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St. Mary Excel; offers update on community progress

Seven years ago, St. Mary Excel brought in the Urban Land Institute for a study on ways to build “the economic foundation along and around the Atchafalaya River.”
On Wednesday, St. Mary Excel hosted a community update at Morgan City Municipal Auditorium, where people involved with aspects of the local economy reported on their progress. That progress is happening above ground and below.
Among the speakers:
•St. Mary Levee District Operations Manager Michael Brocato talked about efforts to create a resiliency lab for the area.
Brocato, a homeowner interested in making homes storm-resistant, spoke about the difficulties involved in gathering information a homeowner needs.
Local officials have been meeting to look for a way to bring important information together in one place, and they hope to have a plan in place in late August.
“This hub is going to be for us, the people of this parish,” Brocato said.
He hopes that hub will be located in a building on the river.
Meanwhile, he said, the Corps of Engineers is conducting a study that could result in a change in the amount of water diverted into the Atchafalaya from the Mississippi and Red river systems. Currently, 30% of the Mississippi’s flow is diverted this way by congressional mandate.
Also according to information presented Wednesday, the Mississippi and Red River tributary systems cover 41% of the United States and two Canadian provinces.
“If you don’t think St. Mary Parish is important to this country,” Brocato said, “you better think again.”
•Dr. Brian Roberts gave an update on the creation of the Atchafalaya National Estuarine Research Reserve.
Roberts is executive director and chief scientist for the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, which is overseeing the current phase of the ANERR’s development. The nation’s 30 such reserves — Louisiana is the last coastal state to obtain one — service as living labs for scientists as well as education and tourism resources for the host communities
The process that began in 2019 with a letter from then-Gov. John Bel Edwards to federal officials, and resulted in the Atchafalaya Basin’s designation as Louisiana’s NERR site, isn’t complete yet, Roberts said.
But it’s moving faster than other NERR site selections, some of which required 10 years or more, he said.
Also unlike the other NERR sites, the Basin site will be near a river and will be in an area which has seen other land uses, including energy production.
Roberts said discussions have been underway about which areas will be considered core areas of the research and which will be designated as buffer zones. Those questions must be answered before an environmental impact study and a management plan are developed.
He’s hoping that work can begin by the end of the year.
•Bill Bourgeois, the legal counsel for Hospital Service District No. 2, noted that voters in the district approved a 9-mill property tax in December.
The tax is to raise money for physical improvements at the hospital and to fund scholarships for local people entering health care fields.
Ochsner Health, which operates the publicly owned Ochsner St. Mary under lease, stepped up to pay for repairs without the need to wait for tax proceeds to arrive. Those repairs include sealing the exterior of the building after Hurricane Francine pushed water into the building, Bourgeois said.
He also spoke of looming shortages of physicians, especially primary care physicians and especially in rural areas. The district is working on what sort of scholarships it will offer and to build connections with universities and community colleges offering training in allied health occupations.
“Our ultimate goal is to provide a facility commensurate with our needs,” Bourgeois said.
•St. Mary Chamber President Beth Chiasson talked about efforts to promote the Fortify roof improvement program.
Homeowners who improve homes with roofs built to withstand hazards such as high wind and hail can qualify for state assistance with the cost.
The Chamber hosted a March 12 meeting in Patterson to inform contractors and residents about the program.
Chiasson said the need now is for contractors to qualify as Fortify roofers and inspectors, training for which costs a few hundred dollars.
•Berwick Councilwoman Colleen Askew, Morgan City Main Street Director Vanessa Spinella and Debbie Torline of St. Mary Excel talked about developments in the two cities.
Morgan City recently received a $16.7 million grant for hiking and biking trails connecting the city’s center with the South Louisiana Community College’s Young Memorial Campus.
The overall idea is to connect 17 miles of trails in Morgan City with Berwick’s seven miles, using the La. 182 bridge as a link.
The bridge is currently closed for an extensive rehabilitation. When it opens, plans are to close it again one Saturday each month so it can be used by bicyclists and pedestrians.
Berwick has also received $8.2 million in grants that will be used for street improvements, updating the natural gas system, and drainage infrastructure.

Role of profit in insurance rates sparks debate

Sen. Royce Duplessis, D-New Orleans, has been one of the more skeptical committee members as it relates to the cause of Louisiana’s auto insurance rates and what to do about it. 
Most committee members and insurance industry representatives attribute the state’s high auto insurance rates to the high rate of claims and the higher rate of payouts and have offered legislation attempting to protect insurance companies. 
Duplessis hasn’t been so sure.
During a recent committee exchange, Duplessis sparred with Insurance Commissioner Tim Temple over the role of profits in driving rates. Duplessis appeared to express interest in limiting the profitability of insurance companies. 
“I don’t think the government should come in and say that we’re going to limit your profit, right? We don’t do that for grocery stores. We don’t tell them what they can charge for food,” Temple said. 
“I haven’t made that suggestion yet,” Duplessis responded, seemingly leaving the door open for future debate.
Duplessis’ skepticism aligns with a bill he introduced last year aimed at limiting the factors insurers can use to set rates. The bill didn’t make it out of committee. 
The proposed legislation would have prohibited insurers from using education level, employment status, home ownership or credit information to set rates.
By eliminating these risk classifications and repealing provisions that protect the use of credit data, the bill could limit insurers’ ability to justify premium hikes, indirectly curbing their profit margins. 
The senator’s stance drew a pointed question from fellow committee member Sen. Adam Bass, R-Bossier City. 
“If insurance companies are making so much money and so much profit, why would they ever quit doing business in Louisiana?” Bass asked. 
“Historically, if you do business here for any amount of time, over that period of time, you are losing money,” Temple said.

EZEKIEL SIMMONS III

Ezekiel Simmons III, 76, a native of Morgan City, died Friday, March 14, 2025 at Lafayette General Hospital.
Services will be Saturday at Mt. Pilgrim Baptist Church in Morgan City. Burial followed in the Morgan City Cemetery.
He is survived by his wife, Valerie Wilson Simmons; daughters, Shenica Simmons and Tegan Simmons; brothers, Elton Williams and Edmond Simmons; and sisters, Yvonne Simmons and Rosella Ruffin, all of Morgan City.
He was preceded in death by his parents, maternal and paternal grandparents.
Jones Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements.

Love the Boot Week will be April 5-13

During Love the Boot Week, April 5-13, Keep Louisiana Beautiful (KLB) will partner with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana (Louisiana Blue) with a goal of communicating that a clean and beautiful Louisiana is a healthy Louisiana.
"Seeing how litter negatively impacts community health and wanting to do something about it, Louisiana Blue has been a part of Love the Boot Week since its inception," said Lt. Gov. Billy Nungesser. "With their support, we are putting litter in its place and making Louisiana a cleaner and greener place to call home."
Ways litter affects our environment, and our physical and mental health include but are not limited to:
•The CDC identifies the condition of a person's environment as a social determinant of health. In other words, the condition of a person's environment is a non-medical factor that can influence health outcomes. Litter negatively impacts the condition of a person's environment.
•Litter is hazardous to our health and the health of our environment. Toxic chemicals from plastic pollute our waterways and soil. Birds and marine life become entangled in litter and ingest plastic remnants, which eventually end up in our food supply.
•In addition to being ingested by wildlife and polluting the environment, littered cigarettes can lead to life-threatening wildfires.
•Litter can clog drains, causing street flooding. This leads to the formation of mosquito breeding pools and mosquitoes can carry and transmit diseases.
•Water collected in waste tires and other illegally disposed debris also creates a breeding ground for mosquitoes.

La. schools brace for impact of education cuts

BATON ROUGE -- With President Donald Trump slashing the federal education budget, Louisiana school superintendents are scrambling to determine if they will lose any of the $2.7 billion in federal K-12 funding that has supported local school districts for years’
“We don’t have any backup for the funds if they were cut,” said Johnnie Adams, the school superintendent in Catahoula Parish. “Anything they cut, there’s a very slim chance we would have any other way to continue that program. Or if we did, we would be cutting money from something else.”
“I’d just like to share that our schools are in need,” Adams added, “and any financial help they can give to help us be more successful for our students would be greatly appreciated.”
In Calcasieu Parish, school superintendent Jason VanMetre acknowledged the uncertainty surrounding the situation, saying, “Things are still a bit up in the air on this situation, so I really don’t have comment at this time.”
President Trump campaigned on dismantling the federal Department of Education, and his administration has cut the department’s workforce almost in half. This push aligns with his larger plan to lessen federal supervision and transfer authority to the states, and for some educators in Louisiana, that brings hope.
“What I anticipate is that more of the funding that is supposedly being spent for education will actually get to the schools that are charged with educating children,” said Jeff Powell, the superintendent of schools in Rapides Parish.
He hopes that money that was paid in salaries and benefits to federal employees will be redirected to school systems “so that we can get the funds where they’re needed in order to have an academic return on investment.”
The U.S. Education Department distributes funding for K-12 schools, including many that are given federal money to help low-income families. The department also manages federal loans for college and post-secondary students and enforces civil rights laws in schools.
During her confirmation hearing, Linda McMahon, Trump’s education secretary, said she did not know of plans to cut the core grants on which states like Louisiana depend.
But Trump has said he expects her to shrink the department so much that she puts herself out of a job.
The changes also have raised concerns about the ability of state governments to make up for any reduction in federal funds.
Educational programs in Louisiana, especially those helping low-income and disabled students, depend significantly on federal support. Cuts to the state education budget could endanger crucial services to schools in Louisiana, including special education programs and free meal programs, since the state would have trouble coming up with the money itself.
Louisiana also receives $14 billion a year in federal grants for its Medicaid program, and some of that money also could be threatened by budget cuts being considered in Washington.
During her confirmation hearing, McMahon’s said: “We will empower states and districts to have more say in what is working on the ground for students instead of bureaucratic edicts from Washington, D.C.”
Powell, the Rapides Parish superintendent, cited that comment and recalled the nearly $200 billion the federal government sent to schools around the country in response to the COVID-19 epidemic.
He said Louisiana’s share of that money helped it rise to No. 32 on a national assessment of fourth- and eighth-grade reading and math scores from No. 49 five years ago.
Powell said he hoped that the savings from firing federal education workers also would lead to more money being sent to the states.
Last Tuesday, the Education Department announced it was firing more than 1,300 workers. These layoffs, in addition to employees who accepted separation packages and probationary workers terminated last month, brings the department down to barely more than half the size it was at the start of the year.
While Trump cannot dismantle the department entirely without approval from Congress, the cuts are part of an effort toward that goal.
But Trump officials also have said that they are firing workers throughout the government to save money and reduce the increase in federal budget deficits expected to come from plans to extend the 2017 federal tax cuts.
And some education experts say the magnitude of the cuts at the Education Department are likely to hurt some school districts, especially in rural areas.
“You can’t just move dollars like that without downstream impacts on individual districts,” Joshua Cowen, an education policy professor at Michigan State University, told NBC News.
“Like rural communities that really rely on the ability to easily, quickly interface with their own state agency and with the U.S. Department of Education to just get what they need, get decisions made, get dollars cleared.”

Shelby McCarty joins Phi Kappa Phi

Shelby McCarty of Morgan City was recently elected to membership in the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, the nation’s oldest all-discipline collegiate honor society, at Nicholls State University.
McCarty is among approximately 20,000 students, faculty, professional staff and alumni to be initiated into Phi Kappa Phi each year.
Membership is by invitation only and requires nomination and approval by a chapter. Only the top 10% of seniors and 7.5% of juniors are eligible for membership.
Graduate students in the top 10% of the number of candidates for graduate degrees may also qualify, as do faculty, professional staff and alumni who have achieved scholarly distinction.
Phi Kappa Phi was founded in 1897 under the leadership of undergraduate student Marcus L. Urann, who had a desire to create a different kind of honor society: one that recognized excellence in all academic disciplines.
Today, the society has chapters on more than 300 campuses in the United States, its territories and the Philippines. Its mission is to “cultivate a community that celebrates and advances the love of learning.”

Dufrene on duty at Ochsner St. Mary

Ochsner St. Mary announced that Ashley Dufrene, NP, is a psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner for the hospital’s new outpatient mental health clinic. She is accepting new patients. 
Dufrene joined Ochsner St. Mary in October 2024 and has been with Ochsner Health since 2020. She assesses and treats patients for substance abuse, depression, anxiety and bipolar disorders, schizophrenia and ADHD. 
“Over the last five years, Ashley has helped deliver excellent care to countless patients across the Bayou region,” says Ochsner St. Mary Chief Nursing Officer and Administrator Jennifer Wise. “She is a proud part of our commitment to the community and to always putting patients first.”  
Dufrene is certified through American Nurses Credentialing Center-Psychiatry. 
 Patients can schedule appointments with Dufrene directly with no referrals needed at 985-202-2680.
Online appointments are available through the MyOchsner patient portal.  

Piner joins staff at Thibodaux Regional

Thibodaux Regional Health System announced the addition of Dr. Kyle Piner, a podiatrist and foot and ankle surgeon, to the active medical staff.
Piner is available to care for patients at Thibodaux Regional Foot & Ankle Center located 290 Bowie Road, Thibodaux, 985-493-4990.
Piner received his Doctorate of Podiatric Medicine degree from New York College of Podiatric Medicine. He completed his residency in podiatry at Rochester General Hospital in Rochester, New York. Piner specializes in all foot and ankle conditions, from sports injuries and general foot pain to major surgical procedures.

Nicholls Art Works slated for April 1

Nicholls State University announced that Art Works, the region's premier art auction and interactive event, is set for 6-9 p.m. April 1 in Talbot Hall.
All proceeds are used to benefit students in the form of scholarships and grants, enabling students to attend regional and national exhibitions and conferences and study abroad.
The evening event will include:
•Tours of the fine art studios
•Art demonstrations, such as a foundry aluminum pour and raku ceramic firing
•Studio workshops that provide interactive learning experiences
•Exhibitions of work by numerous artists
•An outdoor printing demonstration using a steamroller in the parking area
•An online silent auction featuring fine art on display in the exhibitions in the Dane Ledet Gallery and other installation sites inside and outside Talbot Hall
•Live music by Nicholls alumnus Josh Garrett, Bobby Pitre and students from KNSU, the campus student-run radio station
•Complimentary hors-d’oeuvres and a cash bar
A demonstration from portrait painter and ceramicist Tyler Witt Mendez will be conducted in the gallery.
Mendez is a Nicholls Alum and received the first Art Works scholarship 10 years ago.
Now working in her studio out of Texas, Tyler recently held her first gallery exhibit and attributes her professional success to her professors and the Nicholls Department of Art.
A print of roosters by Walter Anderson will be available in the auction. Anderson is a noted Southern Artist from Mississippi who spent most of his life exploring the wonders of the Gulf Coast of Mississippi, absorbed in the haunting ambiance of the water, marshes and woods.
His "oneness with nature" and his expression of that unity have made Anderson a legendary figure on the Gulf Coast.
For those with an interest in creating art, Nicholls art students and faculty will be available to assist you with learning about different media and developing skills.
Guests are provided with art supplies in the studio demonstrations and bring home the original art they created during the evening. Hands-on activities will take place throughout the night, such as:
•Using a potter’s wheel
•Printing silkscreens and wood type revival letters
•Participating in the photo darkroom experience
•Creating your own Mondrian geometric abstract painting
Tickets to Art Works are $50 per person. Artwork will be available for direct purchase or bidding online.
Supporters unable to attend the event can still purchase and bid on the unique auction items and experiences.
For tickets, signing up for the auction or to learn more, visit www.nicholls.edu/artworks.

Veterans Career Fair set for April 11

Fletcher Technical Community College will host the Veterans Career and Resource Fair 9 a.m.-noon April 11 at its main campus, l1407 La. 311, Schriever.
The event will be held in the atrium of the main building.
This free event is open to veterans, active-duty service members, and their families, connecting them with career opportunities, essential resources, and support services. Attendees will have the chance to meet with employers, explore job openings, and access valuable community and veteran-focused resources.
For more information, contact our LaVetCorp Navigator at 985-300-5464 or email tammy.armond@la.gov.

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