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Morgan City High Commencement will be Friday

Morgan City High School Class of 2017 will hold its commencement ceremony at 6 p.m. Friday at the Morgan City Municipal Auditorium. The graduating class will be led by five summa cum laude graduates. Leading graduates, in alphabetical order, are:
—Cassie Aloisio, daughter of Anna and Mico Aloisio, has been involved in Beta Club, Student Council, Key Club, Prom Committee, Foreign Language Society, 4-H, Historical Society, SADD and the yearbook. She also was a member of the MCHS Twirlers for all four years, serving as co-captain. Aloisio plans to attend Louisiana State University where she will major in biological sciences with a pre-medicine concentration.
—Marissa Bellard, daughter of Christina and Andrew Lange, was a member of the Tiger Band, MCHS Twirlers, Beta Club, Student Council, Key Club, Quiz Bowl and the Bowling Team. Bellard served as woodwind captain in the Tiger Band for two years. She will attend the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and plans to major in biology.
—Caylee Deshotel, daughter of Christy and Sonny Deshotel, was a member of Key Club, Student Council, BETA Club, SADD, Historical Society, Yearbook, 4-H, Tiger Ambassadors and Prom Committee. Deshotel served as the yearbook editor for two years and was the Stu-dent Council executive vice president her senior year. She plans to attend Louisiana State University as a pre-medical student.
—Christopher Gros, son of Carmen Gros and the late Chris Gros, was a member of Beta Club, Historical Society, JROTC and Book Club. Gros was also a member of the Tiger Band serving as drum major his senior year. While drum major, he placed first in Class AA in state competition. He plans to attend the University of Louisiana at Lafayette where he will major in chemical engineering.
—Jennifer Tran, daughter of Dung Luu and Phung Tran, was MCHS 2016-17 Student of the Year. She was a member of the New Generation Forum for MCHS for the past two years. Tran also was a member of Historical Society, Beta Club, Foreign Language Society, Tiger Ambassadors, Book Club and 4-H, and served as executive Student Council president. She plans to attend the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, where she will major in chemistry with a concentration in pre-pharmacy.

Mom weighs telling her son truth about dad’s ‘time away’

DEAR ABBY: My son, “Jimmy,” is 8. His father and I are divorced, and he is facing jail time. Jimmy sees him every other weekend. I’m planning on telling Jimmy the truth, although I’m sure his dad will want me to lie and say he needs to “work out of town” for a while, or something like that. I know it will be hard for my boy to deal with. I also wonder what he should tell other people. I worry that if he tells his friends the truth (and they tell their parents), Jimmy might not be invited over ...

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Radio Logs for May 17

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.
Wednesday, May 17
7:04 a.m. Veteran’s Boulevard; Found property.
7:05 a.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.
7:46 a.m. 6300 block of La. 182; Traffic complaint.
7:58 a.m. 600 block of Willow Street; Theft.
8:52 a.m. 300 block of Wren Street; Complaint.
10:01 a.m. U.S. 90 East; Traffic complaint.
10:14 a.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.
11:23 a.m. 900 block of Fig Street; Fire.
11:31 a.m. 900 block of First Street; Fire.
12:21 p.m. 7400 block of La. 182.; Criminal damage.
12:22 p.m. 1700 block of Dale Street; Animal complaint.
1:05 p.m. Railroad and Federal avenues; Complaint.
1:59 p.m. Fifth Street; Phone harassment.
2:18 p.m. 7400 block of La. 182.; Theft.
2:29 p.m. 600 block of Roderick Street; Disturbance.
2:31 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.
2:37 p.m. 600 block of Brashear Avenue; Suspicious subject.
3:34 p.m. Martin Luther King Boulevard; Traffic complaint.
3:38 p.m. 300 block of Terrebonne Street; Animal complaint.
3:48 p.m. 1400 block of North First Street; Officer stand by.
4:01 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.
4:14 p.m. Glenwood Avenue; Complaint.
4:29 p.m. 3000 block of Keith Street; Animal complaint.
5:03 p.m. Mount Street; Warrant arrest.
6:30 p.m. 200 block of Railroad Avenue; Theft.
6:40 p.m. 7500 block of La. 182 East; Complaint.
6:45 p.m. 1200 block of Victor II Boulevard; Complaint.
8:27 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Complaint.
8:54 p.m. 1900 block of Federal Avenue; Suspicious person.
8:56 p.m. 500 block of Roderick Street; Complaint.
9:25 p.m. 1100 block of Chestnut Drive; Complaint.
9:45 p.m. 900 block of First Street; Disturbance.
9:59 p.m. 200 block of Second Street; Warrant.
Thursday, May 18
1:06 a.m. 200 block of Railroad Avenue; Alarm.
3:23 a.m. 1400 block of Elm Street; Fireworks.
3:44 a.m. 1300 block of Second Street; Suspicious person.
4:41 a.m. U.S. 90 East; Reckless driver.
4:54 a.m. 600 block of Brashear Avenue; Com-plaint.

Norwegian journalist examining St. Mary hoax with Russian ties

U.S. intelligence agencies are investigating possible Russian attempts to hack the 2016 presidential election. A case involving St. Mary Parish may have been a preview of the current controversy. A 2014 hoax in St. Mary Parish, which The New York Times Magazine linked to Russian cyber-trolls, has caught the attention of a Norwegian journalist investigating incidents allegedly showing Russia’s hostile attitude against western nations. Oystein Bogen emailed The Daily Review on Monday about a book he’s writing on “Russia’s increasingly aggressive behavior towards the West,” through what’s known as “hybrid warfare.” One prominent example of that type of behavior is the Columbia Chemical ...

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Fire on First Street in Morgan City

Witnesses say one occupant got out safely

Firefighters responded to a report of fire at about 11 a.m. Wednesday in the 900 block of First Street in Morgan City.
One woman was home at the time of the fire but escaped unharmed, Morgan City Assistant Fire Chief Joe Marino said. The home sustained heavy damage. The cause of the fire had not yet been determined as of Wednesday afternoon, Marino said.

17-cent gas tax hike clears House panel

BATON ROUGE – The House Committee on Ways and Means narrowly eked out, 9-7, a favorable recommendation for a 17-cent per gallon increase on the current 20-cents-a-gallon gas tax that would raise an estimated $700 million for mega-projects throughout the state.
The 37-cent proposed tax would be adjusted annually based on Consumer Price Index. It is estimated to cost Louisiana drivers an estimated $100 to $200 in additional expenses each year if enacted at the 17-cent level.
The bill goes to the floor of the House for consideration early next week.
House Bill 632, sponsored by Rep. Steve Carter, R-Baton Rouge, received an endorsement from several business lobbies, but individual and small business owners generally were opposed. The Department of Transportation vowed it would spend on specific projects throughout the state and not on whatever needs money.
Acknowledging constituent concerns of government accountability, the committee added an amendment would tie Carter’s bill to the accountability-inspired House Bills 119 and 598 that establishes the Louisiana Fiscal Transparency website and increase transparency within the Highway Priority Program, respectively.
The bill would also require DOTD to provide an annual list of ongoing projects within the Highway Priority Program so taxpayers know precisely where the new money would be going.
The Department of Transportation and Development would allocate at least 50 percent of the proceeds from the taxes levied over the first 20 years to begin construction of previously prioritized “mega-projects.”
Another committee-added amendment would specify that 45 percent of the funds be dedicated to non-interstate payment projects, evenly among highway districts, in the state’s parishes.
“We have a history in the Legislature of saying we’re going to do something, but taking the dollar and doing something else with it,” Carter said.
Rep. Barry Ivey, R-Baton Rouge, was one of House Bill 632’s most vocal supporters. He promised his support if there would be an “ironclad commitment” toward transparency, to which Carter and DODT Secretary Shawn Wilson agreed.
Rep. Paula Davis, R-Baton Rouge, joined with Ivey in offering support for the legislation, recounting horror stories of sitting in interstate traffic between Baton Rouge and her hometown of Breaux Bridge.
Wilson said an independent group of engineers ranked the state a D+ on its crumbling, cracking roads in between spouting off statistics about how the average Louisianan spends 26-47 hours a year in traffic congestion.
Wilson noted only three states have a gas tax older than Louisiana’s. “We put more in our football fields than we do in our roads.”
He said the proposed gas tax would cost drivers an extra two cups of Starbucks coffee each week, which lit a fire under the bill’s opponents.
“Personally, I don’t drink Starbucks,” retorted Glenda Pollard of Keller-Williams Realty Group of Baton Rouge. Instead, she equated the tax to a grocery list, noting that it would cost a family one loaf of bread, or one dozen eggs, or one gallon of milk, or one bag of beans or one bag of rice weekly.
Cecil Cavanaugh of the Chamber of Commerce of East Baton Rouge, which represents only small businesses, was confused as to why his tax money would be used to deepen ports in Baton Rouge he never used.
“You want the taxpaying public to pay for everyone’s problem,” Cavanaugh chided.
The bill garnered an equal number of supporters in the committee room, mostly representing business and industrial interests, including the Public Affairs Research Council of Louisiana, the Port Association of Louisiana and various economic development alliance groups.
Robert Travis Scott, president of Public Affairs Research Council, a nonpartisan public policy think tank in Baton Rouge who served on the transportation task force, said his skepticism has changed throughout the decades he has been following this issue.
“One thing we learned in this is we have a problem. We are not going to fix this without resources.”

Word millionaires

Submitted Photo
The top word millionaires in elementary and secondary were recognized at the May school board meeting. Morgan City Junior High librarian Destini Barrilleaux stands with Braylyn Pierce, an eighth-grader who garnered the top honor in grades 6-12. The top word millionaire in elementary is Alexa Chaisson, a fifth-grader at Berwick Elementary School. With her is BES librarian Micah Kelly.

Wheel House for May 17

UNIFORMS
New Salem Baptist Church, 1400 Cherry St., Patterson, fifth annual Uniforms for School Kids drive under way. Dona-tions of new and used school uniforms, and monetary donations to purchase uniforms and school supplies accepted. Drop off locations: Cypress Point Super-market in Patterson, The Medicine Shoppe in Morgan City and Bayou Vista, G&J Fashions in Franklin and Centerville Supermarket.

Police to participate in ‘Click It or Ticket’

The Morgan City Police Department will be participating in the “Click It or Ticket” campaign from May 22 through May 29.
Seat belts are the single most effective safety feature ever invented and have helped save thousands of lives, a department news release said. But one in five Americans fail to regularly wear a seat belt when driving or riding in a motor vehicle.
There are more than 100 Louisiana law enforcement agencies participating in the “Click It or Ticket” campaign.
By maintaining “Click It or Ticket” high visibility enforcement and awareness, authorities hope to continue to reduce seat belt fatalities on Louisiana’s roads.

Radio Logs for May 16

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.
Tuesday, May 16
7:13 a.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.
7:50 a.m. Onstead Street; Complaint.
8 a.m. 900 block of Seventh Street; Complaint.
8:08 a.m. 8400 block of La. 182; Animal complaint.
10:36 a.m. 300 block of Fifth Street; Complaint.
10:39 a.m. 6800 block of La. 182; Assistance.
11:08 a.m. 700 block of General Patton Street; Suspicious person.
11:12 a.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Complaint.
11:15 a.m. 1100 block of Marguerite Street; Medical.
11:24 a.m. 1200 block of Victor II Boulevard; 911 hang up call.
11:55 a.m. 6300 block of La. 182; Crash.
12:21 p.m. U.S. 90 West; Complaint.
1:29 p.m. 1100 block of Marguerite Street; Juvenile problem.
1:42 p.m. 100 block of First Street; 911 hang up call.
2:11 p.m. 1000 block of Fifth Street; Animal complaint.
2:56 p.m. 100 block of Eleventh Street; Animal complaint.
3:02 p.m. 7700 block of La. 182; Alarm.
3:24 p.m. 900 block of Federal Avenue; Theft.
3:55 p.m. 300 block of Federal Avenue; Complaint.
4:46 p.m. 6000 block of La. 182; Disturbance.
5:03 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Lost and found.
7:39 p.m. 300 block of Wren Street; Civil matter.
7:53 p.m. 1400 block of North First Street; Disturbance.
7:56 p.m. 2300 block of La. 70; Lost and found.
8:07 p.m. 1000 block of Third Street; Theft.
8:30 p.m. 7100 block of Park Street; Medical.
8:46 p.m. 700 block of Fifth Street; Loud music.
9:13 p.m. 500 block of Egle Street; Suspicious person.
10:39 p.m. 200 block of South Railroad Avenue; Loud music.
10:43 p.m. 1400 block of North First Street; Officer stand by.

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