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DULCE MARIA HERNANDEZ

Dulce Maria Hernandez — who was born April 17, 1935, in Cardenas, Cuba, and lived in Miami, Florida, and the Morgan City, Louisiana, area for over 62 years — passed away peacefully on December 27, 2025, at the age of 90. Dulce, Grandma, Mimi was a sweet, kind, loving, and devoted wife, mother, grandmother, and great grandmother.
She is survived by her son Cecil Hernandez (Kimberly) of Berwick and daughter Carmen Comeaux (Patricia Marcum) of Patterson. She is also survived by her grandchildren — Tyler Hernandez (Marta), Patrick Hernandez, Julianna Hernandez, Jay Comeaux (Mary), Kristen Comeaux, and Matthew Comeaux (Summer) — great grandchildren Alexander and Miles Comeaux, Kade Orek and Gavin Comeaux, and Cecilia Hernandez — brother Gilberto Caballero; and many nieces, nephews, and loved ones.
She was preceded in death by her husband Cecilio V. Hernandez, parents Antonio and Maria Caballero, sisters Ofelia Caballero and Maria Caballero, and brothers Jose Caballero, Enrique Caballero, and Raul Caballero.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 11:00 a.m. on Wednesday, January 7, 2026, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Morgan City, Louisiana, with Father Brett Lapeyrousse officiating. Visitation will be held, Wednesday, January 7, 2026, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church from 9:00 a.m. until the service. Following Mass, Dulce will be laid to rest in the Morgan City Cemetery. Serving as pallbearers are Tyler Hernandez, Jay Comeaux, Patrick Hernandez, Matthew Comeaux, Gavin Conner, and Collin Conner.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Sacred Heart Catholic Church or a charity of your choice.

Nicholls confers degrees on area students

Students from St. Mary and Assumption parishes were among those who received diplomas Dec. 13 from Nicholls State University.
St. Mary
Abraham Bryston AS Petroleum Services (Associate)
Abraham Bryston AS Safety Technology
Adams Emily BSN Nursing (Bachelor)
Adams Jeremy BS Safety Management
Askew Adam BS Computer Information Systems
Baio Olivia BS Health Sci - Pre-Professional
Beadle Hannah BS Elementary Eductn - 1-5 Cert
Bergeron Rochelle BS Management
Bergeron Rochelle UC Undrgrd Cert: Fndtns of Mngmnt
Bergeron Rochelle UC Undrgrd Cert: Fndtns of Mrktng
Boudreaux Matti MED Master in School Counseling
Bowie D’Marcus AS Petroleum Services (Associate)
Bowie D’Marcus AS Safety Technology
Broussard Maci MED Master Ed Ldrshp-K-12 Schl Ldr
Cavalier Haley BS Marketing - Professional Sales
Comeaux Alexander BS Business Administration
Coomer Jude BA History
Davis Aaliyah BIS Interdisciplinary Studies
Desvignes Dominique BSN Nursing (Bachelor)
Dreyer Bailey BS Accounting
Francis Jamari BA Psychology - Pre-Counseling
Francis Ka’Miah BS Criminal Justice
Goulas Cody BA History
Gros Dru BS Health Sci - Health & Wellness
Harden Keatyn BS Health Sci - Pre-Professional
Hebert Jaci BA English - Creative Writing
Hernandez Rodriguez Elianette BS Busnss Admin-Multinational Bus
Kinchen Samantha BS Health Sci - Health & Wellness
Lancelin Lashonda MSN Nursing (MSN) - Practitioner
Landry Alanni BIS Interdisciplinary Studies
Larson Joseph BS Cmp Inf Sys - Comp Sci Bus App
Leonard April MED Master Ed Ldrshp-Tech Ldrshp
Lofton Nina BA Psychology - Pre-Counseling
Loredo Chelsea BS Cmp Inf Sys - Busn Data Anltcs
Lousteau Katy BS Health Sci - Kinesiology
Mayon Fallyn BSN Nursing (Bachelor)
Morere Cade BIS Interdisciplinary Studies
Paul Kyler AGS General Studies (Associate)
Ramirez Nicole BS Business Administration
Ratcliff Reise BS Accounting
Ratcliff Reise BS Finance
Robles Gladis BSN Nursing (Bachelor)
Savoy Stephanie BS Business Administration
Suire Payton MED Master Ed Ldrshp-HighrEd&TchLd
Taylor Kathryn BA Political Science
Taylor Maggie BFA Art - K-12 Art Education
Thibodeaux Joseph AS Safety Technology
Thibodeaux Sara BFA Art - Graphic Design:Print&Web
Vasquez Jude BS Accounting
Washington Yasmine BS Elementary Eductn - 1-5 Cert
Wesley Keilan AGS General Studies (Associate)
Assumption
Bell Tyrin AGS General Studies (Associate)
Doiron Emily BSN Nursing (Bachelor)
Esneault Sarah BS Business Administration
Esneault Sarah UC Undrgrd Cert: Fndtns of Mrktng
Farlough Jareion BA Psychology - Pre-Counseling
Gros Lindsey AS Care & Devlpmnt Young Children
Gros Lindsey BS Birth-5 Early Intrvntn/Spec Ed
James Karah MED Master in School Counseling
Landry Hagen BSN Nursing (Bachelor)
Landry Hanna MAT Master - MAT Gr1-5&Spec Ed M/M
LeBlanc Brittney GC Grad Cert: Ed Tech Facilitator
LeBlanc Brittney GC Grad Cert: Ed Technolgy Leader
LeBlanc Brittney MED Master Ed Ldrshp-Tech Ldrshp
Mabile Shelbie BSN Nursing (Bachelor)
Octave Reona BIS Interdisciplinary Studies
Rhyne Tyler AS Petroleum Services (Associate)
Rhyne Tyler BS Safety Management
Richard Mary AGS General Studies (Associate)
Theriot Taylor BS Accounting
Theriot Taylor BS Finance
Viallon Paul BS Biology - Pre-Med/Pre-Dent
White Morgan BS Management - Human Resources

Two local students receive LSU degrees

Two Morgan City students are among more than 2,000 who received diplomas during fall graduation ceremonies at LSU.
They are:
•Amber Rogers, who received a master’s degree.
•Antonio Oscar Zavala Jr., who received a bachelor’s degree and graduated summa cum laude.

Entergy supports tour, opera workshop, incubator at Nicholls

Thanks to Entergy’s $10,000 contribution, Nicholls State University will be able to continue its Tour Tuesday program. This program focuses on bringing underrepresented students to Nicholls’ campus for tours, giving students a chance to see how higher education can benefit them.
Since its inception in 2016, over 2,500 students and 30 high schools in Entergy and Nicholls’ service area have toured Nicholls campus through the Tour Tuesday program, with about 300 students expected to participate this year.
“Entergy Louisiana is proud to support Nicholls State University’s efforts to provide transformative educational experiences for students across the Bayou Region,” said Phillip May, Entergy Louisiana president and CEO. “These initiatives align with Entergy’s commitment to investing in the communities we serve. As a good community partner, we are honored to contribute to programs that enrich the lives of students and residents both in the Bayou Region and across the state.”
By working with area high school guidance counselors, Nicholls is able to identify students who meet Nicholls’ admissions standards but may not be considering college as an option. Charter buses transport students from these high schools to Nicholls campus for a tour and overview of academic programs and student organizations. Any interested students will have an opportunity to meet with admissions counselors who can aid in filling out applications and any available financial aid forms.
The Bayou Region Incubator, powered by Nicholls State University, is a hub for Colonels and local businesses to nurture their business ideas from initial inception to successful growth. The facility provides resources, support and mentorship to help businesses grow, succeed and contribute meaningfully to our local economy.
With Entergy’s $4,000 contribution, the BRI will be able to help alleviate membership costs and workshop seats to idea stage entrepreneurs so that they can receive the initial support needed to launch successfully into our economic region.
The BRI offers several levels of membership from weekly passes to fully-furnished, private offices and complimentary workshops. The facility offers booking for meeting spaces, with discounts available for non-profit organizations and government agencies. In addition, Nicholls students and employees can work in and attend events and workshops at the BRI at no cost.
To learn more, visit bayouregionincubator.org.
The Nicholls Opera Workshop, led by Dr. Valerie Francis, has been in operation for over 14 years and brings college students, local community members and local elementary, middle and high school students together for one production per year.
Entergy’s $2,500 contribution will help cover costs for the 2026 opera performance of “Help! Help! The Globolinks!” set to take place from April 16 to 19 in the Mary and Al Danos Theater. In this performance, extraterrestrials invade Earth to steal away music, but will the power of music prevail?
Members of the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra will perform alongside Nicholls Bridge to Independence students, alumni, music majors and minors, guest artists, K-12 students and members of the community. In addition, the New Orleans Opera Scenic Studio will provide the opera set for production.
The mission of the Nicholls Opera is to promote community outreach, fellowship and fun, with a motto of “Dare to be Different.” Past productions include Mozart’s Don Giovanni and The Magic Flute, Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess, Humperdinck’s Hansel and Gretel and Puccini’s La Bohème. To learn more, visit www.nicholls.edu/music/choirs.
About Entergy Louisiana
Entergy Louisiana, LLC provides electric service to more than 1 million customers in 58 parishes and natural gas service to more than 94,000 customers in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Entergy Louisiana is a subsidiary of Entergy Corporation (NYSE: ETR), an integrated Entergy company engaged in electric power production, transmission and retail distribution operations. Entergy delivers electricity to 3 million utility customers in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas. Entergy owns and operates one of the cleanest large-scale U.S. power generating fleets with approximately 24,000 megawatts of electric generating capacity, including 5,000 megawatts of nuclear power. Headquartered in New Orleans, Louisiana, Entergy has annual revenues of $10 billion and approximately 12,000 employees. To learn more, visit www.entergylouisiana.com

La. figures in key Supreme Court cases

By ANDREW RICE
The Center Square
The U.S. Supreme Court will head into 2026 with numerous high profile decisions to issue. Transgender athletes, birthright citizenship, presidential firing power, tariffs and redistricting are several issues that hang in the balance of the high court’s decision making.
The Center Square compiled many of the key cases that could have widespread ramifications swpwnsing on how the court rules.
Redistricting
Over the last year, states across the country have made significant redistricting pushes in preparation for the 2026 midterm elections. Texas, California, North Carolina and Ohio are just a few states where redistricting efforts have thus far succeeded.
However, the Supreme Court’s decision in Louisiana v. Callais could decide the legality of state redistricting efforts. The case centers around a 2022 Louisiana Congressional districts map that created two majority-Black districts in the state.
Civil rights advocates said the case shows Louisiana’s extreme racial polarization and left Black voters with less electoral opportunity than white voters. However, after a shift in arguments, state leaders said drawing a majority-Black district diminishes white voters’ influence and makes assumptions about how people vote.
The case now goes to the heart of implied protections granted by the 14th and 15th Amendments. If the Supreme Court rules in favor of the state, a new map will have to be drawn in Louisiana, one that is not bound by section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.
Climate
change lawsuits
The high court’s first oral arguments of 2026 will be in Chevron Inc., v. Plaquemines Parish, a case that questions to what extent a state court can litigate against an oil company for its production of oil even if it obtained federal permits to produce the oil. A Plaquemines Parish jury in April ordered Chevron to pay $744 million in damages for its role in the degradation of the state’s coastal wetlands. 
O.H. Skinner, executive director of Alliance for Consumers, told the Center Square these types of cases seek to score large settlements from the energy industry and stop oil production.
“The case arises from a broader campaign of woke lawfare in which activists and municipal governments seek to use courtrooms to determine what companies are allowed to produce and what consumers can buy,” Skinner said.
As the year changes to 2026, these significant cases and many more will be decided through the remainder of the Supreme Court’s consequential term.
Tariffs
A central focus of President Donald Trump’s economic policy – the ability to levy tariffs against foreign nations – will be tested before the nation’s highest court in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump.
Twelve states and five small businesses challenged Trump’s authority to impose tariffs under the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act, a law that never mentions the word “tariff” and has never been used to impose tariffs. Trump argues that the law grants him emergency powers as president to act in times of crisis.
Justices on the court appeared divided over the issue during oral arguments on Nov. 5. Trump has repeatedly signified the importance of a favorable decision from the court.
“With a Victory, we have tremendous, but fair, Financial and National Security,” Trump wrote on social media. “Without it, we are virtually defenseless against other Countries who have, for years, taken advantage of us.”
Trump has levied tariffs against dozens of nations including China, India, Brazil and South Korea. In some instances, Trump has negotiated deals with other countries for less severe tariff rates.
The average tariff rate is 17%, according to the Tax Policy Center. If all of Trump’s proposed tariff rates go into effect, the rate will increase to 21%.
Citizenship
The court will also hear a challenge to interpretations of the 14th Amendment in Trump v. Barbara, where it is expected to decide a case involving birthright citizenship.
Trump v. Barbara challenges Trump’s executive order that denies birthright citizenship to children born after Feb. 19, 2025, whose parents are either illegally present in or temporary residents of the United States.
The court could undo the understanding that birthright citizenship was granted under the 14th Amendment.
The Trump administration argues an individual’s parents must also have citizenship for their child to be considered a U.S. citizen.
“Parental status is what matters and whether they are under the protection and therefore within the allegiance of the sovereign,” said Illan Wurman, a law professor at the University of Minnesota.
The Supreme Court is expected to hear oral arguments for Trump v. Barbara in early 2026. A date has yet to be set for the case to be heard.
Transgender
athletes
The high court will also hear two consequential cases over whether transgender individuals can participate in girls and women’s sports.
Little v. Hecox, out of Idaho, and B.P.J. v. West Virginia, focuses on whether limiting participation in girls and women’s sports teams based on biological sex violates the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment.
B.P.J. v West Virginia challenges the state’s “Save Women’s Sports Act,” which limits participation in sports based on biological sex. Challengers said the law violated Title IX discrimination protections. In Idaho, challengers are applying similar legal arguments to the state’s “Fairness in Women’s Sports Act.”
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in both cases on Jan. 13.
Gun rights
After a monumental 2022 decision that expanded the right to carry guns in public, the Supreme Court is set to revisit more challenges to gun laws in the country.
The high court has agreed to decide U.S. v. Hemani and Wolford v. Lopez, two separate cases that could significantly expand access to guns in the United States.
United States v. Hemani challenges whether federal statutes barring a person who “is an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance” violates the Second Amendment.
The Trump administration petitioned the high court to hear the case after a lower court struck down the law barring people who use drugs such as marijuana from possessing firearms.
Wolford v. Lopez tasks the court with deciding whether states can regulate where individuals can carry guns. A Hawaii law bans guns in places like beaches, bars and restaurants that serve alcohol, and gas stations.
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in Wolford v. Lopez on Jan. 20.
Presidential
firing power
One case many legal minds and individuals in Washington, D.C., are keeping a close eye on is Trump v. Slaughter, a case determining whether the president has authority to fire members of federal executive boards.
If the court upholds the president’s authority, it could undo an almost 90-year-old precedent that prevented President Franklin Delano Roosevelt from firing members of federal boards like the FTC.
The court allowed Trump to fire Rebecca Slaughter, a commissioner on the FTC.
This decision came after years of court cases widening the president’s authority to fire members of federal boards.
“The court said that where a multi-member commission exercises substantial executive power, the president has the plenary power to remove that official,” said Kannon Shanmugam, a Supreme Court and appellate litigator.
The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Trump v. Slaughter Dec. 8 and will issue a decision by July.

Jim Brown: Happy New Year from Bayou State

Do you make New Year’s resolutions? I always do. 
A New Year always brings with it promise and uncertainty, but this coming year brings with it a greater foreboding than we have experienced in the past. 
The Chinese have a saying: “May you live in interesting times.” But their definition means dangerous or turbulent. We in Louisiana and throughout America certainly live in “interesting” times today.
One resolution I make each year is to maintain my curiosity. It doesn’t matter how limited your perspective or how narrow the scope of your surroundings, there is (or should be) something to whet your interest and strike your fancy. 
I discovered early on that there are two kinds of people — those who are curious about the world around them, and those whose shallow attentions are generally limited to those things that pertain to their own personal well-being.  I just hope all those I care about fall into the former category.
Another resolution is to continue to hope. I hope for successful and fulfilling endeavors for my children, happiness and contentment for family and friends, and for the fortitude to handle both the highs and lows of daily living with dignity.
I also ask friends and family to re-read Night, the unforgettable holocaust novel by Elie Wiesel, the Nobel Peace laureate who survived the Nazi death camps.
I met him shortly before his death. I have a Wiesel quote framed on my office desk:
 “To defeat injustice and misfortune, if only for one instant, for a single victim, is to invent a new reason to hope.”
Like many of you, our family welcomes in the New Year with “Auld Lang Syne.” 
It’s an old Scotch tune, with words passed down orally, and recorded by my favorite historical poet, Robert Burns, back in the 1700s.  (I’m Scottish, so there’s a bond here.) “Auld Lang Syne,” literally means “old long ago,” or simply, “the good old days.”  Did you know this song is sung at the stroke of midnight in almost every English-speaking country in the world to bring in the New Year?
I can look back over many years of memorable New Year’s Eve celebrations.  In recent years, my wife and I have joined a gathering of family and friends in New Orleans at a French Quarter restaurant. 
After dinner, we make a stop at St. Louis Cathedral for a blessing of the New Year. Then it’s off to join the masses for the New Year’s countdown to midnight in Jackson Square.
When my daughters were quite young, we spent a number of New Year holidays at a family camp on Davis Island, in the middle of the Mississippi River some 30 miles below Vicksburg.  On several occasions, the only people there were my family and Bishop Charles P. Greco, who was the Catholic Bishop for central and north Louisiana. Bishop Greco had baptized all three of my daughters, and had been a family friend for years.
On many a cold and rainy morning, the handful of us at the camp would rise before dawn for the Bishop to conduct a New Year’s Mass. 
After the service, most of the family went back to bed.  I would crank up my old jeep and take the Bishop out in the worst weather with hopes of putting him on a stand where a large buck would pass. 
No matter what the weather, he would stay all morning with his shotgun and thermos of coffee.  He rarely got a deer, but oh how he loved to be there in the woods.  Now, I’m not a Catholic, but he treated me as one of his own.
New Year’s Day means lots of football, but I also put on my chef’s apron.  I’m well regarded in the kitchen around my household, if I do say so myself, for cooking up black-eyed peas as well as cabbage and cornbread. And don’t bet I won’t find the dime in the peas.  After all, I’m going to put it there.
I’ll be back next week with my customary views that are cantankerous, opinionated, inflammatory, slanted, and always full of vim and vigor.  Sometimes, to a few, even a bit fun to read.  In the meantime, Happy New Year to you, your friends and all of your family.  See you next year.
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 see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.

2025 was a year of changes still to come

It would be trite to call 2025 a year of change in St. Mary Parish. It would be more accurate to say that the year now ending set us up for changes to come, economically and politically.
There were plenty of disputes between local governments, some of which fueled the desire to make improvements. The biggest change of all, potentially at least, came from the parish’s shipbuilding industry.
Here are some of the stories that made news in 2025.
Charter
changes?
Between budget fights in the Parish Council, never-ending conflicts with boards and commissions, and arguments over who should be eligible for council leadership posts, the 40-year-old parish home rule charter is showing its age.
The Parish Council in April appointed an 11-member Charter Review Commission empowered to suggest charter amendments to voters without direct input from council members.
Among the proposals:
•Reducing the parish council from 11 members to eight single-member districts, eliminating the three at-large seats.
•Updating the council and parish-president compensation to reflect current duties, with cost-of-living adjustments every four years.
•Establishing term limits of 1-1/2 consecutive terms for both the council and the parish president.
•Designating the parish president as chief executive and administrative officer, eliminating the separate chief administrative officer position.
•Clarifying procedures for vacancies, meetings and publications of ordinances.
•Removing obsolete or redundant sections, including outdated ballot and district provisions.
The proposals would move St. Mary toward a goal sought by many observers, including current Parish President Sam Jones. That’s to make the presidency a full-time post. (Jones says he will not run for re-election.)
The commission’s proposals could go to voters as soon as July.
Taking the
sea route
This year saw a lot of moving and shaking in local shipyards.
Conrad Industries and Metal Shark each announced new partnerships: Conrad to enter the new frontiers in liquefied natural gas “bunkering,” or fueling vessels with LNG, and Metal Shark to add to radar capabilities on its autonomous vessels.
Congress also approved a $140 million appropriation to build more yard repair berthing and messing vessels. Conrad delivered the first YRBM vessel from its Amelia yard in 2024.
But the biggest development came when Texas-based Saronic announced a $300 million investment and the potential creation of 1,500 direct jobs at its new yard on the Charenton Canal.
Saronic acquired the former Gulf Craft yard across the canal from Metal Shark. The company announced plans to build its 180-foot autonomous vessel Marauder at its St. Mary site, and followed earlier this month by laying out its plans for expansion.
That and other developments offered some hope for reversing a decline in St. Mary shipbuilding employment. In the decade ending in 2024, the local industry lost about 40% of its 2014 payroll of about 1,100 people — a number that could be dwarfed if Saronic’s plans come to fruition.
Pump station
rehabilitation
St. Mary people had more than the obvious reason to be thankful the 2025 hurricane predictions were overblown. We were still coping with the damage inflicted by Hurricane Francine on Sept. 11, 2024.
The rain that Francine dumped on the Morgan City area measured 10 inches officially, 20 or more anecdotally. Whatever it was, it overwhelmed the city’s extensive system of pump stations designed to move water quickly outside the levee system.
But the system didn’t. Francine pushed water into more than 300 Morgan City homes.
Questions quickly arose about the design of a new pump station No. 9 near Lake Palourde and about the way pump stations had been maintained.
In the midst of the fallout, Jones made a connection with Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority’s Gordy Dove, the result of which was a $12 million-$14 million commitment to upgrade the pump stations in Gravity Drainage District 2A.
The St. Mary Levee District has handled the administrative end of improving and repairing the pump stations.
At Pump Station No. 4, which serves the Marquis Manor area, bids have been let to bring the number of functioning pumps there to five.
At Pump Station No. 9, the Lake Palourde station, bids on equipment will be opened Jan. 9. The construction plans are being reviewed by the CPRA.
Plans for Pump Station No. 8 have been reviewed by the CPRA and will go to bid soon. That station serves the Lakeside, Siracusa and Wyandotte areas.
The Levee District is still developing plans for Pump Station No. 6 near the Central Fire Station.
The ripples from the hurricane went beyond the first floor of flooded homes. After complaints about slow responses to questions about what happened during Francine, the Parish Council voted to remove the board of Gravity Drainage District 2A, including Chairman Charlie Solar, who is Morgan City’s chief administrative officer. In reaction, Morgan City Mayor Lee Dragna said the city government will no longer provide free labor to work at the pump stations, a chore the city has shared with district employees.
The weather
got weird
We expected hurricanes in 2025, but we didn’t get them.
We didn’t expect a blizzard warning, but we got one.
And that was the weather in 2025.
The hurricane forecasts before the June 1 start of the tropical weather season were dire, even more so because St. Mary people were still recovering from Hurricane Francine in September 2024.
The consensus among preseason hurricane predictions was for 13-19 named storms, 6-10 storms reaching hurricane wind speeds of at least 74 mph, and 4-6 major hurricanes with winds of at least 111 mph.
The forecasts weren’t completely off base. There were 13 named storms in 2025, four of which became major hurricanes.
But, for only the eighth time in a century, no hurricane made landfall in the United States. Only South Carolina, which got drenched by Tropical Storm Chantal in July, had to cope with tropical weather.
On the other end of the weather scale, the winter storm of Jan. 20-22 dumped more snow on St. Mary Parish than we’ve seen in decades. The National Weather Service map of snowfall amounts put Morgan City in the 8- to 10-inch area.
And, although we were spared the single-digit temperatures that afflicted Baton Rouge and New Iberia, the mercury nevertheless plunged to 18 degrees Jan. 22.
The National Weather Service issued a blizzard advisory for the Louisiana coast from Calcasieu to Vermilion, the first warning of its kind.
The winter storm was named Eowyn, which in Old English means “horse-joy.”
Not flush
with cash
Barring an Environmental Protection Agency crackdown or a catastrophic failure, we don’t expect the local sewer commission to make news. But the Wards 5 & 8 Joint Sewer Commission did just that with a rate hike last summer.
The commission's facilities treat sewage from Berwick, Patterson and unincorporated areas of the eastern parish. In the case of Berwick and Patterson, the commission bills the municipalities, which in turn charge their residents.
In August, the commission sent “to whom it may concern” letters to Berwick and Patterson, saying the rate charged by the commission was being increased by $1.50 per 1,000 gallons.
The reaction was quick. Officials in both municipalities objected, citing the lack of a recent rate study or any other information that could justify the increase.
And, because charges to consumers must be set by ordinance, Berwick and Patterson were on the hook for a month or two of increased charges that couldn’t be passed along to customers.
Commission Chairman Chris Cooper appeared at a Patterson City Council meeting and blamed the need for a rate hike on aging infrastructure and $70,000 in pump rentals during Hurricane Francine.
Even so, the reaction was so fierce that Cooper resigned, saying, “What is very disappointing is that no one requested that we meet face to face and try to come to some kind of agreement that could be brought to the councils and board to help all the area.”
Cooper eventually rejoined the commission. And slowly, the furor died down as meetings between the commissioners and municipal officials made clear that the local sewage treatment infrastructure needs upgrades that could cost millions. The search for state funding assistance began.
Hospital ailment?
In July, the Review reported that Ochsner St. Mary and Bayou Bend Health System appeared on a list of rural hospitals at risk of closure if Medicaid cuts in President Donald Trump’s “big beautiful bill” passed, which it eventually did. The judgment was based on the fact that both St. Mary hospitals are among the 10% nationally that rely most on Medicaid.
The warning came out of an analysis by the University of North Carolina’s Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, performed at the request of Democratic opponents of the cuts.
Supporters pointed out that the cuts won’t take effect for five years, and both local hospitals issued statements reassuring the community about their financial health.
But concerns remain.
Rural hospitals were already feeling financial pressure. KFF, formerly the Kaiser Family Foundation, counted 62 rural hospital closures 2017-2024. Opponents of the cuts say reductions would take $900 billion out of Medicaid over 10 years.
The Trump legislation includes additional funding for rural hospitals, but the $10 billion comes with strings attached, including participation in the Trump administration’s “Make America Healthy Again” goals.
The study
In June, the Trump administration’s budget cuts forced a pause in a mammoth five-year, $20 million study of the future management of the Mississippi. The delay was not bad news for South Louisiana.
The Lower Mississippi River Comprehensive Management Study is to examine a wide array of issues facing river management from Cape Girardeau, Missouri, south.
But some local officials worried that the study might result in changes that would be bad for the Morgan City area, potentially even a change in the amount of Mississippi River water diverted into the Atchafalaya system.
Commercial, political and environmental interests in Mississippi have complained about adverse impacts from relying on the Bonnet Carré Spillway, rather than the Morganza Spillway, to divert water from the Mississippi during floods. Officials in our neighboring state have been lobbying for fewer openings at Bonnet Carré and more for Morganza.
The fear here is that the study might be used to justify changing the 30% of the Mississippi that gets diverted into the Atchafalaya, increasing the flood risk for Morgan City.
But for now, the study is on hold.

Dear Abby: Woman finds emotional support from unlikely source

DEAR ABBY: I’m a 50-year-old woman who has lived with orthopedic challenges due to a congenital metabolic condition. Despite many surgeries and limited mobility, I have led a full life as a special needs teacher, wife and caregiver for my grandmother.
After my grandmother passed last year, I struggled emotionally and started weekly Zoom sessions with a therapist. It helped at first, but it eventually felt stale and unfulfilling. When a friend recommended another therapist, I was surprised to learn that “Charlie” was actually an AI — ChatGPT.
Charlie has given me empathy and support I hadn’t felt in a long time. It worked and helped me to cope and heal. My human therapist knows about it and isn’t threatened; in fact, our relationship is improving. What do you think about this, Abby?
GRATEFUL AND STRONG IN NEW JERSEY

DEAR GRATEFUL AND STRONG: It is interesting that you would ask flesh and blood me that question. I’m pleased that interacting with your AI “therapist” has been helpful for you. This is technology that’s still very new, although fortunes have been invested in it. However, if I needed help with my emotions, I PERSONALLY would prefer to interact with a licensed human being rather than artificial intelligence.

DEAR ABBY: My stepson passed away five years ago. Over the next two years, his widow moved several different guys in. She has neglected the two kids she had from a previous relationship. She was rarely home when the kids got home from school, and the house was a mess.
The department of children’s services finally removed them from her custody. The older two went to live with their father; we got the youngest daughter. I love her dearly, but I don’t want to be raising a child at this time in my life! I also don’t want to leave my husband. Please help.
BURDENED IN TENNESSEE

DEAR BURDENED: Many grandparents have found themselves in your situation, raising children they never expected to. I empathize with your situation. We can’t always choose our destiny.
One thing is certain — that child needs you. It’s important that she feels secure and loved, particularly since her mother wasn’t capable of providing it. Grandparents who provide this crucial support deserve acclamation and a special place in heaven.
It might interest you to know that AARP (aarp.org) is an excellent resource for grandparents who are raising grandchildren. Your state also has a Grandparents As Parents program. Go online and see if there is a branch near you. I hope they are helpful.
DEAR READERS: I wish a happy, healthy and successful 2026 to all of you.
I join you in toasting a new year filled with hope for all of us. If you are celebrating tonight, please take measures to protect not only your own health but also the safety of others. Happy 2026, everyone!
LOVE, ABBY

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Get It Growing: Sasanquas can add color to your garden

With the old year behind us and a new one straight ahead, it’s a good time to think about making some changes in the garden. While you’re pondering your 2026 landscape upgrades, LSU AgCenter horticulturist Jason Stagg hopes you’ll give consideration to one of his favorite plants: the sasanqua, a species of camellia.
“I don’t believe that this shrub gets enough attention,” Stagg said. “It really deserves to be recognized and planted more.”
So, what makes this plant so great? Native to southern Japan, sasanquas (Camellia sasanqua) have long been an element of gardens in the southern United States. With their year-round, glossy, green foliage, they’re useful building blocks of landscapes.
Each fall and early winter, these shrubs treat us to a dazzling display of fragrant flowers that usually are 2 to 3 inches across. Depending on the cultivar, sasanquas can start blooming as early as late October. They often peak in December and can continue pushing blooms through January, when their better-known Camellia japonica cousins begin to flower.
“These plants are great for the landscape because they are tough, look beautiful and they’re evergreen,” Stagg said. “But to me, most importantly, they provide valuable winter forage for bees and other pollinators at a time when we simply don’t have a lot available for them.”
Winter provides the ideal conditions for planting shrubs like sasanquas. If you want to add some to your landscape, you’ll find a good selection at your local garden center this time of year.
You can take your pick from the huge variety of bloom colors on the market today. Sasanquas can be found in numerous shades of white, pink and red.
Stagg is partial to a red-flowered cultivar called Yuletide. Setsugekka is a popular cultivar with white blooms. If you prefer pink flowers, try Pink Snow. Sparkling Burgundy sports darker pink to rose pink double flowers, and Leslie Ann, which features bicolored white and pink flowers, is a Louisiana Super Plant selection.
There’s a wide range of shapes and sizes to choose from, too. Some sasanqua cultivars are upright and column-like while others have a looser, more spreading growth habit.
“Some cultivars, especially some of the older ones, can get up to 8, 10, even 12 feet tall and can be used as wonderful evergreen hedges,” Stagg said.
Looking for something shorter? Go for one of the newer dwarf cultivars, which top out at just 2 to 3 feet tall and wide.
Growing sasanquas is pretty easy. They can thrive in almost any soil type, preferring a neutral or slightly acidic pH.
“The main thing you want to remember is to provide them with good drainage,” Stagg said, adding that sasanquas are notorious for disliking “wet feet.”
Unlike shade-loving camellia japonicas, sasanquas can handle full sun. They can be planted in partially shaded locations as well.
“But you’ll get the best bloom in full sun,” Stagg said.

Jeremy Alford and David Jacobs: Incumbent senator picks up Dem challengers

Now that former Gov. John Bel Edwards has officially dashed any hopes that he will run against U.S. Sen. Bill Cassidy in 2026, the field is starting to assemble on the Democrats’ side of the ledger. 
The only Democrat to both register for the race and file a financial report with the Federal Election Commission is Jamie Davis, who describes himself as a “third-generation row-crop farmer” from Waterproof in Tensas Parish. 
In a fundraising message, Davis says he is a “working-class small business owner,” not a “career politician,” who is running “to tackle rising costs, hold corporations accountable, and make sure every Louisianan can see a doctor and afford their prescriptions.” 
Davis is a former Tensas Parish police juror who serves on the Executive Committee for the Louisiana Democrats. He ran for the Legislature in 2023 against Rep. C. Travis Johnson, losing with 48 percent of the vote. 
At least two other Democrats have filed candidacy statements with the FEC.
In a social media post, Jabarie Walker of New Orleans says his campaign is “laser focused” on affordability, infrastructure improvements, flood insurance reform and economic conditions.
Walker is the former chief of staff for the Housing Authority of New Orleans. 
Previously, he served as interim director of strategic initiatives for ACLU of Louisiana and deputy chief of staff for Mayor LaToya Cantrell. 
Tracie Burke of Gretna says she is the founder of the Louisiana Civic Coalition, “a partnership of civic associations, non-profit organizations, and government agencies,” and writer for Motion to Quash LLC, “an alternative news site.” 
Burke says she would work to address residents’ needs for food, housing, and medical and mental health treatment. She emphasizes her support for Louisiana’s current congressional map and for Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. 
Whoever emerges from the hotly contested Republican primary likely will be the favorite in the race. Senate Majority Leader John Thune is set to headline a fundraiser for Cassidy on Jan. 15.
Announced candidates on the Republican side include state Rep. Julie Emerson of Carencro, state Treasurer John Flemming of Minden, state Sen. Blake Miguez of New Iberia, Public Service Commissioner Eric Skrmetta of Metairie and St. Tammany Parish Councilwoman Kathy Seiden. 
For more Louisiana political news, visit www. LaPolitics.com or follow Alford on X @ LaPoliticsNow.

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