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Patterson's Deondre Diggs signs with Louisiana College
Former Patterson High School standout Deondre Diggs just wanted an opportunity to play college football.
The hulking defensive lineman got that chance Monday, signing a national letter of intent to play college football at Louisiana College in Pineville.
“Today is a blessing,” Diggs said. “I worked my butt off and believed that this would happen like my family, coaches and people I look up to said it would. So, I owe all of them a great big thank you, for believing in me and helping me. I’m gonna put everything in me into getting ready to play and getting my degree. I will not forget why I’m there.”
Diggs was a first-team All-District 8-3A defensive lineman and an honorable mention Louisiana Sports Writers Association Class 3A All-State selection as a senior.
He recorded 55 tackles, 16 assists, three forced fumbles, two fumble recoveries and 15 tackles for loss, including five sacks.
As a junior, he also earned first-team All-District 8-3A honors on the defensive line, while as a sophomore, he was an honorable mention All-District 8-3A pick as an offensive lineman.
“I learned from my brother, Malik Bass, and his teammates what it means to be a Lumberjack football player,” he said. “I also saw how people looked up to my brother, because he was a good player and student. He went off to play ball in college, finished and now he’s in the military and helping me try to do the same thing.”
Bass was a football and basketball standout at Patterson..
“I’ve coached all over the state and at the college level, too, and Diggs is one of the better defensive linemen that I’ve had a chance to coach,” Patterson defensive line coach Shannon Craig said. “I feel like having a different coach every year, hurt him in the recruiting process, but he understands now that the first thing is to get college, get signed and who knows what the future holds.”
Louisiana College is a Baptist school located in Pineville. The schools’ sports compete in Division III athletics in the American Southwest Conference.
Shipbuilding, LNG may feel sting from steel tariffs
President Donald Trump is enacting tariffs on imported steel and aluminum, a move described as a way to revitalize American manufacturing sectors that have been hammered by imports.
But not everyone is optimistic about the impact the new trade barriers will have on two important Louisiana industries, shipbuilding and the export of liquefied natural gas.
U.S. Rep. Clay Higgins, R-Port Barre, represents south Louisiana from St. Mary east to the Texas border. So his 3rd District contains both those industries.
In a statement, Higgins said he had written to the president to register his concerns about the tariffs’ effects on the burgeoning LNG export industry.
“I agree with President Trump that we should promote trade policies that place Americans first,” Higgins said in his statement. “However, we must also consider the American industries that rely upon imported steel. We have major industrial growth in South Louisiana from the LNG industry that requires specialty steels, which aren’t available domestically. They have no option but to import those materials in order to complete project construction.”
LNG is a major engine in an economic renaissance in southwest Louisiana. Ten LNG export operations, all within an easy drive of Lake Charles, are either in planning, under construction or in operations.
Estimates of the Lake Charles-area investment in LNG range from about $90 billion to more than $120 billion.
January unemployment in the Lake Charles metropolitan statistical area was 3.6 percent, the lowest among Louisiana’s metro regions.
“A new tariff, or tax, on imported steel would increase the costs of production and alter the economic benefit model for every one of the ongoing and announced projects in our state,” Higgins said. “I am hopeful the President will take the economic impact of this industry into account as he considers changes in trade policy.”
Another important industry with potential exposure to negative effects is shipbuilding, one of the pillars of St. Mary’s economy for decades.
Shipbuilders have taken their hits like other St. Mary industries since crude oil prices began to slump 3-1/2 years ago. But the industry still employs more than 800 people in St. Mary. About 5,600 people work in the industry statewide.
The fear here is that the tariffs, which would tack 25 percent on the cost of imported steel and 10 percent on aluminum processed overseas, will jack up the price of the major component in shipbuilding.
“Personally, to get a level playing field is great,” said Bill Hidalgo, owner and managing member of Halimar Shipyard LLC on Railroad Avenue in Morgan City. “My concern is that as soon as the tariff was an-nounced, the domestic steel producers said they were going to raise their prices.”
Domestic steel prices had already been on the rise. Steel that cost 32 cents a pound by November rose by 14 cents, Hidalgo said.
Now the expectation is that domestic producers will raise their prices another 5 cents in response to the tariffs. If that happens soon, the price of American steel will have increased by nearly 60 percent in six months.
Bloomberg Markets reported Sunday that the price of domestic steel has gone up 24 percent since 2018 began.
Hidalgo said he isn’t op-posed to the tariffs by them-selves. “If it’s a negotiating tool, fine,” he said.
But “if you raise the price of domestic steel, all that does is raise the price of whatever you’re buying. … The idea behind this is to assist fabricators, to help them hire more people.”
JBE starts session, seeks 'refocus'
BATON ROUGE (AP) — With tensions still simmering from a failed special session, Gov. John Bel Edwards asked Louisiana’s lawmakers to move on Monday as their annual regular session began, rather than get mired in the same standoffs that stalled action on taxes.
“I hope that in the past week you’ve had time to rest and refocus on the work that we have ahead of us,” the Democratic governor told the House and Senate. “And especially I do not want the roadblocks of the special session to hamper us from what’s most important — making life better for the people of this great state.”
Lawmakers will resume their debates on the unsettled budget mess, the culmination of a decade’s worth of state financial troubles, as well as hot-button proposals on guns, gambling and sexual harassment.
An estimated $700 million shortfall looms when the new budget year begins July 1, caused by the expiration of temporary taxes.
Partisan gridlock in the House blocked every tax bill in the special session called by Edwards to close the hole. Anger and frustration is expected to spill into the regular session, as lawmakers try to determine where they’ll shave away spending. The Legislature can’t consider taxes.
“Many of you will find that it’s much harder than it seems because when you cut funding, you cut services that many people in this state rely upon,” Edwards said. He told GOP lawmakers: “To those that say we can cut our way out of this, it’s your time to step up to the plate.”
Beyond finances, lawmakers have pre-filed more than 1,100 bills.
Proposals would ban abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy, restructure the TOPS college tuition program, end Louisiana’s use of the death penalty, loosen riverboat casino and video poker laws and legalize sports betting. House Republicans are proposing cost-sharing requirements for Medicaid patients and a tighter state spending cap.
Rep. Kenny Havard, a St. Francisville Republican, resigned as chairman of the House Transportation Committee, saying that would give him more freedom to break from House and party leadership to “vote my conscience.”
Among his agenda items, Edwards wants to reduce the list of careers requiring occupational licenses, add new protections against elderly abuse, rewrite teacher tenure laws and prohibit schools from punishing students who owe lunch money. He’ll again push to boost Louisiana’s minimum wage and enact an equal pay law, proposals that have repeatedly failed.
Lawmakers in the majority-GOP House and Senate will consider whether to strengthen laws against hazing after the death of an LSU student, and if they want to enact a uniform sexual harassment prevention policy for state agencies.
Republicans and Democrats differ in their response to the Florida school shooting that killed 17 people, with Democrats seeking new gun restrictions and GOP lawmakers proposing to allow concealed handguns and armed teachers inside schools.
Edwards dodged taking a position on guns. He referenced the “national conversation” and urged lawmakers to “drown out the political noise” and bring in varied voices for the debate.
“Our priority is public safety for our children, and I know that we can have a constructive dialogue here in Louisiana,” the governor said.
The regular session is expected to end ahead of its June 4 deadline.
Edwards, Senate President John Alario and House Speaker Taylor Barras are working on a plan to finish in mid-May, to hold another special session on taxes and keep the entire budget gap from being closed with cuts.
But House Appropriations Chairman Cameron Henry, a Metairie Republican, said he’ll work to send a spending plan to the governor with the reductions required.
“I think it would be a waste of taxpayer dollars for us to again be up here and not pass a budget,” Henry said.
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BROCK ROLLINS
Brock Rollins died Saturday, March 10, 2018, in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
Services are pending at this time.
Wheel House for March 13
FISH DINNER
Sold by Mt. Era Baptist Church, 406 Lawrence St., Morgan City, at 11 a.m. March 23. Menu: fish, potato salad, peas, roll, cake and drink. Donation $8. For tickets call Helen Collins, 985-474-6465, Deborah Stevenson, 985-518-7532, or any church member.
BOY SCOUTS
Troop 41 and Pack 339 annual Barbecue Hamburger fundraiser 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday, March 25, at Patterson Junior High School. Ticket, $5, includes hamburger and bag of chips. For info or tickets call Frank Guarisco, 985-395-9351 or Melvin Vinning, 985-395-3537.
BREAKFAST
St. Luke Baptist Church Mission Ministry Prayer Breakfast “It’s Praying Time” is 9 a.m. April 14. Speaker Lisa Smith, Deep Water Ministries.
Sheriff: Woman caught with over $6K of meth
A 37-year-old Bayou L’Ourse woman was caught with methamphetamine with a street value of over $6,000 and LSD after a narcotics detective stopped a vehicle in the Patterson area, St. Mary Parish Sheriff Scott Anslum said in a news release.
—Rebecca Concienne, 37, of Andras Street in Bayou L’Ourse, was arrested at 8:27 p.m. Monday on charges of possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute over 28 grams, possession of LSD and possession of drug paraphernalia.
The St. Mary Parish Sheriff’s Office K-9 Unit conducting interdiction work on U.S. 90 in the Patterson area observed a vehicle drive onto the shoulder of the roadway.
The narcotics detective conducted a traffic stop and identified the driver as Concienne. While speaking with her, the detective developed information that Concienne was in possession of illegal drugs. The detective received consent to search and located several bags of methamphetamine, a bag containing three pieces of LSD and a glass pipe used to smoke methamphetamine in Concienne’s purse, Anslum said.
The detective also found evidence that the methamphetamine was being transported from Houston and that Concienne planned to sell the drugs, Anslum said. The methamphetamine has an estimated street value of over $6,000. Concienne was jailed with no bail set.
Anslum reported that deputies responded to 33 complaints in the parish and reported the following arrests relating to east St. Mary Parish:
—Louis Bourque, 32, of Cross Road in Bayou Vista, was arrested at 1:27 p.m. Monday on a warrant for failure to appear on a charge of criminal neglect of family.
During booking at the St. Mary Parish Law Enforcement Center, a corrections deputy located the active warrant for Bourque. Bail on the warrant is set at $33,483.89.
—Angelo Giandelone Sr., 35, of Lassus Street in Patterson, was arrested at 6:43 a.m. Monday on a warrant charging him with domestic abuse battery.
Deputies investigating a report of a disturbance at a home in Calumet in February collected evidence that Giandelone pushed a female juvenile during an argument with another subject. Giandelone turned himself in at the St. Mary Parish Law Enforcement Center. Giandelone was released on $2,500 bail.
—Dang Nguyen, 49, of Arbor Circle in Bayou Vista, was arrested at 2:03 p.m. Friday on a warrant for failure to appear on charges of vagrancy and remaining where forbidden and on a warrant for failure to appear on the charge of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle.
Nguyen was transported from the St. Tammany Parish jail to the St. Mary Parish Law Enforcement Center on the warrants. Bail is set at $10,500.
Morgan City Police Chief James Blair reported that officers responded to 38 calls and reported no arrests.
Berwick Police Chief James Richard reported no arrests.
Patterson Police Chief Patrick LaSalle reported no arrests.
