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Bayou Teche, Chene projects highlight proposed budget

Funds for the Bayou Teche and Bayou Chene flood protection projects highlight the St. Mary Levee District’s proposed 2019 budget.

Levee District Executive Director Tim Matte presented the district’s regular 2019 proposed budget during Thursday’s levee district commission meeting at the parish courthouse.

The 2019 calendar year budget will be up for adoption at December’s meeting. Matte expects the district to get $7.6 million in revenues and spend $6.5 million. Officials anticipate an increase of $1.1 million in the levee district’s 2019 ending fund balance, bringing the total fund balance to about $9 million.

Additionally, the district has a separate capital projects budget, which is based on the sale of $13 million in bonds Tuesday to finance the Bayou Teche Floodgate and Yokeley Levee Extension projects. District commissioners accepted issuance of those bonds during the Thursday meeting.

Officials expect to spend $6.15 million on the Bayou Teche project in 2019, which will be roughly half the cost of the total project construction, Matte said. About $3 million of that expense will be paid for by a statewide flood control grant. The district plans to spend the remaining funds to complete the project in 2020.

The project is meant to prevent potential flooding along Bayou Teche from the Franklin area to Centerville and consists of building a receiving structure, floodgate on Bayou Teche at its junction with Charenton Canal and levees to keep floodwaters from going around the structure.

In conjunction with the Bayou Teche work, the levee district intends to spend $3 million on the Yokeley Levee Extension Project next year. Commissioners approved moving ahead with design of the Yokeley extension project Thursday.

Design of the Bayou Teche project should finish in mid-January, and officials should then be able to go to bid for construction in late February or March.

District officials expect to receive $5 million next year in reimbursement funds from the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority for design work on the Bayou Chene Flood Control and Diversion Project, which includes installing a permanent floodgate in Amelia to prevent backwater flooding from the Atchafalaya River in the region.

The district will have about $4.7 million in state capital outlay money to spend on a portion of the Bayou Chene project design in 2019, Matte said. Construction alone should cost $80 million.

Leaders hope to break ground on the Bayou Chene project by September 2019 to fall in line with a recently granted state Department of Natural Resources permit extension that will expire then, said Nicole Cutforth of APTIM, the engineering firm in charge of the project.

Funds from the federal Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act will be spent in 2020 when they become available to use on construction of the Bayou Chene project, Cutforth said.

Potential phases for the Bayou Chene work are construction of the floodgate and receiving structure and levees with a weir at the end of Tabor Canal in Terrebonne Parish.

In other business, the commission

—Approved performing an archaeological survey in the amount of $17,000 as required by the Corps of Engineers for the Bayou Teche project.

—Approved hiring Southern Construction at a cost of $65,700 to perform repairs on the flood side of the levee along the Intracoastal Waterway near Cotten Road in the Patterson area.

— Approved an engagement letter for the statewide agreed upon procedures with Darnall, Sikes & Frederick.

—Authorized establishment of new bank accounts and a Louisiana Asset Management Pool account for proceeds of bond issuance.

—Authorized signing of an intergovernmental agreement with the town of Baldwin to transfer rights of ways to the town for the Bayou Choupique project.

Duncan Hines recalling 2.4M boxes of cake mix

CHICAGO (AP) — Duncan Hines is recalling 2.4 million boxes of cake mix because of a link to salmonella.
The recall affects Classic White, Classic Butter Golden, Signature Confetti and Classic Yellow varieties of cake mix, according to Conagra Brands, Duncan Hines’ parent company. The affected boxes have expi-ration dates between March 7-13, 2019.
Most of the boxes were distributed in the U.S. but some were shipped internationally. Chicago-based Conagra said it is still determining what other countries may be impacted.
In a statement, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it informed Conagra after it tested a sample of cake mix and found that it contained salmonella. It was the same strain that sickened people in five cases reported to the Centers for Disease Control.
The FDA says consumers should not eat or bake with the mix.

Tri-City Area high school football statistical leaders

Season Totals Rushing 202-2,021, Josh Jones, Berwick, 26 TDs 203-1,772, Dajon Richard, Patterson, 22 TDs 211-962, Davidyione Bias, CCHS, 12 TDs 71-591, DeDe Gant, CCHS, 8 TDs 54-431, Devonta Grogan, MCHS, 4 TDs 74-382, Mitchell Sanford, Berwick, 5 TDs 86-376, Kerwin Francois, MCHS, 4 TDs 45-294, Hugh Hamer, CCHS, 4 TDs 47-247, James Butler, Patterson 22-156, Keyon Singleton, Berwick, Passing 1,354, Mitchell Sanford, Berwick, 95-182-9, 13 TDs 837, DeDe Gant, CCHS, 50-89-6, 13 TDs 780, Randy Paul, Patterson, 56-112-6, 6 TDs 195, Devonta Grogan, MCHS, 20-33-5 191, Khai Hartley, MCHS, 22-44-4, 2 TDs 143, Dajon Richard, Patterson, 7-12-1, 1 TD 137, Tate Alcina, MCHS, 10-23-1, 1 TD 50, Bryce Grizzaffi, CCHS, 1-1-0, 1 TD 19, Taylor Blanchard, CCHS, 2-11-1 0,

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MCHS looking to make run at state tournament

Morgan City High School will be making its first appearance at the Allstate Sugar Bowl/Louisiana High School Athletic Association State Volleyball Tournament in 10 years Thursday when it meets district foe and No. 3 seed E.D. White at 10:50.
Morgan City, the No. 6 seed, last played in the state quarterfinals in 2008, falling to Sam Houston.
Since that last trip, Morgan City has been plagued by a regional-round road block before breaking through this season.
“It’s a relief, but yet you don’t want to be satisfied with just getting to the quarterfinals,” longtime Morgan City High School Coach Christy Theriot said.
This season, the Lady Tigers enter the round of eight with a record of 29-13.
It will meet E.D. White, which has a 26-11 mark.
The teams will meet Thursday on Court 2.
Earlier this season in District 8-III play, E.D. White and top-seed Vandebilt Catholic split the District 8-III title as each finished 5-1 in league play and handed each other their lone loss.
Morgan City was 2-4 in league play.
District 8-III had three teams ranked in the top six of the Division III power rankings.
Sh’Diamond Holly leads Morgan City with 479 kills and 73 solo blocks, while Jolee Nini has 844 assists. McKenzi Smith is tops on the team with 273 digs, while Karmen Peterson leads the squad with 81 aces and 28 block assists.
A year ago, E.D. White advanced to the quarterfinals, falling to eventual state champion Vandebilt Catholic.
E.D. White’s road to the quarterfinals this year featured victories against No. 30 Lusher Charter in the first round and No. 14 Iowa in the regional round.
Morgan City has topped No. 27 Livonia in the first round and No. 11 Brusly in the regional round.
“The last two matches, they’ve played with more chemistry and intensity, which they’re definitely going to need for the next game,” Theriot said of her team. “They played as a team. They kept their intensity up. We had some not-great moments, but we bounced back, We didn’t stay down.”
Morgan City and E.D. White met twice in the regular season, with E.D. White winning in four games on Oct. 9 and Morgan City falling in straight sets on Oct. 17.
“We have been our own worst enemy,” Theriot said. “We know what they’re going to do, what they’re capable of doing. We’ve got to change what we’re going to do. We’ve got to cut down on mistakes, and we can’t give them free balls, and we have to serve tough.”
Theriot said E.D. White utilizes whatever opponents give them.
“They don’t send free balls back,” she said. “They (are) all consistent, I guess would be the term. Nobody huge. Nobody that gets up like Sh’Diamond does, but they run a quicker offense.”
In addition to facing each other, the teams have multiple common opponents.
E.D. White beat Ursuline Academy, East Ascension, Catholic High-New Iberia, Terrebonne, South Terrebonne, Thibodaux, Newman, Assumption and Berwick twice apiece and split with Vandebilt Catholic.
Morgan City defeated Newman, South Terrebonne, Ursuline Academy, Catholic High-New Iberia, Thibodaux and Berwick twice. Morgan City fell to Assumption, East Ascension and were defeated twice by Vandebilt Catholic.
E.D. White enters the quarterfinals on a two-game winning streak after dropping its final three matches of the regular season.
The Morgan City-E.D. White winner will face the winner of No. 2 St. Michael the Archangel and No. 7 Parkview Baptist Friday at 11:50 a.m.

CCHS looking to cap season with a state title

Central Catholic will re-turn to the Allstate Sugar Bowl/Louisiana High School Athletic Association State Volleyball State Tournament at the Pontchartrain Center in Kenner for the third straight year, looking for that elusive Division V state championship. The Lady Eagles (35-8) advanced to the state semi-finals a year ago, falling to eventual state champion Metairie Park Country Day in three close sets. This season, Central Catholic will meet No. 6 Epis-copal School of Acadiana (26-11) in the quarterfinals Thursday at 2:30 p.m. on court 3. A year ago, Episcopal School of Acadiana fell in the quarterfinals to Metairie Park Country Day. “Excited and grateful ...

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Police: Man admitted to selling marijuana

Two suspects were arrested Wednesday in Morgan City after one man admitted to selling marijuana to another man, Police Chief James Blair said in a news release.

—Raphael Valentine, 36, of Aucoin Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 7:39 p.m. Wednesday on charges of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.

—Louis D. Topham, 43, of Louisa Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 7:39 p.m. Wednesday on a charge of possession of marijuana and a warrant charging him with failure to pay a fine.

Officers were in the area of Terrebonne and Shannon streets in regard to possible illegal drug activity. Officers located two individuals identified as Topham and Valentine.

Police learned that Topham had a warrant for city court. Topham was also in possession of suspected marijuana. Blair said. Valentine admitted to selling Topham suspected marijuana. Officers also located drug paraphernalia and suspected marijuana in Valentine’s possession, Blair said. Both Topham and Valentine were jailed.

Blair reported that officers responded to 43 calls and reported the following arrests:

—Gilbert C. Howard, 48, of Youngs Road in Morgan City, was arrested at 11:27 a.m. Wednesday on a warrant charging him with criminal trespass.

Howard was located on Third Street and arrested on a warrant. The warrant stems from a Nov. 4 incident that alleges Howard was located on an individual’s property without permission, Blair said. Howard was jailed.

—Chasity D. Culp, 33, of Sixth Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 2:44 p.m. Wednesday on a warrant charging her with improper supervision of a minor by a parent.

Culp was arrested in city court on a police warrant. The warrant alleges that Culp allowed her child to have an excess amount of absences and tardiness this school year, Blair said. Culp was jailed.

—Joseph L. Gary, 32, of Terrebonne Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 4:10 p.m. Wednesday on a warrant charging him with failure to appear for trial. Gary was located on Egle Street and arrested on a city court warrant. Gary was jailed.

—Ashton Martinez, 19, of Hickory Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday on a warrant for two counts of probation violation. Martinez was transported from St. Mary Parish jail to the Morgan City Police Department on a city court warrant.

St. Mary Parish Sheriff Scott Anslum reported that deputies responded to 33 complaints in the parish and reported the following arrests relating to east St. Mary Parish:

—Kendrick Nolan, 28, of Beau Lane in Morgan City, was arrested at 2 p.m. Wednesday on a warrant charging him with domestic abuse battery.

A corrections deputy made contact with Nolan when he turned himself in at the St. Mary Parish Law Enforcement Center on an active warrant for his arrest. Nolan was booked on the warrant and then released on $5,000 bail.

—Cedric Gant, 21, of Grace Street in Siracusa, was arrested at 9:24 p.m. Wednesday on a charge of possession of marijuana.

Deputies patrolling Siracusa smelled a strong odor of marijuana in a parking lot area. While investigating the source of the odor the deputies made contact with Gant who was sitting in his vehicle in the parking lot. The K-9 officer conducted a free air search and responded to the vehicle’s passenger side. Marijuana was found in the vehicle, Anslum said. Gant was released on a summons to appear Jan. 30, 2019.

Patterson Police Chief Janis Merritt reported the following arrest:

—Shantell Denise Blackburn, 48, of Cleveland Street in Patterson, was arrested at 10:41 p.m. Wednesday on a charge of theft of medication. No bail was set yet.

Berwick Police Chief James Richard reported no arrests.

ACT scores up; schools await scores

St. Mary Parish public schools were to learn Thursday how well they performed in the state accountability system.
The local schools have already received some good news about how well high school students are doing.
The district composite score on the ACT was up half a point in 2017-18 and closed the gap by which the district trails the state composite score.
The 593 students who took the ACT had a composite score of 19.2 last year, up from 18.7 in 2016-17. Statewide, 43,696 students had a combined score of 19.3 last year, down from 19.6.
“Any change in ACT is commendable given the expansive nature of the content tested and its objective in determining college aptitude,” Assistant St. Mary Superintendent Teresa Bagwell said. “High schools are working to align course schedules in a manner whereby students have completed the higher level math and science courses prior to taking the ACT.
“This adjustment along with the more rigorous standards required in all grades has made our students better prepared overall.”
School by school in St. Mary, with the number of students tested in 2017-18, the score for last year and the score for 2016-17:
—Berwick High, 126, 20.9, 22.
—Centerville High, 34, 19.4, 17.3.
—Franklin High, 79, 16.8, 17.3.
—Morgan City High, 191, 19.1, 19.2.
—Patterson High, 96, 18.4, 16.9.
—West St. Mary High, 67, 17.9, 18.7.
Meanwhile, state education officials are preparing to release the latest data on how well child care centers and schools in Louisiana are educating children.
State Superintendent of Education John White is set to discuss the figures at a Thursday afternoon news conference.
The department says in a news release that the figures will detail how well state education institutions prepared students for “the next level of learning” during the last school year.
St. Mary has been within fractions of a point achieving an A letter grade for the last two years. But state education officials have raised the bar.
The standard for the test has been achieving the level of Basic on key subjects. The state has been transitioning to a higher standard requiring the level of Mastery.

Hospital district eases deadline for LifePoint's answer

Staff Report
St. Mary Hospital Service District No. 2 has postponed the deadline it had set to make sure LifePoint Health continues to run Teche Regional Medical Center until new management is ready to go.
LifePoint, which operates Teche Regional under a lease, says it wants to give up its Louisiana operations. The Nashville-based company and the district had announced a preliminary agreement in which LifePoint would leave Dec. 31.
But there were also assurances that the hospital would remain open and that service wouldn’t be interrupted. And at a special meeting Friday, the board gave LifePoint until Nov. 9 to agree to stay in place until a replacement is found.
Otherwise, the board would go to court to have LifePoint enjoined from giving up management of the hospital.
Then, at the district board’s regular meeting Wednesday, the board voted to postpone the deadline — a possible sign that LifePoint and the district have come to some understanding.
Board members say they’re negotiating with Ochsner Health System of Jefferson Parish about taking over management of Teche Regional.
“All the parties are working pretty well together …,” said Chairman Heath Hoffpauir at Wednesday’s meeting. “The hospital will not close.”

Radio logs for Nov. 8

The following are the radio dispatch logs from the Morgan City Police Department. To report unlawful or suspicious activity, call the police department at 985-380-4605.

Wednesday, Nov. 7

7:10 a.m. 1100 block of Victor II Boulevard; Alarm.

8:08 a.m. 1000 block of Brashear Avenue; 911 hang up call.

8:14 a.m. Redwood Street and La. 182; Disturbance.

9:06 a.m. 1400 block of Railroad Avenue; Complaint.

9:06 a.m. Filmore Street; Complaint.

10:07 a.m. 3100 block of Lake Palourde Road; Alarm.

10:16 a.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Juvenile problem.

10:48 a.m. 1000 block of Seventh Street; Medical.

11:25 a.m. Youngs Road; Arrest.

11:45 a.m. 1100 block of Cottonwood Street; Animal complaint.

12:27 p.m. 1100 block of Marguerite Street; Complaint.

12:31 p.m. Seventh Street and Brashear Avenue; Traffic incident.

12:33 p.m. 600 block of Barrow Street; Hit and run.

1:14 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.

1:46 p.m. 3100 block of Lake Palourde Road; Alarm.

1:48 p.m. Justa Street; Complaint.

2:26 p.m. 500 block of Roderick Street; Telephone harassment.

2:37 p.m. 900 block of Seventh Street; Patrol request.

2:42 p.m. 7200 block of La. 182; Arrest.

2:58 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.

3:09 p.m. 6200 block of La. 182; Complaint.

3:33 p.m. 1000 block of Seventh Street; Complaint.

3:42 p.m. Greenwood Street; Complaint.

3:55 p.m. 600 block of Egle Street; Arrest.

3:57 p.m. 1000 block of Eighth Street; Theft.

4:25 p.m. Utah Street and Levee Road; Assistance.

6:19 p.m. Mallard Street; Arrest.

6:41 p.m. 1200 block of Youngs Road; Hang up call.

6:55 p.m. 600 block of Egle Street; Arrest.

8:37 p.m. 2400 block of Pecan Street; Stand by.

9:11 p.m. 100 block of Brownell Homes; Stand by.

9:14 p.m. 2400 block of Sixth Street; Remove subject.

10:09 p.m. 200 block of Roderick Street; Medical.

10:42 p.m. 2000 block of Allison Street; Disturbance.

Thursday, Nov. 8

2:05 a.m. 6300 block of La. 182; Lost and found.

2:19 a.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Medical.

Democrat surprises observers by making secretary of state runoff

BATON ROUGE (AP) — Democratic candidate Gwen Collins-Greenup reached the December runoff in Louisiana’s secretary of state race with little money for advertising and no backing from her party, emerging as the state’s Election Night surprise.
Still, Collins-Greenup faces difficult odds to win the office in the Dec. 8 showdown against Republican Kyle Ardoin, who’s working as interim secretary of state until voters elect someone to the position.
GOP candidates combined received support from 61 percent of voters in Tuesday’s open primary, suggesting Ardoin has the advantage heading into the final four weeks of the campaign.
Democratic Party leaders, meanwhile, were struggling to explain how Collins-Greenup reached the runoff at all, instead of the party’s endorsed contender, Renee Fontenot Free, a top aide to two former secretaries of state.
“I think there’s a lot of us scratching our heads trying to see what happened there,” Stephen Handwerk, executive director of the Louisiana Democratic Party, said Wednesday.
Collins-Greenup, a lawyer and notary from the small East Feliciana Parish town of Clinton, raised less than $3,000 for the race and spent the small sum on her qualifying fee, website registration, signs and campaign push cards. She did no widespread advertising.
But the Democrat traveled the state attending candidate forums and small events, speaking to whatever groups invited her and seeking support among African-American voters who make up the base of Louisiana’s Democratic Party.
Handwerk praised Collins-Greenup and said party leaders have reached out to offer her runoff assistance, though she hadn’t yet responded by midday Wednesday. Collins-Greenup also didn’t return calls or a text message from The Associated Press and hadn’t posted on her social media sites since reaching the runoff.
“At the end of the day, we have a young, incredibly smart woman who made it into the runoff, surprising almost everyone, and we’re excited about what that says for the future,” Handwerk said.
The special election competition will fill the remaining year of the term of Republican Tom Schedler, who resigned in May amid allegations he sexually harassed an employee. The secretary of state oversees elections, state archives and business registrations.
The primary race was crowded, with nine little-known candidates and limited donor interest. The candidate who raised and spent the most money — Republican state Rep. Julie Stokes of Kenner — finished fifth.
Stokes spent more than $430,000 ahead of the primary, including some of her own money, according to campaign finance reports filed so far, while Ardoin spent at least $210,000. The two Republicans were the most well-financed and were the heaviest TV advertisers in the race.
Ardoin was Schedler’s top aide. Though he’s only worked in the top job a few months, Ardoin ran as an incumbent, suggesting in his advertising that he’s been leading the office for nearly a decade, without mentioning he was first assistant during most of the time.
On his Facebook page Wednesday, Ardoin told supporters of other candidates that “I hope to earn your trust and support in the runoff. I’m proud of the positive campaign we ran and I’m proud of the job our office is doing. This race is FAR from over!”
Ardoin and Collins-Greenup each made the runoff with 20 percent of the vote.

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