RSS Feed

Jim Bradshaw: June was money month for loggers

In days gone by, the Calcasieu River was jammed from top to bottom with pine logs in the early days of June.
This was the high-water month, when logs could easily be floated to nearly a dozen lumber mills that ringed Lake Charles.
It was a money month for men who cut timber and the month when mill operators stocked up on the logs they would turn to lumber, at a handsome profit.
There was plenty of timber to go around.
In 1840, the huge territory in southwest Louisiana known as “Imperial Calcasieu Parish” contained one of the finest stands of longleaf pine timber in the world, part of 4,500 square miles of a forest filled with centuries-old trees that stretched north through what is now Beauregard, Allen and into Vernon Parish. and east into parts of St. Landry, Rapides and Natchitoches parishes.
Trees standing more than 100 feet tall yielded from 12,000 to 30,000 board feet of lumber per acre, and the supply seemed inexhaustible.
In 1880, according to an estimate made as part of the federal census, Louisiana’s pine forests held enough timber for more than four billion board feet of saleable lumber — a huge amount of it eventually flowing through Lake Charles.
As Donald Millet put it in an extensive study of the industry printed in the journal “Louisiana History” in 1966, the town was “advantageously located on the lake from which (it) gets its name and through which the Calcasieu River flows with its many tributaries extending far into the pine belt and to the Gulf of Mexico.”
The lake and the river also provided a base for a large fleet of schooners that hauled finished lumber to ports all along the Gulf coast, and so became “the first center of logging and lumber production in Louisiana.”
At first, timber was cut close enough to the banks of the streams that they could be easily hauled to the water by mules or oxen, but by the middle 1880s most of the easily accessible trees were cut and loggers began to build little railroads into the piney woods. A. J. Perkins, one of the owners of the Moore, Perkins, & Company mill, is credited with building the Calcasieu & Vernon in 1882, the first of the narrow-gauge lines built specially to haul logs. According to Millet, it started at White Bluff on Hickory Branch Creek—a Calcasieu River tributary—and eventually reached Leesville.
Millet gives a fascinating account of how a tree in the woods was turned into a valuable pine board to be sold in Galveston or Veracruz or some other Gulf port.
“First came the woodsman, whose duty it was to saw or chop the tree down” and cut it into logs about 20 feet long. Each log was dragged to the railway using a high-wheeled cart pulled by mules. About 16 logs could be loaded onto a flatbed rail car that hauled it to the water’s edge.
Pegs to hold short pieces of rope were driven into the logs before they were rolled into the river and hooked together into rafts that could be towed to the mills in Lake Charles. There, the rafts were linked together into huge “booms” of floating logs to be hauled up to the mills.
“Booms of fifty thousand or more logs were a common sight in the waters of Lake Charles,” Millet wrote.
It was a lot of work, but worth it. In 1878, the Galveston News reported that 20 million board feet of Calcasieu longleaf pine had been purchased by buyers on the island alone that year, at an average cost of $18 per thousand feet for top quality lumber and $16 for a lesser grade.
According to my calculator that amounted to about $3.5 million in sales in 1878 dollars in one year in one town. That would be about $90 million in today’s dollars, and that was just the beginning. The Southern Pacific reached Calcasieu in 1880, linking the area to the whole nation at a time when a building boom was going on.
There was a huge demand for Louisiana pine lumber, and within just a few years just one mill was turning out 85,000 board feet of lumber every day—more than 30 million board feet a year. The other mills weren’t far behind, and prices for the finished lumber were better than they had ever been.
A collection of Jim Bradshaw’s columns, Cajuns and Other Characters, is now available from Pelican Publishing. You can contact him at jimbradshaw4321@gmail.com or P.O. Box 1121, Washington LA 70589.

Radio logs for June 9

The following are the radio dispatch logs from the Morgan City Police Department. To report unlawful or suspicious activity, call the police department at 985-380-4605.
Thursday, June 8
7:08 a.m. 100 block of Headland Street; Disturbance.
8:12 a.m. 300 block of South Railroad Avenue; Officer stand by.
10:45 a.m. 200 block of Barrow Street; Medical.
10:51 a.m. 800 block of Sacred Heart Drive; Officer stand by.
11:06 a.m. 6000 block of La. 182; Accident.
12:38 p.m. 200 block of Fourth Street; Alarm.
12:41 p.m. 3000 block of Lizabeth Drive; Harassment.
12:45 p.m. 100 block of Third Street; Forgery.
12:49 p.m. Brashear Avenue and Fourth Street; Suspicious person.
1:02 p.m. 500 block of Roderick Street; Officer stand by.
2 p.m. 1300 block of Nebraska Street; Complaint.
3:30 p.m. 300 block of Adams Street; Fire.
3:49 p.m. 1000 block of La. 70; Accident.
4:25 p.m. U.S. 90 East; Reckless driving.
4:37 p.m. 800 block of Fig Street; Juvenile problems.
4:41 p.m. 300 block of Bowman Street; Disturbance.
4:41 p.m. 200 block of Brashear Avenue; Complaint.
4:46 p.m. 7300 block of La. 182; Animal.
5:05 p.m. 1400 block of Federal Avenue; Accident.
5:10 p.m. 1200 block of Onstead Street; Alarm.
5:27 p.m. U.S. 90 East; Hit and run.
6:14 p.m. 1600 block of Front Street; Arrest.
6:21 p.m. 6400 block of La. 182; Shoplifter.
6:53 p.m. 400 block of Fifth Street; Medical.
8:48 p.m. Brashear Avenue; Arrest.
10:14 p.m. 1200 block of Victor II Boulevard; Removal of subject.
10:44 p.m. 2300 block of La. 70; Complaint.
10:52 p.m. 2300 block of La. 70; Alarm.
11:01 p.m. 7200 block of La. 182; Complaint.
11:56 p.m. 100 block of Headland Street; 911 hang up call.
Friday, June 9
1:26 a.m. Cottonwood Street and La. 182; Arrest.
2:04 a.m. 3200 block of Tammy Drive; Medical.

What passed, what failed in regular session

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Lawmakers filed more than 900 bills for consideration in the legislative session that ends Thursday, with the heaviest debate focused on state spending and tax policy. But other measures dealing with criminal sentencing laws, public education, Confederate monuments and pay issues also drew debate time over the two months. Some of what passed and failed:
BUDGET:
The House and Senate haven’t yet reached an agreement on the state’s $28 billion-plus operating budget for the financial year that begins July 1. At issue is whether to trust the state’s income forecast and spend all the money available or leave some unspent as a cushion in case the forecast is too optimistic. House Republican leaders want to spend less, saying that would keep them from making midyear budget cuts if the forecast isn’t met. The Senate, backed by Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards and House Democrats, wants to spend all available dollars, saying otherwise lawmakers would have to make harmful cuts to services.
TAXES:
No deal was reached on taxes, despite months of talk about how lawmakers would focus on a tax overhaul to stabilize Louisiana’s finances and address a looming $1 billion budget gap that hits in mid-2018 when temporary taxes expire. The House — where most tax measures must start — blocked anything that could be considered a tax hike and scrapped nearly every bill recommended by a task force offering a roadmap for reform efforts. The Senate was stymied, unable to consider much without House cooperation. Senators rejected the few piecemeal bills the House sent over.
JUSTICE:
Edwards’ biggest victory was passage of a criminal justice revamp aimed at reducing Louisiana’s top-in-the-nation incarceration rate. The bills lessen sentences for nonviolent crimes, boost spending on programs aimed at helping people who leave prison so they don’t reoffend, and ease the financial burdens ex-offenders face when they are released. An effort to end Louisiana’s use of the death penalty, which wasn’t part of the criminal justice overhaul, failed. Lawmakers increased police training requirements and agreed to better track officers’ disciplinary records nearly a year after Alton Sterling, a black man, was fatally shot during a struggle with white Baton Rouge police officers.
EDUCATION:
Edwards’ proposal to put limits on the state’s voucher program stalled, along with his recommended changes to Louisiana’s system of evaluating teachers. His push to ban corporal punishment in public schools for students with disabilities easily won approval, though a broader proposal not pushed by the governor to prohibit all corporal punishment stalled. Students won’t need a doctor’s permission to bring sunblock to public schools, and college governing boards will continue to have the ability to raise student fees.
TOPS:
College students who receive tuition payments through the TOPS program won’t encounter new residency or repayment requirements. The nearly $300 million won’t face any substantive changes and will pay students’ full tuition charges in the 2017-18 school year. A study group will look at recommending future legislation, amid concerns about the program’s price tag.
LGBT RIGHTS:
A proposal to add protections into Louisiana law against discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity failed. Lawmakers agreed to make Louisiana the 49th state to allow same-sex couples to receive domestic-abuse protections.
ABORTION:
Lawmakers toughened requirements for parental consent when a minor wants to get an abortion, mandating that the guardian provide proof of identity, including a government-issued identification card such as a driver’s license. But the issue of abortion drew less attention this year.
MONUMENTS:
Decisions on the fate of Confederate monuments erected in towns and cities around Louisiana will be left to local governments. An effort to make it harder to remove the statues was backed in the House, prompting a walkout from black lawmakers. But the bill was spurned by senators.
___
OTHER ISSUES: Louisiana won’t hold a constitutional convention and won’t join 44 other states in creating statewide regulations governing ride-hailing services such as Uber and Lyft. For the second consecutive year, senators jettisoned a proposal to penalize so-called sanctuary cities that limit cooperation with immigration authorities. The House refused to shorten the waiting period for a divorce when the married couple has children under 18.
___
Online:
Louisiana Legislature: www.legis.la.gov

Police: Woman kicked officers responding to complaint

An 18-year-old Bayou Vista woman was accused Thursday of kicking Morgan City police officers after they saw her strike someone else while responding to a complaint, Police Chief James Blair said in a news release.

—Breanna L. Hillebran, 18, of Southeast Boulevard in Bayou Vista, was arrested at 7:10 a.m. Thursday on charges of simple battery, resisting an officer and battery on a police officer.

Patrol officers responded to a home on Headland Street in regard to a disturbance. Officers arrived and saw Hillebran striking the victim. Officers intervened at which time Hillebran began to resist and kick the officers. Hillebran was jailed.

Blair reported responding to 40 calls and reported the following arrests:

—Jerry L. Norman, 54, of South Railroad Avenue in Morgan City, was arrested at 6:28 p.m. Thursday on charges of hit and run, driving under suspension and careless operation of a motor vehicle.

Patrol officers responded to the area of U.S. 90 in regard to a crash that had occurred. Information was gathered that one of the vehicle’s involved had fled the scene. Officers arrived and a description of the suspect vehicle was obtained.

During the investigation, Norman was developed as a suspect. The vehicle involved was located along with Norman. During questioning, Norman allegedly admitted to being the operator of the vehicle in the crash.

Police gathered evidence that Norman had committed the violation, which resulted in the crash. He also had a suspended driver’s license. Norman was jailed.

—Steven Davis, 41, of Versen Street in Berwick, was arrested at 8:53 p.m. Thursday on charges of driving under suspension and improper lighting.

Patrol officers saw a vehicle being operated in the area of U.S. 90 without the required lighting and stopped the vehicle. Davis, the driver, had a suspended driver’s license. Davis was jailed.

—Daniel Perez, 40, of Galliano, was arrested at 1:50 a.m. Friday on charges of no driver’s license, open container, switched license plate and improper turn.

Patrol officers observed a vehicle negotiate an improper turn in the area of La. 182 and stopped the vehicle. Perez, the driver, didn’t have a valid driver’s license and had a license plate that was registered to another vehicle. The officer also found an open container of an alcoholic beverage in the vehicle. Perez was jailed.

Berwick Police Chief James Richard reported the following arrests:

—Brett Lacombe, 17, of Park Road in Morgan City, was arrested at 4:05 p.m. Thursday on a charge of criminal mischief. Lacombe posted $301 bail.

—Chase Gugliotta, 18, of Shadowlawn Drive in Berwick, was arrested at 4:43 p.m. Thursday on a charge of criminal mischief. Gugliotta posted $301 bail.

—Gregory Arceneaux, 27, of River Road in Berwick, was arrested at 8:19 p.m. Thursday on a charge of illegal possession of stolen things. No bail is set.

—Aquinndus Humphrey, 21, of Bernice Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 12:53 a.m. Friday on charge of possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, no turn signal and no driver’s license. Humphrey posted $4,000 bail.

Patterson Police Chief Patrick LaSalle reported the following arrest:

—Alicia Bertrand, 32, of Cremo Lane in Patterson, was arrested 5:33 p.m. Thursday for failure to appear on a charge of shoplifting. Bail is set at $337.

Extreme Tour returns to Morgan City

Three Morgan City natives, Jean’ Guillory, his wife, Mandee Pisani Guillory, and Roland Bennett, along with Joel Fussell from Thibodaux from the band Day Like This, are returning to play with the Extreme Tour this year.
This year the Extreme Tour is coming to Morgan City, and Day Like This will be joining them once again. The Extreme Tour and Day Like This will be in Morgan City at 3-7pm Sunday at Lawrence Park.
Last year the band toured for three months in summer of 2016 on the West Coast going to 30-plus cities playing music and doing community outreach. The Extreme Tour was started by Ted Bruun and a group of Idaho residents in 1994. The tour’s purpose is to use extreme sports and music events to reach people of all ages with resources to assist them in leading healthy lives through positive and healthy decision making, and to encourage community togetherness. This aligned with the vision of Day Like This.
Though they faced many difficulties on the road, being able to play music, serve various communities, and travel the nation made it more than worth it. Day Like This is thankful for their community in Morgan City who helped make it possible. Recently the band has moved to Nashville, Tennessee, to further their career in music.

Kiwanis Club scholarship

Submitted Photo
Caylee Deshotel of Morgan City High School is the recipient of the East St. Mary Parish Kiwanis Club scholarship. Pictured are Deshotel, her mother, Christy Deshotel, and Bernadine Morgan.

AgCenter experts offer hurricane preparedness tips

BATON ROUGE — Hurricane season started June 1, and while Louisiana doesn’t often see storms this early in the season, it is important to be prepared before a storm strikes.
The LSU AgCenter has experts and resources to get Louisiana residents ready for the next storm.
AgCenter housing specialist Claudette Reichel said hurricane prep projects start with the letter ‘S.’
“Think shingles, soffits, seals, shutters and surroundings,” Reichel said.
Homeowners looking to replace a roof have hurricane-hardy options. But if a replacement isn’t in the plans, Reichel said, homeowners can strengthen existing shingles with roofing cement.
“Put some dabs under the first course of shingles and along the gable ends where it is most vulnerable,” she said. Roof damage is the biggest homeowners insurance claim following a hurricane.
Reichel also recommended securing soffits with polyurethane sealant and stainless steel screws. “Soffits are less likely to get blown around and allow wind-driven rain into your attic and cause major damage,” she said.
Inexpensive caulk will seal holes where wires, cables and pipes enter or exit your house.
When high winds are expected, flying debris can damage windows. Shutters such as lightweight translucent removable storm panels are a good alternative to heavy plywood boards, Reichel said.
AgCenter horticulturist Dan Gill also stressed the need to look at your surroundings before a storm.
High on the list is checking out trees, particularly mature shade trees. “Look for trees that have decay in their trunk or large dead areas, or ones that are dead all together,” Gill said. “All of this needs to be taken care of well before a hurricane threatens our area.”
Gill recommends hiring a licensed arborist to evaluate trees and see what work needs to be done on them.
He also said to secure loose objects in your landscapes, such as potted plants, hanging baskets, bird feeders, wind chimes, children’s play areas and patio furniture.
Also protect chemicals that may be stored in a garage or carport. “Make sure chemicals such as pesticides or gasoline are in secure locations and are high enough so they won’t be hit by flood waters,” he said.
AgCentr food safety expert Wenqing Xu said now is the time to stock up on non-perishable food items and water.
“Water is very important. It is best to buy bottled water and prepare one gallon of water per day per person,” she said.
To keep food safe in the event of a power outage, keep the doors of your refrigerator and freeze shut as much as possible.
“Frozen foods can be safely refrozen if they still have ice crystals on them or the temperature is 40 degrees or lower,” Xu said.
She also said to make sure to have a manual can opener, a food thermometer to monitor temperature and bleach if you need to sanitize utensils, pots and water.
Preparation also means getting pets and livestock ready for a storm. LSU AgCenter veterinarian Dr. Christ-ine Navarre said to make sure animals are healthy and vaccinations are up-to-date.
“Healthy animals will be better prepared to handle the stress of relocation,” Navarre said.
Microchipping animals or having identification for them in some way will help if you are separated from your animals. Navarre recommended storing identification numbers online in the cloud so they can be retrieved from anywhere. Prepare an emergency to-go box that includes contact information for animals’ veterinarians, medications, feed and leashes.
She also said it is important to get a pet used to its pet carrier before it is necessary for the animal to be transported in it.
Determine where you will evacuate before the storm and make sure it is pet-friendly if you are bringing your pets with you or look for a place where you can safely board pets or livestock, Navarre said.
More information on hurricane preparedness is available online at www.lsuagcener.com.

School board sees hike in insurance

CENTERVILLE — Accident coverage and its cost for students and parents were the main concern of the St. Mary Parish School Board at its monthly meeting Thursday.
Carmel Breaux, consultant for the St. Mary Parish School Board, presented several cover-age plans for student accident insurance that the board had to choose from for the 2017-18 school year.
Breaux recommended that the board remain with the same insurance carrier, Zurich, instead of going with Ameritas Life. She said Ameritas Life would cost more after catastrophic coverage, which is used to cover athletics, student travels and extracurricular activities, is combined with the general premium.
Zurich’s catastrophic coverage is included with the general premium provided.
Zurich’s premium cost increased almost $5,850 for the next school year. Breaux said student accident insurance claims have been in-creasing consistently nationwide.
Student accident insurance is meant to be a supplement to the student’s primary insurance provided by the parents. Student accident insurance has been acting as primary insurance since more families qualify for Medicaid under the Affordable Healthcare Act.
The new insurance coverage will fully cover some current services but the maximum coverage amount has been reduced. For example, physiotherapy, X-rays, MRI, radiology and prescription drugs are currently covered 80 percent up to the maximum coverage amount of $1,250 for physiotherapy, $500 for X-rays, MRIs, or radiology, with no maxi-mum for prescription drugs.
Under the new cover-age plan, physiotherapy, X-rays, MRIs, radiology and prescriptions drugs will be fully covered to the maximum coverage amount of $250 for physiotherapy, $400 for X-rays, MRIs or radiology, and $100 for prescription drugs.
Board member Pearl Rack raised concerns about parents being required to pay medical expenses when the school board provides coverage.
“Parents are not aware of the insurance and what is offered as coverage,” said Rack
Breaux suggested that the paperwork should be sent separately from all other paperwork that usually goes home with students during the first week of school, or that the insurance be explained to parents during orientation for sports or other activities.
Alton Perry, chief financial officer, said that coverage information about the student accident insurance could be placed on the school board’s website so that parents can always have access to that information.
Breaux did reiterate that student accident insurance is a supplement to the student’s primary insurance and that depending on a student’s health coverage may or may not require parents to still come out of pocket.
Also on Thursday, the school board approved the re-establishment of the Community Eligibility Provision, in which schools with a majority low-income student population do not collect meal applications and served meals for free. The cost of the meals is then reimbursed by federal funds.
Through this initiative, the school board has raised an additional $314,000 in revenue. For the next school year, there will be 14 schools in St. Mary Parish that will participate in this initiative.
The school board also approved the multipurpose building at Morgan City High School will be renamed The Ogden E. “Oggie” Stansbury Multipurpose Building.
In addition, the 2017 St. Mary Parish Principals’ Association Scholarship Winners were presented. The Michael Payton Memorial Scholarship for District One was presented to Jason Cross of West St. Mary High School. The Tommy Bourgeois Memorial Scholarship for District Two was presented to Olivia Kraemer of Berwick High School. The St. Mary Principals” Association Scholarship for District Three was presented to Caylee Deshotel of Morgan City High School.

Mistress stops believing man will leave his family for her

DEAR ABBY: I am a 24-year-old professional woman who has been having an affair with a married man for three years. We have great chemistry, a passionate sex life, endless laughs and give each other a lot of support. He’s married and has children, and when he is with them I find myself incredibly jealous. I feel left out, and I no longer believe he will ever be with me, although he says he will. Because of his legal status in the U.S., it could take a few years before he becomes a citizen and is able to divorce. Should we ...

PLEASE LOG IN FOR PREMIUM CONTENT. Our website requires visitors to log in to view the best local news from St. Mary Now. Not yet a subscriber? Subscribe today!

Council considers vote on appointed police chief

Patterson voters may soon decide if the chief of police should be appointed rather than elected.
That was one of three proposed amendments to the city charter introduced at Tuesday’s city council meeting.
If the amendment is approved at the council’s July meeting, the proposal could be on the ballot as early as Nov. 18.
Currently in the city’s charter, the police chief is elected to a four-year term. The amendment would empower the mayor to appoint the chief. The mayor could then remove the police chief at any time, and the police chief would serve at the pleasure of the mayor.
“Patterson and Bald-win are the only two with an elected chief,” said Mayor Rodney Grogan.
Also, currently in the city’s charter, the mayor has the power to hire, suspend and terminate city officials, including those within the police department. Another proposed amendment would give the power to hire, suspend and terminate city officials within the police department to the chief of police. The police chief would still, however, need the advice and consent of the mayor and council.
Russel Cremaldi, attorney for the city of Patterson, said the charter gave the power to hire and fire city officials to the mayor after being in the hands of the board of aldermen under the Lawrason Act.
The third amendment introduced Tuesday would impose term limits on an elected chief of police.
The proposed amendment says that a person who has served as police chief for over 2½ four-year terms in a consecutive three-term period couldn’t run for a fourth term.
The council declined to introduce proposed amendments imposing term limits on the mayor and council members.
The push for the amendments to be introduced had to deal with the deadlines to get the propositions to the Louisiana secretary of state to get on the ballot for voting. If the council approves the amendment at its July meeting, it will miss the June 14 deadline for the Oct. 14 election. It can still beat the Sept. 25 deadline for the Nov. 18 election.
Also Tuesday, Ryan Aucoin, representative of the Planning and Zoning Department, presented a rezoning request from council member Sandra Turner and husband Ronny Turner. The Turners want their 1.28-acre property on Martin Luther King to be rezoned to accommodate a mobile home park. The property is currently zoned residential.
The rezoning request met all requirements set by the city and was approved by the council.
The council also dis-cussed a “Quiet Zone” to address citizens’ complaints about the trains honking their horn during early morning hours.
“You don’t hear the horn during the day-time,” said Grogan.
Grogan mentioned that as a municipality, Patterson has the right to pass a noise ordinance to submit to the railroads but he understood that, by law, the railroads still have to honk the horn for places along the rail-roads that don’t have a crossing and on approach to the city.
“It’s a safety aspect that they have,” said one Patterson resident. “If you want to give up safety for a noise ordinance, then you don’t want to be safe.”
“You are wasting time to pass it because there is no way to enforce it,” said another Patterson resident. “It becomes a hear-say with the rail-roads.”
A representative for Patterson Police Department spoke on behalf of Chief Patrick LaSalle. The Patterson Police Department requests that citizens be more careful with their driving because of children being out of school and highway construction. Also, the police department asks the citizens to check supplies and that generators are working properly for hurricane season.
In other business the council:
—Adopted the 2017-18 operating and capital outlay budget.
—Adopted ordinance for the 2017 tax year for levying a general alimony tax of 8.20 mills.
—Adopted ordinance for the 2017 tax year to levy millage rates for Public Improvement Issues for Waterworks.
—Approved can shake request for Mount Pisgah for 8 a.m. to noon June 24 on Catherine Street. The can shake will be used to raise funds for scholarships for two Patterson High School seniors.
—The Daily Review was appointed the official journal for the city.
—Adopted resolution to authorize the mayor to execute a maintenance agreement including mowing and litter pickup with State of Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development Office of Engineering.
—Adopted resolution of local government support for the Recreation Trails Program for the Teche Project.
—Two police vehicles and concrete/riprap by boat landing declared as surplus.
—Discussed the lease purchase of a trash truck.
—Construction on the water plant will begin June 19.

Pages

ST. MARY NOW

Franklin Banner-Tribune
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