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JOSEPH WASHINGTON

Joseph Washington, 63, a resident of Berwick, died Sunday, Aug. 19, 2018, at his residence.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements, which are pending.

Miss America: Leadership bullied, silenced me

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — The reigning Miss America says she has been bullied, manipulated and silenced by the pageant’s current leadership, including Gretchen Carlson.
In a letter sent Friday to former Miss Americas, Cara Mund says she decided to speak out despite the risk of punishment.
Her letter is reminiscent of the movie “Mean Girls,” in which characters Gretchen and Regina bully the heroine and make her life miserable. That’s what happened to her in real life, Mund wrote. Gretchen Carlson is chairwoman of the Miss America Organization; Regina Hopper is its CEO.
Her letter exponentially increased the turmoil surrounding the pageant three weeks before the next Miss America is to be crowned in Atlantic City.
“Let me be blunt: I strongly believe that my voice is not heard nor wanted by our current leadership; nor do they have any interest in knowing who I am and how my experiences relate to positioning the organization for the future,” Mund wrote. “Our chair and CEO have systematically silenced me, reduced me, marginalized me, and essentially erased me in my role as Miss America in subtle and not-so-subtle ways on a daily basis. After a while, the patterns have clearly emerged, and the sheer accumulation of the disrespect, passive-aggressive behavior, belittlement, and outright exclusion has taken a serious toll.”
Mund said she’s been left out of interviews, not invited to meetings and called the wrong name. When she obliquely hinted at trouble with pageant leadership in an interview earlier this month with The Press of Atlantic City, Mund said she was swiftly punished by having her televised farewell speech cut to 30 seconds, and was told a dress she had been approved to wear in the traditional “show us your shoes” parade cannot be worn.
This year’s competition will not include swimsuits, and pageant officials from at least 19 states have called for the current leadership to resign.
There was no immediate response from The Miss America Organization or from Carlson and CEO Regina Hopper, who were singled out in Mund’s letter.
Mund said she was given three talking points to be made in every appearance: “Miss America is relevant. The #MeToo movement started with a Miss America, Gretchen Carlson. Gretchen Carlson went to Stanford.” (Mund said she was allowed to mention that she went to Brown to show that both women were highly educated.)
“Right away, the new leadership delivered an important message: There will be only one Miss America at a time, and she isn’t me,” Mund wrote.
Mund, who was Miss North Dakota and won the crown on a platform of increasing the number of women elected to political office, said she was treated better by the previous Miss America leadership that was forced from power after sending emails ridiculing the appearance, intellect and sex lives of former Miss Americas.
She cites examples of mistreatment including being excluded from the nationally televised announcement that swimsuits were being eliminated — even though she was with Carlson at the TV studio where it was made. She says pageant handlers ridiculed her clothing choices and chided her for wearing the same outfits too often.
When she reached out to former Miss Americas to see if they had been treated similarly, “I was reprimanded by Regina who told me that problems and concerns had to be kept ‘in the family.’

Old friend seeks encouraging words for mother of criminal

DEAR ABBY: What do you say when a friend’s son has committed a horrific crime? Does one say, “I’m sorry” or “Call me,” or merely pat them on the shoulder and move on? Or, what? I know she is suffering and blames herself for his crime. How do I even approach her? I knew her quite well until I moved away and started my life on an opposite coast. Telling her what her son did is not her fault somehow seems trite. I’m sure other people have been in this kind of situation. I found out about the young man’s crime ...

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Soap Opera Review: Planning a rosy future on ‘BATB’

THE BOLD AND THE BEAUTIFUL: Liam and Hope are planning their upcoming wedding and happy future together. Bill made an effort to connect with his and Katie’s son Will, but it didn’t go well. Steffy began making changes at Forrester Creations. DAYS OF OUR LIVES: Tripp fumed when Ciara asked Ben to move into the loft with them. Kate had a frightening nightmare about the deceased Andre. Unaware Will and Sonny are really covering for Leo’s death, Paul accused Sonny of having an affair with Will. GENERAL HOSPITAL: Nelle went to prison for what she did to Carly and Michael. Michael held ...

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Courtroom pew collapses

A pew collapsed with several people seated in it Thursday in one of the courtrooms in the St. Mary Parish Courthouse. Acadian Ambulance, Franklin Police and Franklin Fire Department personnel assisted the sheriff’s office and some persons were transported by ambulance for medical attention. Parish Chief Administrative Officer Henry “Bo” LaGrange said courthouse building maintenance is preparing a report, and that the pews were scheduled to be replaced in about two weeks.

A Smoke-Free St. Mary

Teche Action Clinic's new partnerships continue a long-standing health goal

A newly-forged partnership between Teche Action Clinic, Cardiovascular Institute of the South, The Louisiana Campaign for Tobacco-Free Living and Louisiana Smoking Cessation Trust was announced Wednesday at the annual Rise and Shine Breakfast held by St. Mary Chamber of Commerce and TAC, at the Lamp Post in Franklin.
The event was co-sponsored by Fit, Fun & Fabulous Serving St. Mary Parish and UnitedHealthcare.
In his address, David Konur, chief executive officer of CIS said, “We are very excited about partnering with the Teche Action Clinic in an effort to make St. Mary Parish smoke-free.
“That’s a noble cause and it’s a tough thing to go after; but, it’s absolutely essential that we get after this.”
Konur went on to discuss CIS’ approach to smoking cessation as consisting of one which maximizes probability of effectiveness through perception and resource availability.
He explained, “We offer a comprehensive approach to combining physician evaluations with medications and support counseling services.”
Citing the quit-rate of the average potential non-smoker, “on their own,” as less than five percent, Konur upped the quit-rate to 10 percent if the patient is “looking at a white coat,” (medical-personnel), and then to 19.25 percent, if counseling services are added to the white coat index.
“So, we’re really excited to partner with the Teche Action Clinic,” Konur said, “where Dr. Wiltz and his team are going to take care of the medical evaluation and that initial white coat view of it, and then we are going to come in and support them with the counseling component of it, to see if we can’t drive that quit-rate well above 20 percent.”
TAC has been working toward the goal of a smoke-free St. Mary Parish for years now, to include recent efforts alongside TFL, within the last year, toward more stringent smoke-free ordinances in the parish’s five municipalities, limiting tobacco use in or near government-owned facilities.
Dr. Gary Wiltz, chief executive officer of TAC said the Smoking Cessation Program would not be offered just to Teche Action Clinic exclusively, but also to the community at large.
Wiltz, at the end of the breakfast, accepted an award for hero recognition from United Healthcare for his work in helping the parish community to quit smoking and quit using smokeless tobacco.
Before adjourning to TAC’s Weber Street location in Franklin, for the official ribbon-cutting ceremony to kick off the Smoking Cessation Program, proclamations were signed by municipal, parish and state dignitaries, proclaiming National Health Center Week in St. Mary Parish.
Through the Smoking Cessation Program, the Teche Action Clinic will arrange for smokers to receive, at no cost, any of the following cessation services: cessation medications, individual/group intensive cessation counseling, and telephone and web-based support via 1-800-QUIT-NOW or www.quitwithusla.org.

The Old Courthouse Part III

Voters approve a one-cent sales tax, and the long-awaited opportunity to build a new courthouse and jail begins

(Editor’s Note: This is the third in a series)
The headline in the Banner-Tribune on Dec. 8, 1965 was: “Tax Election Passes.”
Voters approved the one-cent sales tax long-haggled over and as yet undecided solution to the St. Mary Parish Courthouse and jail issue.
The vote was 4,604 to 1,864 out of 18,000 registered voters.
The tax proceeds would also be split with the school board at 30 percent; the policy jury got 20 percent “to be used in capital improvements, buildings, waterway improvement, rural areas and to help build a new courthouse and jail,” the report reads. The five cities would split the remaining 50 percent.
On Jan. 1, 1966, the Banner reported: “Long before the sales tax passed on December 7 there was a question on the minds of some St. Mary citizens as to whether or not the parish police jury would carry through on construction of a new courthouse and jail. The 16 jury members answered emphatically this question Wednesday with a unanimous vote in favor of the new buildings, although agreement on a building site could not be reached.”
A $3 million bond issue was bandied about, but one juror said he had been told that a seven-story courthouse “was being constructed in Lafayette for a little over $2 million.”
It was also reported that “the state fire marshal has already condemned the present courthouse and if not torn down and rebuilt, the jury would have to bear the expense of maintaining the present buildings or the expense of demolishing them.”
As a side note, on Jan. 28, 1966, there was a front page article titled, “11 brass keys unlock cell doors at parish jail.” The following story states, “They’re as old as the jail, which makes them about 65 years old. Educated guesses say the jail was built about five years before the courthouse was constructed. That was in 1907-08.”
In February, 1966, the problem of the land upon which the courthouse and jail were erected rose again. According to found documents, the property was donated “…for the use and benefit of the people of the Parish of St. Mary…” by Alexander Lewis on May 5, 1814 and executed by Parish Judge Jehu Wilkinson. The agreement clearly indicated a courthouse and jail should occupy the site.
Whether or not that situation had any effect on the deliberations, it was reported on Feb. 6 that the courthouse committee “revealed that a location on land across the tracks from Foster Elementary School is under consideration.” Jurors asked for an appraisal of the present square and the proposed site in comparison. Further mention of that site is negligible.
Readers may recall the “Around Town” section of the newspaper in many years past, a sort of who’s-who and what’s-what submitted by readers and consolidated into a single article. On Feb. 25, 1966, the column included a snippet, “…Rita Robicheaux determinedly fighting courthouse termites with a spray can…”
It was not until May that the Banner ran a two-deck, eight-column headline above the flag: “Courthouse will remain on present site by 10-4 vote of St. Mary police jury.”
According to the report, Juror Joe Russo “extolled the advantages of a 30-acre tract of land said to be available in the Calumet area, despite the fact that it has been reiterated at almost all jury meetings where the new courthouse site has been discussed that a courthouse must be located, according to law, within the city limits of the country seat, in this case, Franklin.”
Consideration of the design of the courthouse was sought by the police jury in August, 1966 when they asked the Landmarks Society to study “a preliminary plan of the outside elevations” of the new building. Juror Lee Champagne said the group “was asked last week to make suggestions if it felt the design could better harmonize with the architectural style of this area.”
When this is done, architect Lloyd Guillory “will begin drawing a detailed working plan. Then the architect will draw up specifications and the police jury will be ready to advertise for bids.”
The school board agreed to rent space in the new courthouse, it was reported in August.
Guillory’s plans, as yet incomplete, were presented to the police jury in September, 1966. It would be “115,000 sq. feet of enclosed floor space in an eight story building with first level parking for 144 cars. It will exhibit masonry construction with weather conditioning and a helio-port atop the building. The outside will be basically grey bands of grey exposed aggregate around the bottom and top of the entire building.”
It is obvious that the Landmarks Society’s recommendations, if any, were not followed in the design presented. Perhaps prophetically, Guillory said that “some traditional minded persons in the area might not like the plan but it was in keeping with a modern and fast growing area such as St. Mary.”
Plans included three elevators, including the one for sheriff’s use only.
Nov. 18, 1966, the headline: “Courthouse model unveiled, building may start in March.”
Guillory unveiled a scale model of the new $3 million courthouse.
As predicted, “Some citizens were distressed over the lack of colonial style in the courthouse, but Juror Lee Champagne said the committee felt the building should reflect the progressive attitude of the people of St. Mary,” the reporter mentioned.
Even so, the design would have 20 times more usable space, and six times more actual floor space, standing 120-feet tall. “The building itself is designed to withstand 200 miles per hour winds; it has minimal glass usage and the reinforced concrete means few areas will need painting.” The ground floor parking was reduced to 22 spaces, with spaces for 55 on the bulk heading and 144 in the front plaza.
Police jury offices began to move out of the old building in December and into “the Blevins building (formerly the Bella building) where Shell Oil was headquartered several years ago.”
The $3 million in bonds were sold in January, 1967. Interest rate was around 4.75 percent. Meanwhile, “various offices in the present police jury building are in the process of moving above the Greyhound station,” the Banner reported.
Jan. 5, the front page featured three photos of police jury and other occupants moving out of the police jury building.
And on Feb. 2, the Banner reported that “three existing statues on the courthouse square will be used in the mall planned for the new building” including the Justice statue from atop the courthouse, Senator Donelson T. Caffery and the Confederate Soldier.
Today, we know that Justice was not relocated on the plaza, and is now at home in Grevemberg House Museum. Local citizens reportedly rescued Justice from the back of a truck on the way to the dump.
The police jury awarded bids to Horace B. Rickey Inc. of Lafayette for the new construction and Southern Steel Co. of San Antonio for structural steel in March.
Beginning March 21, the Social Security representative moved operations to the National Guard Armory.
Not much more was written on the subject for the rest of 1967. In February, 1968, the “Double Talk” column by Nora Lewis and Ella Mensman led off: “The builders of the new St. Mary Parish Courthouse seem to be adding insult to injury. That sheer grey wall staring us in the face has almost got us stir crazy and now we glance out and see a coat of black going on. If there’s anything we can’t stand it is black courthouses. Dickie Landry was in the office checking telephones and assured us that the black is tar to seal the grey concrete wall. When asked what they plan to cover it with he said, ‘Why, dirt of course, and flowers will be blooming al up the sides of the seven stories.’ Thoroughly satisfied, we all forgot the black wall and went back to work.”
Over the months that followed through most of 1968, the demolition of the structures surrounding the existing courthouse and subsequent beginning of construction of the new behind it were regarded as a curiosity, annoyance and in some cases, with disgust.
But there was also a bit of nostalgia, as Lewis and Mensman wrote: “You just oughta see how clean and sparkling (the old courthouse) is these days. We went into the rotunda election night and thought for a moment we had stumbled into the wrong building. Could it be that someone is feeling sorry for the poor, doomed old thing and trying to make its last days more comfortable?”
The first official act in the nearly complete new courthouse was in January, 1968, when Dan Winchester was sworn in as parish assessor by Clerk of Court Benny Blakeman. Winchester had asked to be the first.
June 27, 1968, and the headline proclaims: “Final session in court termed passing of era.”
The story went on, “Today marks the last session of court to be held in the old St. Mary Parish courthouse, soon to be demolished….Judge S.0. Landry said he feels like his losing an old friend for he has served on the bench for 30 years.”
Lafayette attorney J.J. Davidson said that “the architectural beauty and symmetry of the building which has symbolized the cause for justice for many decades, no gives way to the demands of progress and practical efficiency of modern times.”
The following Monday, offices and their workers began their move into the new, modern courthouse.
(To be continued)

Higgins: Local industry will support Trump on trade

St. Mary's congressman backed President Donald Trump's trade policies in an interview Friday, even the policy that could sting a major local industry. U.S. Rep. Clay Higgins, R-Port Barre, said the challenges will be overcome as "a new normal" emerges in trade relations. Higgins toured St. Mary business Thursday and Friday, including shipyards and Hanagriff Machine Ship in Centerville. The shipbuilders, whose contracts have been a boon for the parish economy during the oil price downturn, stand to pay more for steel and aluminum because of the tariffs Trump announced in the spring. About 800 people work in St. Mary shipbuilding,

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Two men cited for allegedly harvesting alligator out of season

Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries enforcement agents cited two men for alleged alligator violations on Aug. 15 in St. Mary Parish, a news release said.

Agents cited Barry Pedigo, 59, of Pensacola, Florida, and Logan Madere, 28,of Westwego, for possessing an alligator during a closed season, the release stated.

Agents received information about an alligator being illegally harvested at Burns Point Park located in St. Mary Parish.

After investigating the information, agents learned that Pedigo captured an alligator by hand. Pedigo was bit multiple times and had to be taken to Lafayette General Hospital to be treated for moderate injuries. Madere then killed the alligator, the release said.

Agents seized the 4 foot 8 inch alligator. Harvesting an alligator during a closed brings a $400 to $950 fine and up to 120 days in jail. The men may also face civil restitution totaling $375.80 for the replacement value of the alligator.

Sales tax collections down in July

St. Mary Parish sales and use tax collections decreased by over 10 percent in July compared to last year as parish officials hope to see a turn for the better by the end of the year.

The sales and use tax department collected $3.16 million in sales and use taxes, 10.4 percent decline from the $3.53 million collected in July 2017. Financial audits resulted in $99,934 in collections during July compared to the $82,142 from audits for July 2017, according to the monthly sales tax report.

The parish hotel sales tax brought in $47,867 in July, a 4 percent drop from the $49,875 gathered in the same month of 2017.

Frank Fink, the parish’s economic development director, said the area’s economy is still in “a holding pattern,” and deep-water oil and gas activity is just starting to pick up. Companies related to deep-water production are starting to add jobs.

“I think we’ll start to see some positive effects by year end,” Fink said.

Oil prices recently hit what Fink called “the floor” of $65 per barrel. Fink looks forward to business picking up the rest of the year.

St. Mary’s unemployment rate was 8 percent in June, up from the 6.8 percent rate in May, according to the latest employment statistics from the Louisiana Workforce Commission.

June’s workforce, the sum of residents employed and those looking for work, totaled 20,236 people, with 18,608 employed residents and 1,628 unemployed. May’s workforce totaled 19,887 residents, with 18,540 employed and 1,347 unemployed.

That 68-person uptick in the number of employed residents was the first such monthly increase since February, when the parish gained 24 jobs compared to January.

An increase in the unemployment rate was actually a positive sign, because more people were looking for jobs in June than in May, Fink said.

“If there wasn’t much activity, they wouldn’t be looking,” he said.

The June 2017 unemployment rate was 8.8 percent with 19,043 people employed and 1,827 unemployed.

Sales tax collections totaled $2.97 million in June, up 8.2 percent from the $2.74 million collected during June 2017. Without collections made as a result of financial audits, collections rose 5.2 percent. Audits brought in $83,660 in June and $3,100 in the same month of the prior year.

The parish’s hotel sales tax brought in $36,720 in June, an 11.1 percent decrease from the $41,295 collected in June 2017.

In May, officials collected $2.74 million in sales and use taxes, down 12.8 percent from the $3.15 million collected in May 2017. Excluding collections due to financial audits, collections decreased just 2.7 percent.

Audit collections totaled $3,330 in May, while May 2017 audit collections were $330,529.

April sales and use tax collections totaled $3.29 million, up 4.5 percent from the $3.14 million collected in April 2017. Financial audits brought in $75,008 in April compared to the $3,100 in audit collections in the same month of 2017. Excluding collections from audits, collections rose 2.3 percent.

Second quarter sales tax collections brought in about $9 million, a 0.4 percent drop from the $9.03 million collected in 2017’s second quarter. Excluding collections from audits, collections increased 1.6 percent.

Hotel collections for the second quarter were $120,595, almost exactly the same as the $120,580 collected in the second quarter of 2017.

Morgan City’s road royalty sales tax had $69,555 in net collections during July, bringing the seven-month 2018 total collected for road work to $446,436.

The following occupational licenses were filed in July: Morgan City, $8,930; St. Mary Parish, $2,972; Patterson, $1,800; Franklin, $1,085; Berwick, $485; and Baldwin, $69.

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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