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Local teams to enter the playoffs starting Friday

West St. Mary, Centerville and Hanson Memorial will all enter the Louisiana High School Athletic Association Prep Playoffs with opening round games scheduled for Friday in the respective classes.
West St. Mary will travel to play Pine on Friday at 7 p.m. in the Class 2A bi-district contest.
Centerville will take to the road to play Merryville on Friday at 7 p.m. in the Class A bi-district game.
The Hanson Memorial Tigers will travel to Ruston to battle Cedar Creek in the Division IV opening round on Friday at 7 p.m.

JAMES ROBERT BRIMIDGE

James Robert Brimidge, age 76, a native of Cochran, Georgia and a resident of Franklin, La. passed away Sunday, Nov. 5, 2017 at 8:30 p.m. at his residence in Franklin.
Visitation will be observed Saturday, Nov. 11, 2017 at Mt. Pleasant Baptist Church, 1262 Bobtown Road, Charenton, La., from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. and the funeral ceremony will be at Mount Pleasant Baptist Church at 12 p.m. Interment will be in the Mount Pleasant Baptist Church Cemetery in Charenton.
He is survived by his wife, Eltonette Larry Brimidge of Franklin; a son, James Lamar Brimidge of Arlington, Texas; an adopted son, Carl James Gaines and his wife Gloria of Hampton, Georgia; a daughter, Jamila Jan Brimidge-Walker and her husband Brence of Arlington, Texas; an adopted daughter, Kona Coleman and her husband Derrick of Baton Rouge, La.,; a brother, George Brimidge of Pacoima, Calif.; four sisters, Priscilla Jackson of Philadelphia, Penn., Clara Lawson of Cochran, Georgia, Margaret Mathis of Meledgeville, Georgia, and Hazel Owens Butler of Atlanta, Georgia; and five grandchildren.
Rev. Paul Godfrey will officiate.
The Otis Mortuary of Franklin is in charge of arrangements.

IRA PAUL PELTIER

November 25, 1921 – November 7, 2017
Funeral services will be held Thursday, November 9, 2017, at the Church of the Assumption in Franklin during a 2 p.m. Mass of Christian Burial for Ira Paul Peltier, a native of Louisa, former 30 year resident of Sulphur, and a resident of Franklin for the past 21 years, who passed away at the age of 95 at his home on Tuesday, November 7, 2017. Interment will follow in the Franklin Cemetery Mausoleum 4, where he will be laid to rest with his beloved wife. Serving as pallbearers will be Kevin Dinger, Ty Ashley, Brian Ashley, Jamie Cervantes, Rodney Bobbitt, and Craig Landry. Honorary pallbearers will be Terry P. Landry, Wayne Ashley, Howard Winston, and Edgar J. Dugas III.
A gathering of family and friends will be held Thursday at Ibert’s Mortuary from 10 a.m. until time of dismissal at 1:30 p.m.
Ira was a veteran of the Untied Stated Marine Corps, having enlisted on August 9, 1940, at the age of 19. He fought during World War II aboard the USS Augusta from February 2, 1941 to February 21, 1943 as a Rifleman. Following his first enlistment, he reenlisted for an additional two years and was honorably discharged on August 8, 1946 with the rank of Field Music Sergeant. After his military service, Ira went to work for the Texas New Orleans Railroad, which merged with and became the Southern Pacific Railroad, until his retirement in 1982 at the age of 60, having dedicated 36 ½ years of faithful service. He was a parishioner of the Church of the Assumption and played the harmonica in a local band called The Veterans Three, who gave of their time playing for the residents at the Franklin and Patterson nursing homes, the Center of Hope, and various local organizations and private parties.
Those he leaves to cherish his memory include his nieces, Harriet L. Cervantes, Maxine L. Ashley and her husband Wayne, and Roselyn Landry; his nephews, Terry P. Landry and his wife Judy, Roy J. Peltier Jr. and his wife Sally, and Glenn Peltier and his wife Janice; as well as 16 great nieces and nephews and numerous great great nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his wife. Iva Vesta Peltier; his parents, Clarville Peltier and Octavia Rogers Peltier; his siblings, Valla Peltier Landry and Roy J. Peltier; step-daughter, Joy Lynn Walls; step-grandsons, Michael and Ricky Walls; and nephew, Ames J. Landry.
The family would like to express their deepest gratitude to Dr. Roland Degeyter for all the years taking care of him; to Heart of Hospice for all the care and support given to him and the family; and to his caregivers, Stephanie Johnson, Cecile Charpentier, Karen Scott, Janice Rudolph, Cheryl Landry, Shannon Harrison, and Charlene Gentry for all their help and wonderful care they gave him throughout the past five years.
Family and friends may view the obituary and express their condolences online by visiting www.iberts.com.
Arrangements have been entrusted to Ibert’s Mortuary, Inc., 1007 Main Street, Franklin, La. 70538, (337) 828-5426.

Teche presents "A Streetcar Named Desire"

Teche Theatre for the Performing Arts opens its 2017-18 season with Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire. The show is set to run November 9-11 at 7 p.m. and Nov. 12 at 3 p.m. Tickets are available at Lamp Lighter Antiques for $10.

1,927 inmates go free; 23 from St. Mary Parish

Sixteenth Judicial District Attorney M. Bofill Duhé confirmed Tuesday to Franklin Rotary that as per the terms of the Justice Reinvestment Act, 1,927 inmates have been, are being, and will be released across the state by Thursday, despite their originally sentenced release dates.
The released are non-violent offenders only, and fall under several Department of Corrections caveats before being considered eligible. The cases chosen for early release are by and large, cases that have been affected by changes in sentencing laws while the inmates have been incarcerated; most of those who are released are drug offenders or theft-related offenders. Their average age is between 30 and 49 years old and they have served at least 35 percent of their original terms, and are up for “good time” (good behavior) releases.
In 2016, Duhé was on a legislative task force brought together to analyze the possible effects of such a reinvestment package as the one used to inform the JRA, made law by Governor John Bel Edwards, this year.
The task force concluded that by reasonably curtailing the sentences of non-violent offenders, they could retain costly prison space for “serious threats to society,” strengthen community supervision, clear away barriers to successful re-entry and reinvest approximately 50 percent of the projected $262 million in savings back into the program.
“The Justice Reinvestment Act began two (legislative) sessions ago and is dealing with the fact that Louisiana incarcerates more people than any other state in the nation,” Duhé said.
According to Duhé, aside from he, “a couple of judges and one other public defender,” there were no other members of the 30-person task force with any kind of knowledge of the “practical effects” of implementation of the JRA.
“Which was extremely frustrating,” Duhé said, “because I could see mistakes being made. I could see problems there. I know I had solutions, but unfortunately, they generally fell on deaf ears.”
Duhé said that in the package’s first iteration, it was almost agreed among the task force to consider releasing violent offenders under the umbrella of caveats for eligibility, as well as non-violent offenders. Duhé said that he was happy with the success the DA’s office had had with keeping violent offenders out of consideration in the package for the JRA.
“Our task force pushed some ideas to be considered by the legislature,” Duhé said. “The legislature took this, and in a matter of six weeks, put it in a massive legislative package and just started ramming it down everybody’s throat. This is what you are going to have as the end result: Some of it good, most of it bad.”
Of the parishes in the 16th Judicial District, St. Mary Parish will be the most affected, receiving 23 offenders back into the population, while Iberia Parish receives 22 and St. Martin Parish receives eight.
According to Duhé, Wednesday’s statewide prisoner release is more than double the inmates released in Louisiana in an average month.
“But what is included in this is that we incarcerated too many non-violent people,” Duhé said. “Certainly, I am here to tell you that there are many people in jail who should probably not be in jail, for whatever reason: low level drug offenses, or whatever might be the case.
“In 2016, 86 percent of the people that were in Department of Corrections’ custody were there for a non-violent offense. What is a non-violent offense? A non-violent offense is any offense that is not specifically listed under (Revised Statute) 14: section two, as a crime of violence— first degree murder, second degree murder, manslaughter, aggravated rape, aggravated battery… down the line. It’s about 26 crimes out of 450.
“So, these are the non-violent group. We thought, ‘Why are so many of these people being incarcerated? That sounds crazy.’ That was my reaction.”
Duhé said that it fell to the DA’s office of each district in Louisiana to assess the records of their inmates, and compile the data concerning non-violent offenders and the natures/ lengths/ severities of their offenses and sentences.
What Duhé’s staff found was that after studying every fourth case in the district, out of 300 non-violent offenders, 67 percent were repeat non-violent offenders, albeit felony offenders in most cases.
“It’s someone who has had many opportunities to curb their behavior, but was cycled through the system,” Duhé said. “It also could be someone charged with burglary, who has two prior armed robberies; but they are in on the burglary, because they’ve already done the time on the armed robberies, so now they’re back out. That is still a very dangerous person.”
Duhé asked of the state’s national incarceration standings, “Why are so many incarcerated?”
He said, “Incarceration is not the problem. Incarceration is a result of the problem. It goes back to the basic principles of human nature.
“You’ve got a problem with poverty, illiteracy, lack of job opportunities and skills; but most importantly, you’ve got so many single-parent families.
“The family unit has fallen apart. There are single mothers raising children without a father around, and in some cases—the opposite. We have to look at why that is.”
Duhé went on to say that in his 25 years in law, he had seen such things as a single parent giving their children over to their grandparents, to be raised by the very same grandparents who, when they were only parents themselves, gave up their kids (who were now parents) to be raised by someone else, because they were never up to the task, in the first place.
“And hence, you don’t have the type of morals with palpable discipline, with palpable accountability that was embedded in many of us, I dare say in all of us,” Duhé said.
He lamented Louisiana’s JRA having not been implemented in the manner employed by Texas in the implementation of their reinvestment act.
Duhé said that what Texas did was to establish an infrastructure of rehabilitation and mental health programs and facilities, before establishing their reinvestment program; thusly accounting for anticipatory increases in necessities, and increased stresses on systems already in place, once the inmates were released.
According to Duhé, Louisiana can implement measures similar to Texas, albeit after the fact.
He said that he would like to see a statewide infrastructure of drug courts, more funding to address the issues of mental health, all of the funds saved from the institution of the JRA, reinvested in the program, instead of just 50 percent, and funding increases for social programs aimed at early intervention through preventative measures.
Under the terms of the JRA, the state is set to release anywhere from 30 to 50 more inmates per month, through February.

School merger a natural fit

Officials, parents say combing CCHS, Holy Cross schools makes sense

Officials and parents say the announcement to combine Central Catholic and Holy Cross schools next school year is one that makes sense because the schools, which share a campus, are already interwoven in many ways.

Bishop Shelton Fabre of the Diocese of Houma-Thibodaux announced Monday that the two Morgan City Catholic schools will merge into one school beginning in the 2018-19 school year to help both schools maximize their resources as one entity.

The new unified school will be divided into a lower school for Pre-K3 through fifth grade and an upper school for sixth through 12th grade. There will be a principal for the lower school and another principal for the upper school.

“What we’re hoping for is, through this collaborative effort … we will have a unified advancement and development program and strategic plan in place,” said Suzanne Troxclair, diocesan superintendent of Catholic schools.

Tahitia Price, who has two daughters at Central Catholic, said there’s been talk for many years of eventually combining Central Catholic and Holy Cross into one school.

Students and staff members from both schools routinely work together, and schools are already so intertwined, Price said.

“It only makes sense for them to say they are one school,” Price said.

Even when Price’s children were students at Holy Cross, students from Central Catholic would work with elementary students, she said.

“It’s going to be big because of the fact it’s going to affect a lot of people, but the majority of kids at Holy Cross end up going to Central. And their siblings are there,” Price said.

One of the main changes resulting from the merger is that sixth-grade students will be grouped in the upper school, Troxclair said. Currently, Holy Cross goes up to sixth grade, and Central Catholic includes seventh grade through 12th grade.

Merging the schools won’t have any effect on tuition, which will continue to be tiered based on grade level, Troxclair said.

Tuition assistance will continue to be available for students who are seeking a Catholic education and “have a financial challenge,” Troxclair said.

Lower school students will still have classes in the current Holy Cross building. Sixth- through eighth-grade students will go to school in one section of the current Central Catholic building, while ninth through 12th-grade students will attend classes in a different part of that building, Troxclair said.

A committee of stakeholders will be formed to work on “re-branding” the unified school and name the school, too, Troxclair said.

J.S. Aucoin to hold Veteran's Day Color run

J.S. Aucoin Elementary in Amelia and the LSU AgCenter are hosting a Veterans Day 2 Mile Color run from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 11, at J.S. Aucoin. Cost to enter is $10. Pre-registration is due by Nov. 10 and the class with the most pre-registered students wins prize. Registration at event begins at 9 a.m. Plate lunches will also be sold and fun jumps will be on hand. All proceeds benefit the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Entry forms are avail-able at Orange Leaf and CC’s Coffee in Morgan City, and at the school. ...

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