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City council hears from guests, gets updates on taxes, pumps

Franklin’s City Council meeting Tuesday evening was one of good tidings and encouraging reports.
Dawn Kaiser-Melancon from the committee of Fit, Fun and Fabulous Serving St. Mary Parish provided details on the day-long, Oct. 5 event to be held in downtown Franklin.
Spotlighting health and fitness, the function will include healthcare and medical agencies, as well as church and community organizations. Former New Orleans Saint and Hall of Famer Willie Roaf will be the keynote speaker at one of the luncheons held that day, and as in years past, the day will conclude with a candle-light vigil for Chez Hope Family Violence Crisis Center, to bring awareness to domestic violence.
Reid Miller, Miller Engineers & Associates, gave a positive progress report on the pumps that were installed at the bridge on Willow Street. The pumps are operational, though they will undergo more tests, according to Miller, before being handed over to the city. There are two new pumps installed in the Franklin Canal, bringing the total there to four pumps, and Miller says, with “dress up work” to be done, those pumps will likely be operational in two or three weeks.
Before the pump project on the Franklin Canal, draining water had to go across US 90, to the Hanson Canal. With the new pumps, draining water can stay in the Franklin Canal, instead of having to travel so long a route as it did previously. The pumps, at full velocity can pump 150 cubic ft. of water per second.
Director of Finance Ed Hay updated the council on the city’s sales tax collections from January of 2014 through last month, and the recent trends depicted a decrease, to a leveling off. Hay said he would still like to see an improvement with an eye toward 2014 levels.
Chief of Police Sabria McGuire addressed the possibility of instituting a gun return/buy back policy by saying she would research the grants and provisions necessary for such an institution, with results to follow. McGuire was also asked to clarify the terms of the city’s curfew for minors, and she stated that so long as the minor was on the property of the homeowner/parent during curfew hours, and was not being of disturbance to neighbors or passers-by, they were considered in compliance, even if outdoors.
Director of Recreation Chris Barrilleaux reported that the summer recreation programs were a success and thanked all who participated in their success.
Lastly, a resolution authorizing Mayor Raymond Harris Jr. to enter into a cooperative endeavor agreement with the state of Louisiana, Department of the Treasury for the purpose of obtaining the allocation of funding through Act 3 of the 2017 session of the Louisiana Legislature in the amount of $10,000 for the Masonic building repair and renovation, was squarely approved.

Franklin downtown cleanup

Teche Talk Productions sponsored the Aug. 12 city cleanup in downtown Franklin. Marguerite Robinson, Bridget Barrilleaux and Curless Estelle represented Teche Talk, joined by Ruthie Heard, Trent Downing, Elaine Karam, Lois Thomas and Keep St. Mary Beautiful board members Diana Alexander, Vel Minor and Didi Battle. Franklin Foundation Hospital provided gloves, grabbers and bags; bottled water was supplied by Argus Spa.

Coastal leaders commit $80M to Bayou Chene structure

State coastal leaders say they are committed to making sure the Bayou Chene permanent floodgate gets built and is able to protect up to six parishes from flooding with the push of a button. Work to build the structure could start next year. The Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority of Louisiana held a board meeting Wednesday at the Morgan City Municipal Auditorium. St. Mary Levee District Executive Director Tim Matte discussed the district’s Bayou Chene Flood Control and Diversion Project to install a permanent 400-foot wide floodgate on the bayou in Amelia to protect the region from backwater flooding when ...

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Daily Review writer Flores wins four awards

Morgan City Daily Review and Franklin Banner-Tribune outdoor writer John Flores received four awards in four categories last weekend at the 72nd annual Louisiana Outdoor Writers Association Conference in Natchitoches

Flores took first place in the magazine short feature category, first place in the regular feature magazine category, third place honors in the photography category, and third place in the electronic submissions category for an article featured in www.stmarynow.com titled, “Platte Bayou Rookeries Are Things That Matter.”

“It’s always an honor and a humbling experience to receive an award among such a distinguished group of outdoor communicators,” Flores said. “The fact that I live in St. Mary Parish helps.

“We have such a diverse ecosystem here with the Atchafalaya Basin and Atchafalaya River draining into our vast coastal marshes. The people of St. Mary Parish are just the best. Plus, it doesn’t hurt that they always have a story to tell providing something unique to write about.”

GLORIA MORRISON WIGGINS

April 12, 1930 — August 16, 2017

Gloria Morrison Wiggins, 87, a resident of Morgan City, passed away Wednesday, Aug. 16, 2017, at her home surrounded by her loving family.

Gloria was born April 12, 1930, in Bayou Boeuf, the daughter of Charles and Aline Arcemont Morrison.

Gloria was the most caring person that was always eager to help with anything; and she loved her grandchildren and great-grandchildren dearly.

She will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by her husband of 71 years, Earl J. Wiggins of Morgan City; three children, Jarrell Wiggins, Janice Aucoin and husband D.J., and Julie Wiggins and partner Edie Landry; five grandchildren, J.J. Wiggins, Jarrod Wiggins, Jennifer W.
Romero, David Aucoin and Dwayne “Peanut” Aucoin; eight great-grandchildren; one great-great-grandchild; three sisters, Clara Bailey, Lilly Tabor and Wanzie Richard; and two brothers, Charles Morrison and Ira Morrison.

Gloria was preceded in death by her parents, Charles and Aline Arcemont Morrison; one daughter-in-law, Sparkle Wiggins; three sisters, Ethel, Juanita and Hilda; and one brother, Andrew Morrison.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be at 11 a.m. on Thursday, Aug. 17, 2017, at Holy Cross Catholic Church with Father Clyde Mahler celebrating the Mass. A visitation will be held from 9 a.m. until the time of Mass at Holy Cross Church. Following Mass, Gloria will be laid to rest in the Morgan City Cemetery.

UPDATED: BOBBY RAY MONCEAUX

August 29, 1937- August 13, 2017

Bobby Ray Monceaux, 79, a resident of Berwick, passed away Sunday, Aug. 13, 2017, at Teche Regional Medical Center.

Bobby was born Aug. 29, 1937, in Crowley, the son of Ovey Monceaux and Mildred Faust.

Bobby worked in the oilfield business and for the Town of Berwick until his retirement in 2009.

He will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his wife of 61 years, Wyanette Hanks Monceaux of Berwick; four children, Sue Billiot and husband Ken of Arkansas, Rachel Wells and husband Elmer of Bayou Vista, Randal Monceaux and wife Debbie of Berwick, and Kevin
Monceaux and wife Mable of Berwick; nine grandchildren, Chantel Guidry and husband Joey of Bayou Vista, Michelle Landry and husband Ross of Youngsville, Travis Billiot (Pam) of Jeanerette, Sangel Billiot (Chris) of Mississippi, Courtney Wells of Bayou Vista, Brandon Monceaux and wife Amber of Bayou Vista, Drew Monceaux of Morgan City, Paula Harrington and husband David of Patterson, and Jessica LaSalle and husband Doug of Bayou Vista. Bobby is also survived by 13 great-grandchildren, Alexis Barrilleaux, Dillian Billiot, Alex Landry, Kaitlyn Billiot, Zackari
Billiot, Bayley Delcambre, Alyssa Delcambre, Breckin Monceaux, Dylan Harrington, Zoie Harrington, Landyn LaSalle, Elijah LaSalle and Alayna LaSalle; four great-great-grandchildren, Hayden Barrilleaux, Miles Barrilleaux, Audrie Barrilleaux and Ethan Cooper; sister-in-law, Ora Johnelle “PeeWee” Bergeaux and husband Allen of Jennings; and nieces, Sally Simon of Louisiana and Sulane McFarlin of Texas.

Bobby was preceded in death by his parents, Ovey Monceaux and Mildred Faust; mother- and father-in-law, Joseph Hanks and Theresa Hanks LeJeune; one brother, Ovey Monceaux Jr.; brothers-in-law, Wayne Hanks and Lewis Hanks; one aunt, Ann Sanchez; one cousin, Pat Monceaux; and maternal and paternal grandparents.

Pallbearers will be Ross Landry, Travis Billiot, Brandon Monceaux, Drew Monceaux, David Harrington and Douglas LaSalle Jr.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 18, 2017, at Twin City Funeral Home. The family will receive friends and family from 9 a.m. until the time of the service on Saturday at the funeral home and the rosary will be prayed at 1 p.m. Following the services, Bobby will be laid to rest in the Berwick Cemetery Mausoleum.
The family requests those coming to pay their respects to please dress in casual attire as Bobby wasn’t much for formal dressing.

SOLLY MARVIN 'JACK RABBIT' ROBISHEAUX SR.

November 19, 1927- August 13, 2017

Solly Marvin “Jack Rabbit” Robisheaux Sr., 89, a resident of Morgan City, passed away Sunday, Aug. 13, 2017, at Patterson Healthcare Center.
Jack was born Nov. 19, 1927, in Berwick, the son of Solomon and Goldie Gilmore Robisheaux.

Jack grew up in Berwick and moved to Morgan City shortly after his marriage to June Bonner, who preceded him in death. Jack was a member of Sacred Heart Catholic Church. After retiring, he worked for the church as a maintenance man. He was a member of the Knights of Columbus Council 1373 and he also taught CCD classes. He was a boat captain for Tidex for many years and was also co-owner of Roland’s Auto and Starter Repair in Morgan City.

Jack was a born outdoorsman and spent his youth down the bayou hunting and fishing. As a man, bass fishing became his passion. He was famous locally and nationwide for his handmade crank baits, “The Jack Rabbit.” He will be posthumously awarded as The Honorary Member of the Year by the National Fishing Lures Collectors Club.

He will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by three children, Beth Holley and husband Jerry Randy, Bridgette Basas, and David Robisheaux and wife Donna; one daughter-in-law, Patricia Robisheaux; six grandchildren, Melissa Rowlands and husband Chris, Rachel Lewis and husband Damondrick and Rachel’s mother Jean Bagwell, Trent Basas and girlfriend Stephanie Garner, Robert Muirhead, Alair Basas Gaudet and husband Bryan, and Bryce Robisheaux and wife Erin; eight great-grandchildren; one great-great-grandchild; one brother, Bryan Robisheaux and wife Bonnie; niece, Diane and nephew, Wayne.

Jack was preceded in death by his parents, Solomon and Goldie Gilmore Robisheaux; his wife of 67 years, June Bonner Robisheaux; one daughter, Mary Hill; three sons, Garland Robisheaux, Neal Robisheaux and Solly Robisheaux Jr.; and two grandsons, Brian Robisheaux and Marcus Phelps.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 11 a.m. on Friday, Aug. 18, 2017, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church with Father Wilfredo Decal officiating. A wake will be held from 9 a.m. until Mass time. Following Mass, Jack will be laid to rest in the Morgan City Cemetery.

Wheel House for Aug. 16

SOLAR ECLIPSE
Blood Drive at United Blood Services, 1234 David Drive, Suite 102, Morgan City 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday. Aug. 21. Donors receive a “Solar Eclipse Blood Donor” T-shirt and NASA-approved eclipse viewing glasses, while supplies last. A partial solar eclipse will peak in South Louisiana around 1:24 p.m. Aug. 21. Blood donors must be 16 or older, weigh at least 110 pounds and be in good health. Donors who are 16 must have a signed parental/guardian permission slip. Schedule appointment at www.bloodhero.com or call 877-827-4376. Donors can visit www.UnitedBloodServices.org the day of donation and click on the “Health History Questionnaire” to complete the interview portion of the donation online. Print the “Fast track donation ticket” and bring it to UBS at donation time.

Gov. seeks to reinstate his LGBT rights order

BATON ROUGE — Lawyers for Louisiana’s governor and attorney general sparred Tuesday over the scope of the elected officials’ authority and whether an executive order aimed at protecting LGBT rights in state government crossed a constitutional line.

Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, is asking an appeals court to reinstate his April 2016 order banning discrimination in government and state contracts based on sexual orientation and gender identity. A district court judge blocked enforcement in December in response to a lawsuit from Attorney General Jeff Landry, a Republican.

A three-judge panel of a Louisiana appeals court heard arguments Tuesday, but did not immediately issue a decision.

Edwards’ attorney Matthew Block said District Court Judge Todd Hernandez “just got it wrong” when he ruled the Edwards order violated Louisiana’s constitutional separation of powers.

Hernandez agreed with Landry that Edwards’ order was executive overreach, unconstitutionally seeking to create state law and trying to circumvent Louisiana lawmakers who have refused to write such LGBT-rights protections into statute.

“The executive order is not law,” Block said. “It is internal policy to the executive branch about employment and about contracting standards.”

Landry’s lawyer, Elizabeth Murrill, said Edwards is claiming authority Louisiana’s governor isn’t granted in the state constitution, trying to enact hiring and contracting requirements for other elected officials in the government’s executive branch.

“There are a number of other statewide elected officials who are not under the direction of the governor, and you have seen in the briefs I think that the governor believes that they are,” Murrill said. “And that, I would submit to you, is a rewriting of the constitution.”

Edwards and Landry have clashed repeatedly since taking office in 2016. Landry is considered a possible challenger to Edwards in the 2019 governor’s race. Landry attended Tuesday’s court hearing, while Edwards was meeting with U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson in New Orleans.

Appeals Court Judge Guy Holdridge asked Block what would happen to someone who doesn’t follow the executive order if it was in force, questioning how strict the enforcement would be or if the order was an “aspirational goal.”

Block said someone who works for the governor could be removed for not adhering to policy and someone with a state contract could be found in breach of the agreement.

After the hearing, Block added, however, that the governor would have limited ways to enforce the LGBT-rights policy on other statewide elected officials.

He couldn’t force those officials to following the hiring guidance, Block said, and could only mandate the anti-discrimination language in contracts over which the Edwards administration has review.

Holdridge asked Murrill if part of the governor’s executive order could be upheld, as it relates to Edwards’ own employees.

“Could we find his order constitutional on a limited basis?” Holdridge asked.

Murrill replied: “I don’t think you can partially uphold the executive order.”

The Edwards administration claims the order is consistent with directives issued by previous Louisiana governors Edwin Edwards and Kathleen Blanco.

But Edwards’ order goes further than that issued by the two prior Democratic leaders. He added language protecting against discrimination based on gender identity, a provision that protects transgender people.

Landry’s attorneys have said that term isn’t defined and could create legal problems and ambiguity for employers.

When Edwards issued his order last year, Landry blocked dozens of legal services contracts that contained the anti-discrimination language.

After Hernandez declared the order invalid, the LGBT protections were stripped from the contracts, and that stalemate ended.

As part of the lawsuit, the two statewide elected officials also are disputing the scope of the attorney general’s authority over legal contracts.

Follow Melinda Deslatte on Twitter at http://twitter.com/melindadeslatte

Purchase Award patron

Submitted Photo Patterson State Bank makes a contribution toward artwork for the upcoming 54th Artists Guild Unlimited Annual Show and Sale Aug 30-Sept. 22. The show is held at Everett Street Gallery in downtown Morgan City. Patrons make a donation of $50 or more toward artwork and are invited to a Patron Reception before the public opening of the show. Receiving a check from Robert Marin, chief lending officer and senior vice president, is AGU representative Geri Bourgeois. For more information on becoming a patron, call 985-385-9945. ...

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