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Louisiana 'months away' from paying online sales tax

BATON ROUGE (AP) — Louisiana has ramped up its push to collect more sales taxes from internet purchases, but still hasn’t set a deadline to try to force out-of-state companies that sell online products in the state to remit taxes for those sales.
A state sales tax commission has set rules for collecting taxes for online sales from large out-of-state retailers, defining who is subject to Louisiana sales tax, how they should register with the state and how they turn over the sales taxes they collect.
But for now, following those regulations is voluntary from retailers who don’t have a physical store in Louisiana and only sell to residents through online sites.
“We are working through when we will have mandatory compliance,” said Revenue Secretary Kimberly Robinson. “I think it’s just months away.”
More online retailers have started voluntarily charging and turning over sales taxes to Louisiana since a June ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court paved the way for states to require the tax collections for online purchases.
In its South Dakota v. Wayfair decision, the court upheld a South Dakota law that targeted online retailers who avoided collecting sales tax because they didn’t have a physical presence like a store or distribution center in a state. The court threw out a decades-old exemption.
Robinson said it’s too soon to determine the size of the uptick in Louisiana sales tax collections since the ruling. The revenue department, she said, should have a better idea early in 2019 after tallying the most recent quarter.
Before the high court’s decision, Louisiana had laws aimed at being able to take in taxes from online shoppers and already collected some sales taxes voluntarily from retailers like Amazon.
But the state’s complex, parish-by-parish sales tax system complicates efforts to force compliance from out-of-state retailers.
In Louisiana, parishes levy their own local sales tax rates and handle sales tax collections. That creates a hodgepodge system that regularly receives criticism for lacking the uniformity of many other states and creating unnecessary complexity for businesses trying to follow the rules.
The sales tax commission, led by Robinson, is serving as the single online sales tax collector for out-of-state companies that only do business in Louisiana through internet sales. The regulations target “remote sellers” who do more than $100,000 in sales in Louisiana or have more than 200 transactions in the state.
Though sales tax rates vary from parish to parish, the state is collecting an 8.45 percent rate from online vendors located outside Louisiana who are voluntarily submitting the taxes. The collection includes the state sales tax rate of 4.45 percent and a 4 percent rate that gets divvied up among local governments based on parish population.
Robinson said the online sales tax collections will become mandatory when the state has a centralized software system that can charge out-of-state website retailers the 4.45 percent state sales tax rate and the varying local sales tax rates based on where the purchaser lives.

Fire destroys Verdun Lane home

Firefighters from Franklin and Bayou Vista, in addition to St. Mary deputies and Acadian ambulance, were called to 319 Verdun Lane late Wednesday morning for a fire at this home. No injuries have been reported, and there was no immediate word on the cause of the fire.

The Daily Review/Bill Decker

MCHS boys win while CCHS and BHS girls see losses

Three area teams were in action on Dec. 21.
The Morgan City High School Tigers outscored the Franklin Hornets 67-52 in Franklin. The Central Catholic Lady Eagles worked hard against Houma Christian but ultimately took a 41-54 loss while on the road. Also on the road, the Berwick High Lady Panthers lost a close one to David Thibodaux 48-53 in Lafayette.
MCHS defeats FHS, 67-52
The 7-4A Tigers defeated the 7-2A Hornets 67-52 to bring their record to 10-5. Franklin’s record is now 7-6.
Three members of the Tiger team, Jared Singleton, Deondre Grogan and Kerwin Francois, were hot on the boards with each scoring 18 points. Singleton’s points were aided by two 3-pointers and four free throws made. Grogan had four 3-pointers and four free throws. And Francois added five free throws.
Nylan Francis tossed in two 3-pointers and two free throws for eight points and Tyland Boatman’s six points were aided by two free throws. Also contributing for the Tigers was Zion Landry with two free throws.
High scorers for the Hornets were J. Michael Gray, 15; Travis Zeno, 12; and Braydon Ward, 10.
Morgan City’s game against Westgate that was set for Dec. 28 has been canceled. The next game on the schedule is at home against White Castle at 7 p.m. Jan. 3.
CCHS loses to HC, 41-54
The 7-1A Lady Eagles’ 41-54 loss to the 8-1A Lady Warriors brought their record to 4-9 while the Lady Warriors improved to 12-1.
“They played pretty good,” said CCHS Assistant Coach Joe Jones of the Lady Eagles. “They were only behind by two at the half.”
On the boards for Central Catholic were Aaliyah Poole with 20 points, Yani Johnson had 12 points, Laurielle Bias dropped in four, Sydney Williams had three and Caitlyn Picou scored two.
The Lady Eagles will be in action at 6 p.m. Dec. 28 at home against Hanson Memorial.
BHS 48, David Thibodaux 53
The Lady Panthers lost a close one to David Thibodaux, 48-53. The District 8-3A contest brings Berwick’s record to 0-2, and 3-10 overall. David Thibodaux improved to 1-1 in district and 5-9 overall.
Madison Carline was the top scorer with 28 points and Arianna Jones put in 10 points. Also helping on the boards were Lauren Skinner with four points, Madison Billiot contributed three, Sam Kinchen had two and Tia Whitehead added one.
The schedule has the Lady Panthers on the road Jan. 2 as they take on crosstown district rivals Patterson High School Lumberjills at 6 p.m. The Lumberjills are 1-0 in district and 6-6 overall. The Panthers and the Lumberjacks will play at the conclusion of the girls’ contest.
The Panthers, who have yet to find a win this season, will play their first district game against the Lumberjacks who are 6-3 overall.
Central Catholic’s Eagles will play in the E.D. White tournament in Thibodaux starting Thursday and Morgan City’s Lady Tigers next action will be at home Jan. 4 against 7-5A Destrehan.

Rebowe, Orgeron tie for Coach of the Year honors

Mindful that LSU’s season soared past expectations and carried the Tigers among the nation’s top teams while Nicholls won its first Southland Conference championship since 2005 and won a game in the FCS playoffs, voters on the All-Louisiana Collegiate Football Team amply acknowledged the state’s most accomplished programs in 2018.
LSU filled 10 of the 50 first and second-team spots while Nicholls had the second-most representatives, six, in voting by a Louisiana Sports Writers Association panel of media and sports information contacts.
Appropriately, LSU’s Ed Orgeron and Tim Rebowe of Nicholls shared state Coach of the Year honors, tying in the balloting. It was the second straight year for Rebowe to capture the accolade.
LSU linebacker Devin White was a landslide pick as the All-Louisiana Defensive Player of the Year, while Tiger quarterback Joe Burrow won Newcomer of the Year honors. White was a repeat selection.
Northwestern State receiver Jazz Ferguson, who began his career at LSU, was chosen Offensive Player of the Year. Southern’s Jordan Lewis, a defensive lineman, took the All-Louisiana Freshman of the Year award.
Orgeron led the Tigers (9-3) to a New Year’s Day (Fiesta) bowl berth with four Top 25 wins, three over teams ranked in the Top 10. It was only the third LSU team ever to beat three Top 10 foes.
Rebowe’s Colonels (9-4) were nationally-ranked all season, reaching as high as 10th in the FCS polls, after kicking off the 2018 campaign with an upset win at Kansas.
White was among 15 players who were repeat picks from the 2017 team, including three other defenders who were first-team All-Louisiana for a second straight season: Louisiana Tech defensive end Jaylon Ferguson, Grambling linebacker De’Arius Christmas and LSU cornerback Greedy Williams. LSU punter Zach Von Rosenberg and Southeastern Louisiana kickoff returner Juwan Petit-Frere were also repeat first-team selections.
The Ferguson brothers, Jazz and Jaylon from St. Francisville-West Feliciana High, joined White (Springhill-North Webster HS) as the only three players chosen for first-team honors on every ballot.
White has collected 115 tackles in his junior season, earning the Butkus Award as the best linebacker in major college football. The first-team All-American has 12 tackles for loss, including four in the seven-overtime battle at Texas A&M among his career-best 17 stops.
Jazz Ferguson, who began his college career at LSU, made a year’s wait worth it at Northwestern State. After a season on the scout team in 2017 establishing his academic eligibility, he set six school records while earning All-America and Southland Conference Offensive Player of the Year honors with 1,117 yards receiving on 66 catches, scoring 13 touchdowns and averaging 101.5 yards receiving per game for the Demons.
Burrow’s impact was also immediate. The Ohio State transfer stepped in at quarterback for LSU and threw for 2,500 yards and 12 touchdowns, while running for seven more scores and 375 yards, becoming the first Tigers’ quarterback to be such a productive passer and rush for at least 350 yards.
Southern’s Lewis shifted down from linebacker to the defensive front in his first collegiate season and collected 12 sacks, forced two fumbles, blocked a kick, and recovered a fumble for a touchdown in his rookie campaign, helping the Jaguars to a Bayou Classic victory and a West Division Southwestern Athletic Conference title.
Individual Award Winners
COACH OF THE YEAR (tie) — Ed Orgeron, LSU; Tim Rebowe, Nicholls (11 votes each)
OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR — Jazz Ferguson, WR, Northwestern State (12)
DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR — Devin White, LB, LSU (18½)
NEWCOMER OF THE YEAR — Joe Burrow, QB, LSU (13)
FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR — Jordan Lewis, DL, Southern (8)
FIRST TEAM
OFFENSE
OL — Chandler Arceneaux, Nicholls, Sr., Bourg; Kevin Dotson, UL Lafayette, Jr., Plaquemine; O’Shea Dugas, Louisiana Tech, Sr., Lafayette Ryan Hanley, Nicholls, Sr., Metairie; Robert Hunt, UL Lafayette, Jr., Burkeville, Texas
TE — Bransen Schwebel, Southeastern La., Jr., Amite
QB — Chase Fourcade, Nicholls, Jr., Metairie
WR — Jazz Ferguson, Northwestern State, Jr., St. Francisville; Adrian Hardy, Louisiana Tech, So., Houston.
RB — Nick Brosette, LSU, Sr., Baton Rouge; Trey Ragas, UL Lafayette, So., New Orleans
DEFENSE
DL — Jaylon Ferguson, Louisiana Tech, Sr., St. Francisville; Patrick Johnson, Tulane, So., Chattanooga, Tennessee; Rashad Lawrence, LSU, Jr., Monroe; Sully Laiche, Nicholls, Jr., Gramercy
LB — BJ Blunt, McNeese, Sr., New Orleans; De’Arius Christmas, Grambling, Sr., Vicksburg, Mississippi; Devin White, LSU, Jr., Springhill
DB — Hayden Bourgeois, Northwestern State, So., Church Point; Grant Delpit, LSU, So., Houston, Texas; Amik Robertson, Louisiana Tech, So., Thibodaux; Greedy Williams, LSU, So., Shreveport
SPECIALISTS
P — Zach Von Rosenberg, LSU, So., Lake Charles
K — Cole Tracy, LSU, Sr., Camarillo, California
RS — Juwan Petit-Frere, Southeastern La., Jr., Orlando, Florida
SECOND TEAM
OFFENSE
OL — Garrett Brumfield, LSU, Sr., Baton Rouge; Grant Burguillos, McNeese, Jr., Mandeville; Lloyd Cushenberry, LSU, So., Geismar; Damien Lewis, LSU, Jr., Canton, Mississippi; Bobby Reynolds, ULM, Jr., Keller, Texas
TE — Foster Moreau, LSU, Sr., New Orleans
QB — Joe Burrow, LSU, Jr., The Plains, Ohio
WR — Marcus Green, ULM, Sr., Pontotoc, Mississippi; Drake Battaglia, Louisiana College, Sr., Thibodaux
RB — Darius Bradwell, Tulane, Jr., Tallahassee, Florida; Elijah Mitchell, UL Lafayette, So., Erath
DEFENSE
DL — Jordan Bradford, Louisiana Tech, Sr., Bay St. Louis, Mississippi; Terrence Garnett Jr., Louisiana College, Freshman, Alexandria; Jordan Lewis, Southern, Fr., Ocala, Florida; Chris Livings, McNeese, Jr., Lake Charles
LB — David Griffith, ULM, Sr., Plano, Texas; Tamarcus Russell, Southeastern La., Sr., Dadeville, Alabama; Evan Veron, Nicholls, Jr., LaPlace
DB — Colby Burton, McNeese, Donnie Lewis Jr., Tulane, Sr., Baton Rouge; Joseph McWilliams, Grambling, Jr., Baton Rouge; Roderic Teamer, Tulane, Sr. New Orleans
SPECIALISTS
P — Alex Kjellsten, McNeese, Sr., Lake Charles
K — Lorran Fonseca, Nicholls, Sr., Hercules, California
RS — Myles Ward, Northwestern State, Fr., New Orleans
HONORABLE MENTION
OL — Pat Allen, Southeastern La.; Dustin Burns, Northwestern State; T.J. Fialoa, ULM; Eddie Houston, Nicholls; John Leglue, Tulane; Ethan Reed, Louisiana Tech; Kody Russey, Louisiana Tech
QB — Shelton Eppler, Northwestern State
WR — Teddy Veal, Louisiana Tech
RB — Dontrell Taylor, Nicholls
DEFENSE
DL — Anfernee Mullins, Grambling; Ronald Ollie, Nicholls; Immanuel Turner, Louisiana Tech
LB — Isaac Adeyemi-Berglund, Southeastern La.; Michael Divinity, LSU; Zachery Harris, Tulane; Orel Ledet Jr., Louisiana College; Jacob Phillips, LSU
DB — Percy Cargo, Grambling; James Jackson, Louisiana Tech; Ahmani Martin, Nicholls; Khristian Mims, Nicholls

Saints’ Payton quiet about starters

NEW ORLEANS — Saints coach Sean Payton bristled on Monday when pressed about whether he intended to protect certain starters from potential injury by sitting them out of New Orleans’ anti-climactic regular season finale.
“We’re going to prepare to play Carolina and continue to work on getting better in the areas we need to,” Payton asserted. “I can’t be any more clear; we’ll approach it just like we would any regular season game.”
But this isn’t any regular season game. It holds no playoff implications for the Saints (13-2), who wrapped up the top overall seed in the NFC with a 31-28 victory over Pittsburgh on Sunday.
Sure, a victory would give the Saints the first 14-win regular season in the history of a franchise that was founded in 1967.
But that may not be worth the risk of exposing a central player such as quarterback Drew Brees — who turns 40 next month — to a full-force hit that might affect his health in the all-important postseason. And Carolina defenders — eager to improve their own career prospects by putting more great hits on video — will surely be taking aim at top offensive producers like receiver Michael Thomas and running back Alvin Kamara.
And there are probably benefits to getting more snaps for reserves this week in the event they are pressed into service in the playoffs.
“We’re going to treat this like a regular work week,” starting safety Vonn Bell said, sidestepping a question about the merits of resting key players this week. “We’re going to do what the coaches tell us.”
The rest vs. rust dilemma is one that coaches are generally thankful to encounter.
The last time the Saints were a No. 1 seed was in 2009, when Payton sat Brees for the regular season finale in Carolina. New Orleans lost that game before becoming the first team in NFL history to win a Super Bowl after ending the regular season on a three-game skid.
But Payton downplayed his past decision-making on that front.
“I don’t have a general philosophy,” Payton said. “Each team’s different.”
Saints players who are banged up could now have two weekends off if they don’t play against Carolina. New Orleans gets a bye after that before opening their playoff run at home in the divisional round against an opponent yet to be determined.
Recent results suggest the Saints could use the rest.
After a string of dominant victories during the heart of the season, New Orleans’ past four games have included one close loss and three straight fourth-quarter comebacks.
Whether the tighter games were indicative of the Saints coming back to the pack is a matter for debate. Payton and the Saints sound generally gratified by the way they’ve handled their recent string of late-game stress.
“The thing I’m encouraged about — each of those times we’re challenged, we found a way to come up on the right end for the most part,” Payton said, noting that in the NFL, close games are “more the norm” than the multi-touchdown victories the Saints enjoyed against the New York Giants, Washington, Cincinnati, Phila-delphia and in their home date with Atlanta.
“We’re a resilient team,” Saints right tackle Ryan Ramczyk said. “Not every NFL game is a blowout. Even if you have a dominant offense, it doesn’t happen a lot. We know that’s not a common occurrence and later in the year we got to battle through some games and I think that shows you what kind of team we have.”
Ramczyk looked to be among the players who could use a break when he briefly left the game against Pittsburgh with an ankle injury. But he returned to play through it and said he felt relatively good on Monday. It remains to be seen how left tackle Terron Armstead fares. His action against Pittsburgh was his first since his chest injury on Nov. 11 at Cincinnati. He did not make it through the whole game and the Saints have not provided updates on his condition.
Beyond that, the Saints appear relatively healthy, particularly after receiver Ted Ginn Jr.’s impactful return (five catches, 74 yards) against Pittsburgh from a knee injury that kept him on injured reserve more than half the season.
“He played well,” Payton said. “It was good to have him back out there.”
If Payton wants Ginn back out there again in the postseason, he could always limit his snap count against the Panthers.
As far as the most successful coach in Saints history is concerned, such decisions will become evident in due time.

Lindsay heads list of undrafted rookies making impact

Phillip Lindsay didn’t receive an invitation to the NFL scouting combine and his name wasn’t called during the draft.
Motivated by the snub, he made history.
The talented Denver Broncos running back became the first undrafted offensive player selected for the Pro Bowl as a rookie. He heads the list of undrafted rookies who’ve made an impact this season.
“At one point, I was just trying to make the team,” Lindsay said. “I was hoping to do some (gunner) reps, some kick return and hopefully catch some balls at punt return. When they gave me the news that I was going to the Pro Bowl, it was just a real emotional moment.”
Baltimore Ravens running back Gus Edwards, Philadelphia Eagles running back Josh Adams, New England Patriots cornerback J.C. Jackson and Minnesota Vikings cornerback Holton Hill have also made significant contributions to their teams after 32 teams passed on them in the draft.
Lindsay signed with his hometown club after playing four seasons at Colorado and was bold enough to seek permission from Hall of Famer Terrell Davis to wear his old No. 30 jersey after he earned a spot on the Broncos. He had 71 yards rushing in his debut and 107 yards in his second game. Lindsay moved into the starting lineup in Week 8 and had 1,037 yards, an average of 5.4 yards per carry and nine touchdowns. He also had 35 catches for 241 yards and one TD.
Lindsay was injured in the Broncos’ Week 16 loss to Oakland. He will miss the regular-season finale against the Chargers and is expected to be out for the Pro Bowl because of a right wrist injury, a person with knowledge of the MRI results told The Associated Press.
Lindsay is the third undrafted rookie with 1,000 yards in a season, joining Dominic Rhodes (1,104 in 2001) and LeGarrette Blount (1,007 in 2010).
“To be able to be elected to a Pro Bowl by your teammates, the people you’re playing against, the coaches, that means the world,” Lindsay said. “That means that they respect you. ... Nobody knew about me when I first got here, other than I was little.”
Lindsay ran for 2,726 yards and 30 TDs in his final two seasons in college but was passed over in the draft mainly because of his size — he’s 5-foot-8. He had offers from other teams but chose the Broncos so he could live in his parents’ basement and save money.
“His first day with us, he was the sixth halfback on the depth chart. The sixth!” Broncos coach Vance Joseph said. “Obviously, being a rookie free agent. Didn’t go to the combine. Wasn’t drafted. ... He came in here just trying to make our football team.”
Here’s a look at other undrafted rookies making an impact:
GUS EDWARDS: After playing three seasons at Miami and transferring to Rutgers for his final year of eligibility, Edwards signed a three-year contract with the Ravens in May. He began the season on the practice squad, played his first game in October and got just 15 carries in his first five games. Then Edwards had back-to-back 100-yard games as Lamar Jackson took over for the injured Joe Flacco at quarterback, and the Ravens (9-6) turned into a run-dominant offense and took the lead in the AFC North. Edwards leads the team with 642 yards, has a 5.1 average and two TDs. Jackson is right behind him with 605 yards on the ground. A Baltimore win Sunday earns it the AFC North title.
JOSH ADAMS: Despite running for 3,201 yards and 20 TDs in three seasons at Notre Dame, Adams had to go the free-agent route. He signed with the Super Bowl champions, earned a spot on the practice squad and made his NFL debut in Week 3. Adams got his chance after starter Jay Ajayi went down for the season, and Darren Sproles and Corey Clement were sidelined by injuries. He’s emerged as the leading rusher with 461 yards, has a 4.2 average and three TDs, helping the Eagles (8-7) remain in the playoff chase.
J.C. JACKSON: From Malcolm Butler to James Develin, the Patriots have scored often with undrafted rookies. Jackson, out of Florida Riverside Community College, is the latest to make a statement. One of the players New England picked up to help plug the hole left following Butler’s offseason departure, Jackson has appeared in 12 games and started the past four. The team’s confidence in him has grown each week and he’s performed well, hauling in a pair of interceptions. He’s been on the field for 89.3 percent of the snaps since December, and played every snap against the Bills. Jackson drew primary coverage duty on Steelers receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster and held him to four catches for 40 yards on 10 targets in a Week 15 loss.
HOLTON HILL: Hill has played a lot on special teams and started two games for Minnesota, one each for regulars Xavier Rhodes and Trae Waynes because of injuries. He has one interception and seven pass breakups and has generally held up well in coverage when tested by a tough slate of opposing quarterbacks: Aaron Rodgers twice, Tom Brady, Russell Wilson, Carson Wentz, Jared Goff, and Matthew Stafford.
ROBERT FOSTER: A wide receiver out of Alabama, Foster has 23 catches for 520 yards and two TDs for the Bills. His average of 22.6 yards per catch leads the team.
FRANKIE LUVU: The linebacker out of Washington State has played in 13 games for the Jets and has three sacks.
SHARIF FINCH: A linebacker out of Temple, Finch has been a key player on both defense and special teams for the Titans. Before injuring his shoulder in Week 15, he had 20 tackles, 1½ sacks, two quarterback pressures and two tackles for loss. He also has forced two fumbles and recovered another.
POONA FORD: The defensive tackle was the Big 12 defensive player of the year his senior year at Texas, but his size (5-foot-11, 310) caused teams to shy away from him. He’s played in 10 games for the Seahawks, including one start, and been strong in the run game.

Arkansas Baptist player victim in La. shooting

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Officials say an Arkansas Baptist College football player was among two people killed in a Christmas Eve shooting west of New Orleans.
Authorities say 20-year-old Thaddeus Watis of Convent, Louisiana, died after the shooting Tuesday night in Lutcher, about 40 miles west of New Orleans. Arkansas Baptist Coach Richard Wilson says Watis was a freshman football player at the private college in Little Rock.
Wilson tells the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette that Watis played several positions but was primarily a linebacker. Wilson says that the team is in shock and that Watis was the type of player that coaches “bragged on every day.”
Investigators have not yet determined a motive for the shooting, which left another man dead and two others wounded.

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