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Central Catholic homecoming

Submitted Photo
Morgan City Mayor Lee Dragna has signed a proclamation making Oct. 9-15 Central Catholic Homecoming Week. He's shown with members of the homecoming court, standing from left: Hailey Skiles, Olivia Babin, Sarah David, Natalie Sloane, Bri’Yannah Johnson, Madison Landry, Hannah Domingue and Isabella Duval. Shown seated are Mary Brinkley, Amaya Williams, Chloe Estay, Emily Lipari, Emily Wise, Dragna, Jolie Boudreaux, Sophie Webster, Presley Bruni, Sofia Saleme and Jillian Morell.

3rd District candidates meet for forum

Four candidates who hope to represent Louisiana’s 3rd Congressional District appeared Wednesday at a St. Mary Chamber forum — but not the man they hope to unseat.

U.S. Rep. Clay Higgins, R-Lafayette, was a no-show Wednesday. So were three other candidates who qualified for the Nov. 8 primary, a Tuesday election. Early voting begins Oct. 25.

The challengers are hoping to defy history. Higgins is completing his third term, and since at least 1980, only one incumbent House member has been defeated for re-election in the 3rd or 7th District, portions of which make up the current 3rd District.

Then-Rep. Jeff Landry, now Louisiana attorney general, lost to another incumbent, Charles Boustany, after both were placed in
the newly redrawn 3rd District following the 2010 Census.

Appearing Wednesday at Morgan City Municipal Auditorium were Holden Hoggatt, a Republican assistant district attorney from Lafayette; Tia LaBrun, a Democrat and teacher from Lafayette; Thomas “Lane” Payne Jr., a Republican and clergyman from Perry in Vermilion Parish; and Jacob Shaheen, a Republican and teacher from Lake Charles.
Among the four, Hoggatt took on Higgins most directly.

“I believe we lack competent representation in Washington,” said Hoggatt, who prosecutes drug cases in the 15th Judicial District.
Hoggatt said Higgins hasn’t been effective in securing hurricane recovery assistance for southwest Louisiana. He said Steve Scalise, R-Metairie, was more effective after Hurricane Ida because he establishes relationships and knows the system.

Hoggatt said his priorities are fighting crime, fighting inflation and securing the borders. He also criticized President Joe Biden’s energy policy, which he said discourages offshore oil and gas production while encouraging OPEC countries to increase their production.

Payne was also critical of the current federal energy policy, which he said lacks understanding of the economic ripples created by reduced production, especially in the state’s petrochemical industry.

“My first statement is ‘drill, baby, drill,’” Payne said.

He also spoke against regulations that he said hurt another iconic St. Mary industry, shrimping.

Like Hoggatt, he said the industry is being hurt by the failure to inspect imported shrimp. Payne is prepared to go as far as an import moratorium to protect the industry.

Payne said he has been instrumental in hurricane recovery efforts in Vermilion.

“I wasn’t serving the people for name recognition,” he said. “I served the people because the people needed to be served.”
LeBrun, raised by a single mother and a single mother herself, said she hopes to be part of improving education, making child care affordable and promoting early childhood education.

“I love to help people,” LeBrun said, and running for Congress “is a natural extension of that, I believe.”

She said federal hurricane response could be improved by developing a formula to trigger assistance immediately rather than waiting on congressional action on aid.

After the hurricanes of 2020, “Lake Charles is not yet in recovery, and that’s not OK,” LeBrun said.
In a mid-term election cycle in which abortion is expected to play a major role, LeBrun said she supports “a woman’s freedom to make her own body choices.”

Shaheen is the youngest member of the group, a 32-year-old teacher and a Republican who wore a black “Working Class
Solidarity” T-shirt to the forum.

His candidacy is based on campaign finance reform, he said.

“We don’t have free-market capitalism in America,” Shaheen said. “We have crony capitalism.”

The donations people make to political candidates aren’t just donations, he said. “They are investments.”
Like LeBrun, Shaheen was more enthusiastic about developing alternative energy sources than either Payne or Hoggatt.
Shaheen said nuclear power should be in the mix.

The candidates who qualified but did not appear Wednesday were Higgins; Lessie Olivia LeBlanc, Democrat; Guy McClendon, Libertarian; and Gloria Wiggins, Democrat.

The St. Mary Chamber has scheduled an Oct. 12 forum for candidates in the 6th Congressional District, which takes in portions of eastern St. Mary after the recent redistricting. The candidates there are incumbent Garret Graves, R-Baton Rouge; Brian Belzer, R-Prairieville; and Rufus Holt Craig, Libertarian of Baton Rouge.

John K. Flores: Louisiana offers opportunities as squirrel season opens

It was some 20 minutes before sunrise Saturday when suddenly a loud pop broke the silent solitude of Bayou Teche National Wildlife Refuge. The subsequent scratching of squirrels chasing each other high up in the live oaks revealed the source of the popping sound.

Essentially, when an acorn drops 40 to 50 feet and strikes a palmetto on the way down, it sounds like a single beat on a snare drum. What’s more, squirrels are indiscriminate in the way they feed, especially when breakfast is a tree full of acorns. If they happen to drop a few, so be it, there’s plenty more where that came from.

If you were lucky enough to hunt opening day of squirrel season last weekend, not only were you greeted with fall-like temperatures in the 50s at daylight, you probably had plenty of bushy-tailed targets to shoot at too. That is if you did your homework and scouted around a bit.

From small game harvest surveys, both hunter participation as well as harvest numbers have been fairly constant the past three seasons. There were an estimated 52,200 squirrel hunters in 2018-19, 48,600 in 2019-20 and 53,700 in 2020-21.

Those hunters harvested an estimated 703,900, 682,700 and 737,400 squirrels, respectively, the past three seasons.

The Louisiana Big and Small Game Harvest Survey for 2020-21 estimated that squirrel hunters hunted 328,600 days. Moreover, 69% of those squirrel hunters hunted at least one to five days last year.

In an email exchange with Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Small Game Program Manager Cody Cedotal, the biologist says there is suitable habitat for squirrels found throughout the state and harvest rates are typically low, thus, the reason for the long season and unchanged bag limits over the years.

There are two common species of squirrels that St. Mary Parish hunters harvest annually in a variety of habitats, the gray squirrel (Sciurus Carolinensis) and the fox squirrel (S. niger).

In describing the differences between the two species besides the obvious color variation, Cedotal said, “Gray squirrels seem to be more habitat generalists and can thrive in a wider variety of locations. Fox squirrels generally spend more time on the ground than gray squirrels and tend to use more open forests with sparse understory for the most part.

“And, although gray squirrels do forage on the ground,” Cedotal continued, “they tend to stay in the forest canopy more and typically select sites with relatively dense and/or understory cover. Both species use cavities in live or dead trees as dens, whereas leaf nests are used for resting, escape cover and rearing young.”

When it comes to finding a place to hunt squirrels, that’s easy. The LDWF maintains 1.6 million acres of Wildlife Management Areas. Kisatchie National Forest has some 604,000 acres. Bayou Teche National Wildlife Refuge is made up of 9,028 acres and is just one of 23 national wildlife refuges in the state.

One of the things hunters need to be aware of when hunting on public land is they need to get very familiar with various “refuge” regulations. NWRs require the use of non-toxic game loads when hunting small game on these refuge systems.

It’s also important to note that State WMA and NWRs have specific regulations concerning check in and game harvest reporting. Prior to hunting any of our state’s refuge systems, take time to read and learn about specific regulations.

In other hunting news, in a LDWF press release issued Sept. 28, the department reminded hunters and the public to take care in handling and preparing harvested wildlife.
The release offered eight general safety guidelines for hunters and others handling wildlife and their tissues. They include:

1. Do not handle or eat sick game.
2. Field dress and prepare game outdoors or in a well-ventilated area.
3. Wear rubber or disposable nitrile gloves while handling and cleaning game.
4. When done handling game, wash hands thoroughly with soap or disinfectant and clean knives, equipment, and surfaces that were exposed to game with hot soapy water and a 10% bleach solution.
5. Do not eat, drink or consume tobacco products while handling animals.
6. All game should be thoroughly cooked to an internal temperature of 165 degrees.
7. Avoid contact with surfaces that appear to be contaminated with feces from wild or domestic bird.
8. Waterfowl hunters should adhere to these guidelines.

With an abundant population of squirrels, plenty of public land available, a generous bag limit of eight squirrels per day, and a long season that runs through
the month of February 2023, why not take advantage of some of the best small game hunting in the country? Some of it is right here in St. Mary Parish.

John Flores is the Morgan City Review’s outdoor writer. He can be contacted at gowiththef lo@cox.net.

Price of gas ticks up again

Gas prices have continued to rise over the past two weeks, and now OPEC has announced a major decision that will likely drive those prices higher.
OPEC said Wednesday that it would reduce oil production beginning in November by 2 million barrels per day. OPEC, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries largely based in the Middle East, said in a statement it made the decision “in light of the uncertainty that surrounds the global economic and oil market outlooks, and the need to enhance the long-term guidance for the oil market, and in line with the successful approach of being proactive, and preemptive. …”

President Joe Biden helped lower prices by releasing 1 million barrels per day from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve since April, but the reserves – meant for emergency situations like natural disasters or in the event of war – are now near decades-low levels.

“In any event, we will continue to take steps to protect American consumers,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said during Tuesday’s press briefing. “Our focus, and it’s been very clear for the past several, several months, has been on taking every step to ensure markets are sufficiently supplied to meet demand for a growing global economy.”

Biden told reporters earlier this week he was “concerned” about OPEC’s announcement, calling it “unnecessary.”

According to AAA, the current national average price for a gallon of regular gasoline is $3.83, up from $3.77 a week ago. The recent rise in gas prices is due in
part to the effects of Hurricane Ian.

Patrick De Haan, a petroleum expert with Gas Buddy, said he expects OPEC’s decision to drive prices up 15 to 30 cents per gallon.

“Ouch... and up goes oil after OPEC recommendation…” he wrote on Twitter. “It’s VERY nuanced right now because of refinery kinks, but high [gas prices] will soon fall in the West Coast, Great Lakes and others where they exploded, while rising in the Gulf, South, [Southeast], East Coast and [Northeast] because of OPEC’s decision.”

Prices hit an all-time high in June, surpassing $5 per gallon before declining. Current prices, though, are still much higher than when Biden took office. The average price one year ago was $3.20 per gallon.

Berwick High student is National Merit semifinalist

Evan White of Berwick High School has been named a semifinalist in the National Merit Scholarship Program.

White is among the 235 Louisiana high school juniors who scored highest on the 2021 PSAT test, a preliminary to the SAT college entrance exam.

He’s the son of Brett and Mary White.
The 235 National Merit Scholarship semifinalists from Louisiana included four from the Houma-Thibodaux-Morgan City area.

Baton Rouge Magnet has 28 semifinalists, the most of any Louisiana high school.

The program offers more than $28 million in scholarships to encourage academic excellence among high school students.

Wheel House for Oct. 7: Parade of Presidents, cancer screening

NEW SALEM
Baptist Church, 1412 Cherry St., Patterson, hosting a “Parade of Presidents” program 9:30 a.m. Sunday, Oct.23. Public invited.

CANCER SCREENS
Breast and colorectal cancer screenings are 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. (by appointment only) Tuesday, Oct. 25, at Walmart Super Center, 973 U.S. 90 East, Bayou Vista. For an appointment call 985-239-5739. Free for those not screened in the past 12 months (uninsured are free, insurance billed for others with no cost to participant). Offered by Mary Bird Perkins Cancer Center and Woman’s.

Around Town for Oct. 7

Happy birthday Saturday to Jordan and Tyler Minor and Willard Austin, and Monday to Mia Nguyen who turns 104, from family, friends and Ira … Happy birthday Saturday to Leonard Menson from family and friends.

Colonels stunned by Northwestern St. comeback

The Nicholls State University football team took a 12-point lead with just over three minutes remaining at North-western State, but the Demons rallied with two late touchdowns to stun the Colonels with a 36-33 comeback victory Saturday afternoon at Turpin Stadium.

Nicholls (0-5, 0-1 SLC) made it a two-possession game with 3:17 remaining after Julien Gums scored on a 37-yard rush for a 33-21 advantage. Northwestern State (2-3, 2-0 SLC) needed just 1:43 to travel 65 yards, scoring on a Javon Antonio 27-yard catch. The Demons then recovered an onside kick and Zachary Clement hooked up with Antonio again with nine seconds remaining. NSU converted the 2-point try to grab a 36-33 lead.

The Colonels moved to midfield on a Al’Dontre Davis catch and after a Demon penalty, had one last play. Kohen Granier lofted a pass into the endzone but it was intercepted, giving the Demons their first win in the rivalry since 2015.

The game served as the Southland opener for the Colonels, who remained winless on the season. Nicholls has not started the season 0-5 since Coach Tim Rebowe’s inaugural 2015 campaign.

Despite the loss, Nicholls churned out season highs on offense with 555 total yards, 324 passing and 231 on the ground. Granier completed 20 of 41 passes for his first 300-yard outing and accounted for three touchdowns — two passing and one rushing. Davis was his top target with 92 yards on four catches, while Terry Matthews and Tank McMath each hauled in their first career TD receptions.

Gums led the rushing attack with his first 100-yard game of the season and 12th of his career, finishing with 104 yards on 18 carries. Collin Guggenheim added 53 yards on nine carries. Granier rushed for 61 yards and his 6-yard keeper in the opening quarter gave Nicholls an early 7-0 lead.

UP NEXT
Nicholls will head to Houston for its fifth road game of the season, taking on Houston Christian University. Kickoff at Husky Stadium is scheduled for 6 p.m.

Lonestar horseshoe shootout

Sept. 17
Buffalo, Texas
Singles
Class A-30
Third, Tim Gilmore, Bayou Vista
Class B-40
Third, Randy Giroir, Berwick
Class C-30
First, Sharla Fontenot, Lacassine
Class C-40
Third, Clay Weaver, Lacassine
Class D-40
Second, Hilton Rhodes, Bayou Vista
Doubles
Class A
Second, Tim Gilmore, Bayou Vista, Willie Rutledge, Buffalo, Texas
Class C
First, Hilton Rhodes, Bayou Vista, Danny Navarre, Carlyss

11 amendments on La. ballots this fall

The Public Affairs Research Council of Louisiana this week unveiled a guide to help voters understand 11 proposed constitutional amendments they will be asked to decide in November and December.

The PAR Guide to the 2022 Constitutional Amendments breaks down eight ballot questions for the Nov. 8 election and three proposed amendments for the Dec. 10 ballot, offering not only an explanation but also arguments for and against the proposals.

Amendment 1 for November would authorize the state to increase the maximum amount of money the state’s seven trust funds can invest in equities on the stock market to 65%. The state’s largest funds are capped at 35%, though limits are different for each fund and some do not currently allow stock investments at all. There’s now about $3.2 billion in the seven trust funds.

Amendment 2 would increase the property tax exemption available to veterans with service-related disabilities and their surviving spouses after death. The current exemption is for $75,000, and up to $150,000 in some parishes, and a yes vote on the proposal would create a graduated exemption ranging from 100% for fully disabled to up to $100,000 for those with service-connected disability ratings of 50% to 69%.

Amendment 3 would allow most of Louisiana’s civil service employees to support candidates for public office if they’re immediate family members, something that’s currently prohibited. The change would impact 51,000 workers, but would not extend to those working in the registrar of voters’ offices or the state elections division.

Amendment 4 would allow local governments to reduce water bills if the charges stem from water lost due to damage outside a customer’s control, which is currently prohibited with few exceptions.

Amendment 5 would give local taxing bodies more time to decide if they want to “roll forward” millages that increase property taxes paid by businesses and homeowners. The change would allow taxing bodies to roll forward their millage rates until the authorized millage expire, rather than until the next four-year assessment cycle as it currently stands.

Amendment 6 would limit increases in the property tax liability of homes subject to homestead exemption in Orleans Parish, capping reassessment increase to 10% of value in the previous year. The current system requires a four-year phase-in of tax liability for homes with a homestead exemption when reappraisals increase assessments by more than 50%.

Amendment 7 would change the state constitutional ban on slavery and involuntary servitude to allow use only for the “otherwise lawful administration of criminal justice,” rather than the current wording that allows for involuntary servitude only as a “punishment for crime.”

Amendment 8 would remove the requirement that certain property owners with disabilities annually certify their income to receive a property tax rate freeze.
More than 194,000 homes received special assessments in the most recent year available from the Louisiana Tax Commission.

Amendment 1 for December would ban people who aren’t U.S. citizens from registering to vote or casting ballots in Louisiana elections. Current law requires voters to be Louisiana citizens to cast ballots.

Amendment 2 for December would require Louisiana Senate confirmation of the governor’s appointees to the State Civil Service Commission, something that’s currently not required.

Amendment 3 for December would require Louisiana Senate confirmation of the governor’s appointees to the State Police Commission, which is not a requirement now.

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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