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Toys R Us closing stirs up memories

You could argue I had already grown out of Toys R Us by the time I first set foot in one.
It was 1991. I was 13, a Hungarian immigrant, new to America. New to breakfast cereal, to dozens of channels on the TV and to big stores with endless shelves of toys.
Now that it might be nearly gone, I feel a strange pang of nostalgia. Even though I am a teeny bit to blame for its demise, thanks to my penchant for one-click ordering and free two-day shipping. As a working parent, I rarely go to physical stores any more. Shoes, toilet paper — and yes, toys — are all ordered online, arriving at my doorstep in a brown cardboard box.
Weekend trips to Toys R Us used to be a special treat. We were allowed a lot of special treats that year because my mom felt bad for uprooting us from our comfortable, closed-off lives behind the quickly crumbling Iron Curtain. I also think she just wanted to get out of the house.
We had moved from Budapest, Hungary, to New Orleans. Everything was different, even the thick humid southern air that seemed to sit on your chest and try its best to keep you from breathing. Then there were the huge cars, air conditioning and endless aisles of brightly packaged food in supermarkets. It was in New Orleans that I learned the purpose of breakfast cereal, that it wasn’t some strange candy to savor piece by piece but something you poured milk over and ate by the spoonful.
My mom rarely bought us anything at Toys R Us in those first months. She didn’t have to. The pure experience of it was like Disneyland to us — in fact she probably could have told us we were in Disneyland and we would have believed her.
Sure, we had toy stores in Hungary. A few hundred square feet, peeling vinyl floors, staffed by sour-faced ladies (smiles were another American thing we were not accustomed to) who rang up your purchases wordlessly. The toys were fine — I had a comfortable 1980s childhood that rarely left me wanting. But without Toys R Us, there wasn’t as much want. Each year, as the West pushed in more and more, there seemed to be more kinds of toys to choose from and pine over.
Eastern Europe had a toy shortage in the early 1980s, my mom reminds me, and Legos were not only extremely pricey but they could only be acquired through connections. We had a lot of Legos — apparently my parents had the right connections. By 1989, I also had a Barbie, along with her sister Skipper and several knockoffs. I had more My Little Ponys than any other girl in my class.
But until we moved, I’d never seen anything like a Toys R Us. We couldn’t have dreamed it up if we tried. It was an entire palace dedicated to celebrating childhood.
By January 1992, we were speaking English and grew accustomed to “shopping” for the sake of shopping. We started to want things at Toys R Us. We became, almost, closer to becoming American.
As the years passed, half of our family stayed in the U.S., the other half returned. I remained and started a family of my own.
Hearing about the closings, I realized that I’d never taken my 2-year-old daughter to Toys R Us. I suddenly imagined her running around the aisles as I did with my brothers, this simple experience fusing my past with her present.
But I’m not even sure I would have ever taken her. It’s just not how we shop. Maybe this sadness is not about her childhood but mine.
A few weeks ago I bought her first doll. I searched for a while on Amazon until I picked out a few with good reviews and two-day shipping. I showed her my phone and let her point at the one she liked.
I clicked “Buy Now” and that was that. Two days later, she was opening another brown cardboard box.

Longtime addiction remains a secret in woman’s past

DEAR ABBY: I am a 53-year-old woman who has finally met a kind, decent man after many abusive relationships. I honor our bond and have been open about my past, which has been colorful, to say the least. I was an addict. It was a long addiction that left me homeless and almost killed me many times. I have kept this part of my life a secret from everyone out of shame and fear of judgment. I would love to be open about it with him and let him know how much drugs affected me, but I don’t want to ...

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Soap Opera Review: Quickie marriage falls through on ‘DOOL’

THE BOLD AND THE BEAUTIFUL: Someone shot Bill during a rainstorm after the lights went off in the house. Ridge was the last person with Bill and they argued over Bill’s actions toward Steffy. Wyatt and Justin both want to take over Bill’s business. DAYS OF OUR LIVES: Unaware of Abigail’s multiple personalities, Chad told Kate he is worried about how strange Abigail has been acting. Brady was extremely upset when his and Eve’s plan for a quickie marriage fell through. Ciara and Tripp shared a first kiss. GENERAL HOSPITAL: There were no major injuries as a result of an earthquake in ...

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St. Joseph Altar events at St. Joseph Church

St. Joseph Catholic Church in Patterson held a blessing of the St. Joseph Altar at 6:30 p.m. in the parish hall Sunday.
Monday, March 19, St. Joseph Catholic Church will celebrate its Patron Saints Feast Day with Holy Mass at 9 a.m. with Bishop Douglas Deshotel of the Diocese of Lafayette.
Immediately following Mass, the traditional Sicilian “Tupa, tupa” ceremony will take place with children of the parish representing the Holy Family.
Free spaghetti dinners will be served beginning at 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. Monday with visitation of the St. Joseph Altar concluding at 4 p.m.

The Trees on the Stretch

A post-Depression era planting of live oaks rejuvenated

By CASEY COLLIER
If one was lucky enough to be traveling on La. 182 in the crisp, sunny wherewithal of Thursday morning, along the Adeline Stretch between Jeanerette and Charenton, the rhythmic lines of the sugar cane fields may have appeared disrupted by pickup trucks, an industrial auger and hunched figures with their hands full.
That was the roadside planting of live oak saplings by a fistful of happy volunteers, in the breezy morning shine.
They did it last year, this year, and they are working toward providing the same sight next year, doing the same work, just a little further down the road and at various other locales.
The St. Mary Water and Soil Conservation District, in concert with the United States Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service and Farm Service Agency are working with LSU AgCenter, the local 4-H club and the Chitimacha Tribe of Louisiana in an endeavor to restore uniformity in number to the oaks along La. 182.
Andrea Dumesnil, SWCD, says the funding for the project comes from the Apache Corporation and their Tree Grant Program, which she intends to apply for again in June, with an eye to next spring’s prospective road-lining.
The oak-planting project started with Juanita Clements, USDA-FSA.
Of the projects impetus, Clements said, “I wanted to do it, but I didn’t know where to go, and there was someone working for the Soil and Water Conservation District who found a grant with Apache, and she got the grant, and then we worked together.”
Clements said that SWCD secures the grant/trees, “and we all participate in restoring the oaks to the way they used to be.”
Clements and Dumesnil remember when the St. Mary Parish stretch of La. 182 was galleried along its roadside by long, green reaches of oak trees, where now it is merely intermittently peppered with them.
What’s more is they have been working to plant live oaks at other points throughout the parish: Raintree Elementary School, Centerville Park and B. Edward Boudreaux Middle School, to name a few.
As part of the “New Deal” in the 1930s and 40s, President Franklin D. Roosevelt created a public work relief program called the Civilian Conservation Corps.
The live oaks were originally planted for that program.
Dumesnil said, “We have come across several elderly people who came out here as students, and planted trees.”
Clements added, “Ms. Martha Boudreaux, who is since deceased, who was at high school at Franklin High, she so wanted to come plant a tree, but they would only let the boys come (originally). So, she was 90-something years old when we first started the (new) program, and she came out here in a wheel chair to participate in planting that tree.”
The re-planting project has been going on for five years so far, and this year, the Chitimacha Tribe was represented, in part, by 4-H volunteer, Marley Darden, then later also by Kim Walden, Chitimacha’s Cultural Department Director and Tribal Historic Preservation Officer.
“Our volunteers up here are also representing the Chitimacha,” Dumesnil said. “They send people, if we need water, they’ll send their fire trucks out here. So we work with the tribe, as well.”
In advance, and to wit, Dumesnil said if there are extra trees next year, she hopes to work with Walden to plant trees on the reservation, along the Ralph Darden Memorial Parkway.
Of the grant’s allotment possibly expanding, Dumesnil said, “I asked for 200 trees this year, and they sent me 150. So, I’ll ask for 200 trees next year, and maybe they’ll send me 200.”
On account of the placement of the trees being required to clear 45-feet from the highway’s center-line, the planters find themselves at the edges of properties of cane farmers, with whom they have to work for permission and to establish the parameters of planting.
According to Dumesnil, it is the harvesting of the cane that has posed the greatest danger to the oak saplings in years past. With the harvesting machines moving toward a single and solitary purpose, the saplings have tended to pay the price by proximity.
This year, however, the planting crew is optimistic they have taken the necessary safeguards to allow the new trees their opportunity to flourish. The flagging of metal posts tied to the saplings, and drains placed near their bases have come into employ for the future oaks, to raise their visibility and to protect them from fast-moving mowers and harvesters.
Dumesnil said she hopes to see more done in the way of public maintenance of the young trees, but she also understands that planting them on private property makes that a tricky, if not moot proposition.
Darden said she likes the idea of driving down the planted highway, in days to come, exclaiming to her kids-to-be, that the trees through and under which they are passing, are the very same ones she helped to plant, years ago.
With any luck, history will repeat itself for such an exclamation.

Port gets funds for welding school

The Port Commission of West St. Mary announced Wednesday they were awarded $1.3 million in grant funds from the U.S. Economic Development Administration.
The federal funds are to be employed in combination with $450,000 in state capital outlay funds purposed toward erecting a welding school on port grounds.
It was also announced at the monthly meeting, the lease of SBA Communications Corp., whose cell tower is located at the port, will be up at the end of April. Though, Executive Director David Allain reported expected negotiations for renewal to likely take place, soon.
In other news, a Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development Port Priority state project is said to be in the first of its four planned phases of completion, with a contract of $102,000 awarded to Trio Compressed Air Systems, to begin work.
Further phases of the DOTD project were allocated their proper places in future meeting agendas as they come to consideration or resolution.

PC in-house mosquito control approved

Parish government will move ahead with securing a grant to create an in-house mosquito control program.
The St. Mary Parish Council approved a resolution to allow application funding operation of a mosquito abatement program in the amount of $250,000. The grant period is five years.
Matt Yates, a board-certified entomologist with Mosquito Surveillance & Control Consulting LLC said the grant is a unique opportunity for the parish.
Yates said the funds would allow purchase of “top of the line equipment that you wouldn’t ordinarily be able to because of the start-up cost of a mosquito control program.”
He said Jean Paul Bourg, the parish’s new public works director, has a background in mosquito control, having previously set up an in-house program for the City of Morgan City, a program Yates considers best in the state.
Components of the program include bio-pesticides, or larvicides, which are applied to standing water areas and are far less expensive than spraying. “Once they begin to fly away, you’re spraying whole neighborhoods,” Yates said. “Larvicide is much more effective because you’re dealing with a captive audience in a small space.”
Modern spray trucks are highly technological, Yates said, including monitors with GPS that report the amount of insecticide being dispersed and control flow-rate based on speed of the truck. “So you’re applying exactly the amount of material you need. It’s equipped with an on-off switch.” The system includes many other controls of spraying volume vs. speed of the vehicle.
In addition to cost of chemical control, it assures that the program is not over- or under-applying chemical.
The system automatically downloads all information over Wifi when the truck returns for record-keeping and reference.
Only two parishes have applied for the grant, Assumption and St. Mary.
Chief Administrative Officer Henry “Bo” LaGrange said the operations center will be the old parish voting machine site near the Hanson Canal in Franklin, and repair cost and equipment will come out of the grant funding.
Councilman Craig Mathews expressed concern that coupling Bourg’s duties in public works with mosquito control might be too much.
Yates expressed confidence that Bourg was up to handling both tasks, based on his experience and association with Bourg in the past.
The equipment, Yates said, will require routine maintenance, with the life expectancy of the blowers (sprayers) at 15-20 years. Vehicles typically last about five years.
Parish President David Hanagriff, who previously offered the proposal which was voted down by the council, said that while he has been a strong proponent of the current contractor, Cajun Moquito Control. “This is about economics, this is about moving forward in St. Mary Parish and save a significant amount of money,” Hanagriff said. “This is actual data based on actual facts.”
Hanagriff said he is confident Bourg can initiate and operate the program. “We’re getting state-of-the-art equipment,” he said.
The current program is costing about $250,000 a year, and brings in through user fields about $185,000.
Hanagriff expects to save about $400,000 over five years. “This is being handed to you; it’s being placed in your lap.”
He added, “To vote this down and come back to me and say we need money for roads, we need money for drainage, we need money for all this, I just don’t know how you can do that.”
Councilman James Bennett called for the question, and the grant application was approved 7-4.
Also Wednesday, Two requests were made for funding of youth programs: Mathews for $1,000 to the Franklin High School Business Leaders of America to attend a conference and from Councilman J Ina from the Wards 1, 2, 3, 4, 7 & 10 sales tax fund for travel and operating expenses to Centerville Youth Basketball for tournaments in Kansas City, Missouri.
These items drew a protest from Councilman Gabe Beadle. “This is a slippery slope yet again that we continue to come to,” he said. “You have every high school in the parish with students that are going to this conference…so eventually it will turn into every school coming ask for money, and where does it stop. This may be a matter for the school board as opposed to the parish council.”
Beadle said issue should be brought to the school board so that “we don’t continue to allocate this money over and over.”
Councilman Ken Singleton said he agreed with Beadle, and asked if the groups had held fundraisers.
“They need to strive to raise some money, take some pride in their efforts, and not rely on someone else,” he said. “It’s part of the learning experience.”
Mathews said the school board is restricted by law on what activities they can fund. “But there is a mechanism that the parish council put in place to support what’s called recreational activities…for our citizens. This certainly does qualify, and when it was created it was for rural, unincorporated parts of the parish. That’s what these funds are for.”
Beadle said he knew of schools that held fundraisers to help finance the trip. “There are a number of students who are going to the conference and not using parish funds to do it.”
There were fund raising activities, Mathews said, contributing to the overall cost of about $2,000.
Ina said he took offense because Singleton inferred that the allocation was a “handout.” Singleton said he misunderstood his statement.
Ina insisted, “It’s our duty to support kids in these endeavors. It seems like every time these matters come up I’m finding myself having to explain…it doesn’t happen every time. Why do we need explanation on our sales tax on this end?”
Mathews echoed that other allocations were not challenged.
Beadle protested that he has objected to similar requests in the past.
Members of the Centerville team and coaches were present in the audience while the parish council debated the merits of allocating the funds.
The allocations were approved 8-3, with council members Patrick Hebert, Beadle and Kevin Voisin against.
In other business:
—An ordinance was introduced authorizing a lease agreement between the parish and school board for Verdunville Recreation Park.
—A resolution was approved for issuance of not more than $20 million of limited tax revenue bonds for infrastructure projects.
—A resolution was approved authorizing a contract with Volute, Inc. in the Gilmore drainage improvements project.
—Mathews was approved $500 from the Wards 1, 2, 3, 4, 7 & 10 sales tax fund to Water and Sewer Commission 5 for Baldwin water tower repairs.

Stephensville sandbag distribution site open until 5 p.m. Saturday

A sandbag distribution site opened Saturday in Stephensville for those affected by the rising waterways. Sandbags will be available until 5 p.m. Saturday at Stephensville Park on La. 70 in Stephensville, according to the St. Martin Parish Sheriff's Office.

Bring shovels and be prepared to fill your own sandbags, a news release said.

Sandbags were also available beginning Friday under the U.S. 90 bridge in Amelia, according to the St. Mary Parish Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness.

Berwick's Carline leads area All-District 8-3A girls basketball selections

Patterson's Butler nets honorable mention honors

Berwick High School had one selection to the All-District 8-3A team, a first-team selection.
Berwick junior Madison Carline made the top squad as a representative of the Lady Panthers.
Meanwhile, Patterson had one selection, Briyanna Butler, who was named honorable mention.
Kaplan, which shared the district title with North Vermilion, swept the individual awards as senior Rylie Frick was named Most Valuable Player, while Kaplan’s Amelia Broussard is the district’s Coach of the Year.
Below is the complete all-district team:
First Team: Kaylee Lopez, North Vermilion, Sr.; Kyler Walker, North Vermilion, Sr.; Tory Riggs, Kaplan, Sr.; Rylie Frick, Kaplan, Sr.; and Madison Carline, Berwick, Jr.
Second Team: Darrelyn Boudreaux, David Thibodaux, Sr.; A’mani Barrow, David Thibodaux, Jr.; Oriel Henderson, Abbeville, Sr.; Alaina Dartez, North Vermilion, So; and Alyia Broussard, Kaplan, Fr.
Most Valuable Player: Rylie Frick, Kaplan
Coach of the Year: Amelia Broussard, Kaplan
Honorable Mention: Damani Summers, David Thibodaux; Briyanna Butler, Patterson; Madeline Hebert, Erath; Lexi Gisclair, Erath; and Courtney Dubois, Erath; Leah Frick, Kaplan; Alexis Trahan, Kaplan; Kennedy Trahan, North Vermilion; and Gabrielle Bessard, North Vermilion.
Courtesy of The Lafayette Daily Advertiser

(Updated) Commander: Another river crest possible later this spring

River expected to crest at 8 feet Wed.

The projected 8-foot crest of the Atchafalaya River this week in Morgan City shouldn’t cause any major issues in the area, but uncertainty exists to whether the region may see more high water later this spring.

The National Weather Service predicts the Atchafalaya River will crest at 8 feet Wednesday morning in Morgan City and then start gradually dropping.

Based on that projected crest, St. Mary Levee District officials don’t plan to install a temporary flood protection structure in Bayou Chene in Amelia as they’ve done during extreme high water events. Levee district leaders are taking measures to protect so low-lying areas in Amelia that could be affected by the crest.

Area leaders and officials with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers held a meeting Friday at the Port of Morgan City’s Government Emergency Operations Center to discuss the high water in the region.

Maj. Gen. Richard Kaiser, commander of the Corps’ Mississippi Valley Division, attended the meeting. Kaiser also serves as president of the Mississippi River Commission.

The Mississippi Valley system is experiencing “a very large flood event this year,” Kaiser said. Overall, this flood is about the 10th largest in recorded history and areas such as Natchez, Mississippi, are experiencing the fourth highest flood in its history, he said.

Kaiser has been traveling across the region assessing the flood fight that’s taking place in different areas. He visited the Morganza Floodway last week and discussed the thresholds that would have to be reached for the Corps to decide whether operate that floodway. Operation of the Morganza Floodway brings more water to the Morgan City area.

“We don’t think we’re going to reach triggers to necessitate operating Morganza,” Kaiser said.

The purpose of Friday’s meeting was, in part, to get Corps’ officials together with St. Mary Parish leaders and officials with other parishes, including Terrebonne, to prepare in case closure of Bayou Chene is deemed necessary in down the road, Kaiser said.

There’s uncertainty as to whether another crest may occur this later spring, Kaiser said.

“The weather patterns, as we understand them, this is shaping up to be a very wet and long spring,” he said.

Based on those predicted weather patterns, a second river crest is possible later this spring, Kaiser said.

“You have to really look at the Ohio Valley and what’s affecting that system,” he said.

The snow melt to the west still hasn’t occurred yet. That melt will come down the Missouri River and other rivers into the Mississippi River.

Kaiser also met with area officials to discuss the $80 million Bayou Chene Flood Control and Diversion Project, which entails installing a permanent floodgate on Bayou Chene to prevent areas in up to six parishes from flooding.

St. Mary Levee District officials expect to be able to begin construction on the permanent floodgate in 2020.

The Corps is the process of working with the St. Mary Levee District to go through the permitting process for the project.

“I think we’re making good progress, but it’s because of the teamwork between the Corps … the mayors, the levee districts and everybody trying to come up with the right solutions for our nation,” Kaiser said.

Due to the rising Atchafalaya River during the past couple of weeks, Morgan City and Berwick officials have closed several floodgates.

In Morgan City, officials have closed floodgates at Freret Street, Railroad Avenue, Eco Serve, Brashear Avenue north and east Shell Oil dock.

In Berwick, officials have closed floodgates at First Street and Gus Street Gate and were closing gates at Canton, Pacific and Mound streets Friday. Officials were planning to close the California Street gate Monday evening or early Tuesday morning.

Officials are monitoring the river stages to determine if more gate closures are necessary.

Sandbags were also available beginning Friday under the U.S. 90 bridge in Amelia, according to the St. Mary Parish Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness.

Sandbags became available Saturday at Stephensville Park on La. 70 in Stephensville, according to the St. Martin Parish Sheriff's Office.

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