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HAROLD WILLIAM 'HARRY' GOBERT

September 21, 1924- September 18, 2017

On Monday, Sept. 18, 2017, Harold William Gobert, fondly known as Harry, met Jesus face to face at the age of 92. He was just three days shy of his 93rd birthday and was known to have lived a full and an adventurous life.

Harry was a lifelong resident of Patterson and a dedicated loving family man. Day or night, sick or well, he worked hard as a diesel mechanic in Patterson and as a Port Captain in Cameron. His family remembers him as a caring, kind and humorous gentleman who could share a great story. Strong, wise and a good man, Harry was everything his family and friends needed.

Those left to cherish Harry’s beautiful memory are his children, Karen M. Gobert, Angie D. Gobert and her husband, David E. Weber, and Harolyn R. Gobert; his brother, Wayne Gobert; three grandchildren who he raised as his own, Marsha, Tanya and Kara and three more grandchildren he adored, Alicia, Jace and Darryl; 11 great-grandchildren; and one great-great-grandchild.

He was reunited in heaven with his wife, Margaret B. Gobert; his parents, Curtis and Beulah Gobert Sr.; five siblings, Leatrice Verdun, Shirley Verdun, Curtis Gobert Jr., Ruby Bogan and Jeanette Gobert.

The family requests that visitation be observed Saturday, Sept. 23, 2017, from 10 a.m. until time of services at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Patterson.

A Mass of Christian burial will take place for Harry on Saturday, Sept. 23, 2017, at 11:30 a.m. at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Patterson with Harry being laid to rest in the church cemetery following services. Upon the completion of services, the family asks that friends and family join them at the church hall for a celebration of life.

The family would like to express their heartfelt thanks to Paula Boutte for the friendship and caregiving she provided to Harry for numerous years.

NORA PERCLE DAIGLE

September 12, 1924 -September 19, 2017

Nora Percle Daigle, a native and lifelong resident of Morgan City, passed away on Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2017, at the age of 93. She was a proud and longtime resident of the Morgan City Health Care Center.

Nora retired from the St. Mary Parish School Board as a cafeteria worker after many years of dedication. An avid gardener, Nora enjoyed spending time in her yard and watching things grow. Along with gardening, Nora enjoyed dancing when she was younger, picking crab meat, and playing the penny machines at the local casinos. Nora was known for being honest and telling everyone what was on her mind. Both her family and friends will find life just a little bit bland without her among them.

Those left to cherish Nora’s memory are her five children, Ronald Aucoin Sr. and his wife, Wanda, Mollie Falcon, Vernon Aucoin and his wife, Jackie, Rickey Aucoin Sr. and his wife, Brenda, and Lois Aucoin and her husband, Charlie; three siblings; and numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents, Clifton and Agnes Percle; and three siblings.

The family requests that visitation be observed Thursday, Sept. 21, 2017, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. and again on Friday, Sept. 22, 2017, from 9 a.m. until time of services at 11 a.m. at Hargrave Funeral Home in Morgan City. Nora will be laid to rest in the Morgan City Cemetery following services.

The family would like to express their deep gratitude to the Morgan City Health Care Center for their care and support of Nora.

Wheel House for Sept. 21

VOTING
Voter Registration Drive offered by Young Memorial’s WorkReady U Program at South Central Louisiana Technical College campuses in Morgan City, 900 Youngs Road, Room 201, and Franklin, 1013 Perret St., from 8-11 a.m. Sept. 26. Tours of the campus also offered to celebrate Adult Education & Family Literacy Week. For info call 985-380-2957, ext. 350 or 337-828-1171.

Louisiana Spotlight: New tactic as 'fiscal cliff' nears

BATON ROUGE — Maybe Louisiana’s politicians are starting to take the state’s “fiscal cliff” more seriously as the $1 billion-plus budget hole edges ever closer. Or maybe they’re just acknowledging the last stab at closing the shortfall earlier this year was a total failure and that their most recent tactics shouldn’t be repeated.

Whatever the reason, two of the key leaders critical to getting any tax plan passed to remedy the financial gap — Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards and Republican House Speaker Taylor Barras — seem to be taking a more hands-on approach to building a consensus ahead of the next legislative debate on Louisiana’s budget woes.

More than $1 billion in temporary taxes passed by lawmakers in 2016, mainly a 1 percent state sales tax, expire on July 1. And there’s no plan for how to handle the hole that will be blown in the budget.

Edwards has been traveling the state, holding closed-door meetings with business leaders and elected officials in Baton Rouge, Houma, Alexandria, Shreveport and New Orleans to outline the situation and build support for a budget-balancing fix involving taxes.

“They understand the gravity of our financial problems and are committed to finding viable solutions to address them. Party affiliations aside, it will take input from many people to develop a plan to stabilize our state budget,” the governor said in a statement after his Shreveport meeting last week.

He’s also started sitting down with lawmakers to solicit ideas for patching the hole, an effort that Edwards spokesman Richard Carbo said will expand once the meetings with business leaders are complete. Edwards and Barras are slated to talk face-to-face Thursday.

The House speaker, meanwhile, has been engaged in his own outreach effort, visiting with House members around the state to determine what tax proposals they would back. Barras said he hoped — and expected — lawmakers in his chamber to coalesce around tax ideas by January, with an expectation they would be debated in a special session sometime early in the new year.

By January, “I would feel comfortable that we either have a plan that makes sense to most members or have something that we need to work harder on to get another piece done, all under the realm of trying to replace a billion dollars,” Barras said.

Any tax plans will require a special session to consider, but Edwards said he won’t call one unless he can reach a consensus with House GOP leaders who were the primary roadblock to his previous tax proposals.

At the time they approved the temporary taxes, Edwards and the majority-Republican Legislature described it as a short-term fix to pay for services while they worked on a larger plan to overhaul Louisiana’s tax structure, which has been criticized as unfair and riddled with special interest loopholes.

The tax rewrite never happened.

Ideas offered by a nonpartisan task force created by lawmakers were bottled up and killed in the House, where most tax bills must start. A separate idea pushed by the governor to enact a new business tax also was a nonstarter. Republican House leaders sought to shrink spending,
but that didn’t happen amid opposition from Edwards and Senate leaders.

And no one has released a detailed plan to cut $1 billion from the $28 billion state operating budget.

While Barras spoke with optimism about reaching agreement on taxes and said he was encouraged by the outreach the governor has done so far, his budget committee chairman struck an entirely different tone last week.

Appropriations Chairman Cameron Henry, a Jefferson Parish Republican, released a Facebook video that he titled “Kickoff to Fear Season,” in which he slammed the governor as “constantly looking for more money” from taxpayers and using budget-cut scare tactics.

“He’s not bringing business leaders in to ask them how he can help expand their business and create jobs, which is really the deficit we have. We have a jobs deficit. It’s, ‘How can your company give the state more money so we can continue to spend it?’” Henry said.

To say the least, Henry’s video is at odds with the hopefulness coming from his chamber’s leader, raising questions about whether Edwards and Barras can find consensus they both say they’re seeking.

Melinda Deslatte has covered Louisiana politics for The Associated Press since 2000. Follow her at http://twitter.com/melindadeslatte

Donation to Bayou Vista Elementary

Submitted Photo
M C Bank recently made its annual adopt-a-school donation to Bayou Vista Elementary. From left, with Bayou Vista Elementary are Brigett Mabile, Karri Lipari, Pam Mahaffey, Chrissy Harrison and Ronica LaPoint. With M C Bank: Jason Bailey and Vicki Laubach. With BVES: Mindy Loupe, Tamatha King and Shelia Scott. The picture was published Wednesday with the school incorrectly identified.

Knights of Columbus Family of the Year

Submitted Photo During the Bayou Vista Knights of Columbus Council 6211 monthly meeting held in September, the family of Brother Patrick Hebert Sr., center, was named Family of the Year. Also accepting the award is Patrick Hebert Jr., left. Presenting the award is Grand Knight John Trevino Sr.

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Conrad wins contract to build tugboats

Conrad Shipyard of Morgan City announced that it has been awarded a contract to build two 3,000-horsepower ocean service tugboats for Harley Marine Services of Seattle.

The two vessels will be 100 feet in length, with a beam of 34 feet and a molded draft of 15 feet, 3 inches. They will be powered by Caterpillar 3512C Tier 4 A-rated diesel marine engines, and equipped with two Caterpillar C4.4 99-kilowatt at 1,800 rpm genrators.

The tug design was developed by Entech Designs LLC. The first hull is scheduled for delivery in fourth quarter 2018, and the second hull is scheduled to be delivered in the first quarter of 2019. Conrad President Chairman and CEO Johnny Conrad made the announcement:

“This is an extraordinary number of vessels to be awarded from one customer over the years, and is validation of the Conrad commitment to quality, craftsmanship, integrity and service. It is a compliment to the exceptional talents of our entire shipbuilding team. We appreciate the confidence of my good friend Harley Franco and his management team.”

Harley Marine Services provides marine transportation services in every major U.S. West Coast port as well as in Alaska, New York and the Gulf of Mexico.

Ribbon-cutting for Innovative Vape

The Daily Review/Zachary Fitzgerald
The St. Mary Chamber of Commerce held a ribbon-cutting Friday for Innovative Vape, 501 Southeast Blvd. in Bayou Vista. The owners are Kenneth Comeaux, Byron Comeaux and Ricky Comeaux.

Louisiana Politics: State construction backlog now $13.4B; gas tax future uncertain

Transportation and Development Secretary Shawn Wilson said the construction backlog for the state now stands at $13.4 billion, which is an increase from where it stood when he was first took over the department in January 2016. “People need to understand the backlog is really unmet needs on our system today,” Wilson said in an episode of The LaPolitics Report that will be released this week. So what does that include? According to Wilson it’s the lanes of transportation that take you to and from work and school and all points in between. “It’s the bridge repairs we need to make,” ...

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Jim Brown: Should we have the right to decide when to die?

We pride ourselves as Americans in our lifestyle choices. The right to freedom of choice, protecting our individual assertion of free will, and deciding just how we want to live our lives.

And yes, we have the right to excess. You can live a gluttonous life by overindulging in many personal hazards.

You know smoking causes lung cancer, but making a personal decision to smoke is your right. Drinking to excess leads to a number of health concerns, but that’s your choice.

Obesity by overeating? Not good, but no law can legally restrain your decision to carry too much weight. You can live where your want, and do what you want with few limitations.

That is, up until you want to shut things down and end your life. In the vast majority of states, that’s when the government takes over. You have the right to decide how you live, but you do not have the same right to decide, at least legally, when you want to end your life. Should you have such a right?

Six states (Washington, Oregon, California, Colorado, Vermont and Montana) say “yes,” and they’ve passed legislation where a patient can ask a doctor for medication to end life.

Under these “physician assisted suicide” or “death with dignity laws,” as they are known, there are strict requirements as to the patient’s condition that must be met before these laws can be applied.

In the rest of America, death is delayed with small concern for the costs in terms of pain and suffering, not to mention, as is often the case, of economic hardship to the family and the taxpayer.

Families stand by watching over loved ones who are force fed through tubes, and often kept alive by a number of artificial means.

Instead of death taking its natural course at its humane end stage, modern medicine seems to make death almost optional.

In the debate over life ending care, a notable event took place recently. In Phoenix, a husband was convicted of shooting his wife who suffered terribly with final stage multiple sclerosis, and who would have required extensive amputations because of gangrene in order to keep her alive. She had begged for months to end her life.

Her 86-year-old husband finally honored her wishes and shot her to end her misery.

“Your honor,” the husband addressed the judge, “I loved Ginger since she was 15 years old and I loved her when she was 81 years old. She begged me to end her misery, and I just couldn’t watch her suffer like that.”

A jury convicted him of manslaughter, but the judge, with almost unanimous family and community support, sentenced him to probation.

I would hope that at the end of my life, I would have the right to make my own choice. I am not afraid of facing finality.

Death will come. But there will be quality of life issues that all of us will face. And there will be a quality of living that will deteriorate and be tempered by both the effort and the ability to deal with both the physical wear and tear and the emotional costs. You see, from my perspective, there is a real difference between life and living.

But the system fights to keep you alive regardless of the quality of life. If it takes feeding tubes, ventilators, not having any control over basic bodily functions and dealing with bedsores that will never heal because you will never leave the bed, so be it.

But once this process begins, it rarely ends — until you come to an end.

When I was 70, I wrote that “If there is a yin and a yang, the before and the after, what has happened and what is yet to be, then maybe getting older is a special way post for me. Hey, I could be at the top and ready for the long and relaxing ride back down.”

I’m still on that great ride. But one day, it’s going to come to an end. I just hope I will be able to set my own timelines, and make my own life and, yes, death choices on my own with out dictates from the government. Yes, I want the freedom of choice. In both living and dying.

Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns and at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.

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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