan City Municipal Auditorium.
“His show is split evenly between magic, comedy, and audience interaction, giving audiences the ultimate entertainment experience!" according to promotional material.
Association season subscriptions are available at $45 per adult and $10 for students K-12.
Single event tickets are available for $25 (adults) and $5 (students K-12). See www.morgancitycca.biz for more information.
The association has a partnership with the St. Mary Council on Aging, which is offering free transportation for senior citizens (60 plus) who live in St. Mary Parish. Please call at least 24 hours before the concert to arrange.

Wheel House for Feb. 28

PATTERSON
Housing Authority taking applications for all units from 8:15-11 a.m. and 1:15-3 p.m. Tuesday, March 19 and 26. Must bring birth certificates and Social Security cards for all members of household, picture ID for all members over 18 and current proof of all income. For more info call 985-395-3736.

Video app Musical.ly agrees to FTC fine

WASHINGTON (AP) — The operator of a video-sharing app popular with teenagers is agreeing to pay $5.7 million to settle federal allegations it illegally collected personal information from children.
The Federal Trade Commission says the Wednesday penalty against lip-syncing app Musical.ly, now known as TikTok, is the largest ever obtained in a children’s privacy case.
The FTC says the app violated the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, which requires kid-oriented websites to get parents’ consent before collecting personal information from children under 13.
TikTok says it’s starting a separate, more restrictive app for younger U.S. users.
FTC Chairman Joe Simons says Musical.ly knew many younger children were using the app and collecting names, email addresses and other personal information without parental consent.
Musical.ly merged last year into China-based TikTok.

Dad turns sons into weapons in his bitter breakup with mom

DEAR ABBY: My daughter has two boys who treat her like crap. They swear, call her a b——, whore, liar and the f-word. They break things in her house and have no respect for anyone. The problem started after she broke up with their biological father and married her new boyfriend. The father brainwashes the boys to do these things to make life a living hell with her new husband. What I cannot understand is why my daughter goes out of her way to please these two ungrateful kids and still cannot see how they are destroying her present household.

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!

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