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Young people have their own views on crime, violence

For a month of Mondays, police, mayors, school officials and other adults have talked about the impact of drugs and gun violence on young people.

On Monday, the young people had their chance. And they see things differently.

A panel of eight teens appeared at the last in a series of town hall meetings put together by Patterson Mayor Rodney Grogan. The town halls were at the Patterson Area Civic Center.

“Tonight we’re going to be here for the youth — what they’re thinking, what they’re feeling, their thought processes,” said Holden Murray, Patterson city government’s human resources director.

As police seek help in solving and ending a recent series of violent crimes, many involving teens, the adults had some advice: See something, say something.

The young people aren’t so sure.

“I try not to put myself in situations where I’m in it,” said teen Dillon Gunner.

Even after Uvalde, Sandy Hook and other school shootings, some of the young people aren’t sure active shooter drills are a good idea. They think the drills may be giving away information to shooters waiting to become active.

“I would never trust anyone,” said Patterson Junior High student Trevor Thomas.

“It’s getting closer to home,” said Jamari Francis of Patterson. “You can’t say it won’t happen to you.”

Police violence against minorities, the most notorious example being the death of African American George Floyd in Minnesota, has created rift between young blacks — a category that includes seven of the eight panelists Monday night — and police.

“The police have most black people scared for their safety ...,” Thomas said, directing comments toward police officers in the audience of more than 65 people. “I want to trust you all. But after all that’s happened, I wish I could.”

Interim Morgan City Police Chief Mark E. Griffin’s reply was that the trust has to work both ways.

“To have an officer go out and open himself or herself up,” Griffin said, “we need some respect back.”

Keatyn Harden, a pastor’s daughter, had this solution for making young people avoid trouble: “I’d like to see the kids get more involved in church.”

Some of the young people are doing more than talking about their problems. One of the panelists, 19-year-old LSU student Ajani Connor, has qualified to run for alderman in Baldwin, a town especially hard hit by violent crime.

Three panelists from the July 18 town hall meeting returned and sat in front of the Civic Center stage with pictures of their deceased sons.

The sons of Marcelle Hoskins of Morgan City and Catalene Theriot died as a result of gun violence. The son of Lisa Smith of Patterson died of a fentanyl overdose.

Louisiana's abortion law will go to appellate court

A randomly selected three-judge panel will decide the fate of Louisiana’s law that bans most abortions, but the state’s abortion clinics will remain open until a
decision is made.

Attorney General Jeff Landry is appealing a court order prohibiting the state’s abortion ban from taking effect amid an ongoing legal challenge.

East Baton Rouge District Judge Don Johnson on Tuesday denied Landry’s request to allow the state’s abortion ban to go into effect pending his appeal of a preliminary injunction issued by Johnson last week.

The ruling means abortion will remain available in Louisiana until the three-judge panel from the 1st Circuit Court of Appeal takes action. It’s unclear how long until the court — composed of 11 Republicans and one Democrat – rules on Landry’s appeal.

Johnson found Tuesday that plaintiffs in the case have “shown how such ‘trigger bans’ could unconstitutionally be reasonably understood and misapplied by health care professionals, and by interpretation of ordinary citizens.”

Last week, Johnson issued a preliminary injunction against the state’s abortion ban in a lawsuit challenging the law brought by Shreveport abortion clinic Hope Medical Group for Women and abortion advocates with Medical Students for Choice.

Louisiana’s trigger law took effect immediately upon the U.S. Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey in late June, but the plaintiffs immediately sued, arguing the law is unconstitutionally vague both in terms of exceptions and when the law takes effect.
Attorneys representing Landry and Louisiana Department of Health Secretary Courtney Phillips have argued the law clearly bans elective abortions and doctors won’t be held criminally liable if they use “reasonable medical judgment.”

Landry has said he expects the Louisiana Supreme Court will ultimately decide the case.
In the meantime, he’s optimistic the First Circuit Court of Appeals will lift the preliminary injunction as the case proceeds.

“We trust the First Circuit will apply the law properly and reverse Judge Johnson’s ruling,” Landry posted to Twitter on Tuesday. “Our laws are clear and we will prevail in defending them.”

Johnson’s ruling on Tuesday comes just days after the Louisiana State Bond Commission Landry’s call to halt funding for New Orleans following a vow from local officials to defy the state’s abortion ban.

The New Orleans City Council unanimously passed a resolution on July 7 that prohibits city officials and local law enforcement from using public funds or resources to enforce the state’s abortion trigger laws. Orleans Parish District Attorney Jason Williams also promised not to prosecute abortion providers, while Orleans Parish Sheriff Susan Hutson vowed to refuse to accept any person into custody at the Orleans Justice Center who is arrested for violating the abortion ban.

In response, the bond commission voted 12-2 last Thursday to delay preliminary approval for the New Orleans Sewerage & Water Board to borrow $39 million next year to continue a power plant project.

Justices with the Louisiana Supreme Court voted 4-2 earlier this month against a request by Landry to intervene in the case.

Justices Jefferson D. Hughes III, Piper D. Griffin, James T. Genovese, and Scott J. Crichton joined in the majority to deny Landry’s motion to reinstate Louisiana’s abortion ban “at this preliminary stage of proceedings,” while Hughes argued that intervening now is “procedurally premature.

Wheel House for July 29: Marcus Jones run, flag football and cheerleaders

JONES 5K
The 25th annual Marcus Jones/100 Black Men of St. Mary Parish 5K Run is 8 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 3. Starts at Morgan City City Hall, 512 First St., and ends at Lawrence Park. Registration at City Hall prior to start. Online registration $35 at 100blackmenofstmary.com where a link will lead to runsignup.com. Funds raised provide scholarship funds. Awards for overall male and female; and top three males and females in each age group. T-shirt guaranteed to first 100 to register. Race medal to all finishers. For info call Travis Darnell, 985-992-0840 or Kreig Triggs, 985-519-1683.

FLAG FOOTBALL
Registration for children ages 7-12 (no weight limit) for Atchafalaya Football Conference ongoing at Morgan City Recreation Department, 915 Everett St., Morgan City. Must have copy of birth certificate. Family fees: $45 one child; $35 for second child; $30 for third. Family fee limit is $110. Physicals required. MCRD has registration form and more details.

FLAG CHEER
Atchafalaya Football Conference cheer applications for ages 7-12 for flag football are available at Morgan City Recreation Department, 915 Everett St., Morgan City. Must have copy of birth certificate. Family fees: $45 one child; $35 for second child; $30 for third. Family fee limit is $110. MCRD has registration form and more details.

Around Town for July 29

Happy birthday Sunday to Kelley Minor, Stephanie Parker, Lenny Jenkins and Gerwin Hebert, Monday to Denise Welsh and Tuesday to LaBette Howard from family, friends and Ira.

CAROL JEANNE SMITH CARBIN JAMES

Carol Jeanne Smith Carbin James, 63, a native and resident of Morgan City, LA passed away on Monday, July 18, 2022 at 8:35 PM at her residence.
Visitation will be observed on Saturday, July 30, 2022 at Lee Chapel AME Church 609 Freret St. Morgan City, LA from 9:00 AM until funeral service at 11:00 AM. Burial will be in the Morgan City Cemetery.

Carol Jeanne Smith Carbin James is survived by her life-long friend and devoted partner, Willard Francis of Morgan City, LA; a father-figure, Hilliard Smith Jr. of Patterson, LA; two daughters, Na-keithia (Maurice) James Howard of Patterson, LA and Khayla (Jonathan) Mott of Morgan City, LA; three sons Max James Jr., Kimoni James, and Gregory (Katana) Carbin all of Morgan City LA; four step-daughters Crystal (Donald) Harris of New Iberia, LA , Katina (Terry) Taylor of Clarksville, TN, Celeste (Jeric) Bias- Houston, TX, and Charlotte Francis of Morgan City, LA; two step-sons Jarrel Jackson and Brandon Means of Alabama; three brothers, Hilliard (Audrey) Smith II of Navarre Beach, FL, Johnny Carbin Jr, Clemous (Anita) Mingo both of Morgan City, LA; Six sister, Naomi (James) Perry Sr of Patterson, LA, Melanie Gobert of Morgan City, LA, Mary Prevot of Lafayette, LA, Carolyn (Keith) Guienz of Franklin, LA , Katherine (Bodie) Goodlow, and Maxine Young of Los Angeles, CA ; twelve grandchildren, and a host of relatives and friends.

She was preceded in death by her grandparents, Sylvester and Edna Carbin Sr, Elliot Mckenzie III and Naomi DeGraffenaried; parents, Johnny and Mildred Mckenzie Carbin Sr; brother, Larry Smith; god-son Kim Gobert II; nephew, Lanier Prevot.

Arrangements entrusted to Jones Funeral Home. please visit; www.jones-funeral-home.com to send condolences to family.

Wise joins Thibodaux Regional staff

Thibodaux Regional Health System announced the addition of Dr. Rhandi Wise, obstetrics and gynecology, to the active medical staff.
She is available to care for patients at Thibodaux Regional Women’s Clinic, 604 N. Acadia Road Suite 500, Thibodaux, 985-448-1216.

Wise received her medical degree from LSU Health Sciences Center in Shreveport. She completed her residency and internship in obstetrics and gynecology at University Health Shreveport.

Wise is a member of the American College of Physicians, the American Medical Association, and the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

Wise specializes in prenatal care and delivery, annual exams and wellness care for women of all ages, infertility, urogynecology, and gynecologic cancer diagnosis. She is skilled in vaginal and laparoscopic surgical techniques.

Wise chose to practice at Thibodaux Regional because she wanted to raise her family in a small community and provide care to the community where her husband was born and raised, the hospital said in a press release.

Phoenix looks back on 25 years and technological evolution

Phoenix International Holdings, which has a 5.5-acre facility in Bayou Vista, is celebrating 25 years and its evolution from a diving company into a provider of a variety of sophisticated underwater operations.

In a press release, the company says it offers “technically sound, cost-effective, safe solutions to our clients’ most challenging problems,” from the surface to 6,000 meters.

In 1997, six underwater operations specialists founded Phoenix as a diving company dedicated to the waterborne repair of U.S. Navy ships, the company said.

More service lines and capabilities have been added:

—Remotely operated vehicle operations to 6,000 meters (2000)
—Submarine rescue system deployment and management (2001)
—Atmospheric diving to 400 meters and offshore oil and gas infrastructure inspection, repair and maintenance (2004)
—Autonomous underwater vehicle operations (2012)
—Underwater repair of commercial ships and shore-side infrastructure maintenance (2013)
—Topside nondestructive testing (2017)

Phoenix has successfully completed many high-profile projects, including finding components of Air France Flight 447, the space shuttle Columbia, and SS El Faro; multiple remotely operated vehicle dives into the wreck of the Titanic; and ROV film documentation of drill deck control configuration on sunken semi-submersible Deepwater Horizon.

In 2017, under tasking from the U.S. Navy supervisor of salvage and diving, or SUPSALV, Phoenix completed emergent repairs to the USS Fitzgerald in Japan and the USS John S. McCain in Singapore after their respective collisions.

Phoenix welder-divers mobilized to Yokosuka, Japan, to repair USS Fitzgerald’s extensively damaged starboard side.
More than 370 hours of bottom time and 378 linear feet of weld were used to install doubler-plates, flat-bar and T-beam stiffeners. The Phoenix crew moved to Singapore and performed repairs to the port side of USS John S. McCain, depositing 250 linear feet of welds over 213 hours of bottom time.

0In 2021, Phoenix, under the direction of the Navy, located and recovered the fuselage of a downed MH-60S Seahawk helicopter in the Pacific Ocean near Okinawa, Japan, from a record-setting depth of 19,075 feet.

This equates to 3.6 miles beneath the sea and is 266 feet deeper than the previous salvage record, also set by Phoenix and the supervisor of salvage and diving, in 2019. The helicopter was located in March 2020 using the U.S. Navy’s Trondheim AUV. A year later, Phoenix and SUPSALV returned to the site and recovered the aircraft using the U.S. Navy’s CURV 21 ROV and Fly Away Deep Ocean Salvage System.

This year, Phoenix and SUPSALV located and recovered a downed U.S. Navy F-35C Lightning II aircraft in the South China Sea from a depth of more than 10,000 feet. Working aboard the off-shore construction vessel Picasso, the Phoenix team deployed Trondheim to locate the aircraft and then CURV 21 to attach specialized rigging and lift lines with which the fighter-jet was lifted to the surface and hoisted aboard Picasso. This operation was the third successful F-35 recovery per-formed by Phoenix and SUPSALV in less than three years.

Phoenix said it has also moved recently into the areas of sustainable energy and environmental stewardship.

“We assisted with the installation of the first commercial offshore wind farm in the U.S., transplanted fragile coral to preserve an ecosystem in Hawaii, and are currently managing and per-forming all underwater activities related to the testing of a large offshore energy conversion device that will transform wave motion into electricity,” Phoenix said in its press release.

“We have mapped and sampled the deep seabed in search of the minerals that will be required to electrify transportation, and our many successful stern-tube seal repairs have kept lubricants inside ships and out of our oceans.’

“Phoenix’s success over the past 25 years is a result of our employees’ energy, talent, determination, and innovation,” President Pat Keenan said.

“Our team of professionals consistently rises to the challenge of safely and efficiently meeting and often exceeding the needs of our clients.
In addition to its Bayou Vista facility, Phoenix International Holdings Inc. has offices in Largo, Maryland; Chesapeake, Virginia; Davis, Florida; Stennis, Mississippi; Houston; San Diego; and Honolulu.

The company’s website is https://www.phnx-international.com/

Phoenix’s Bayou Vista office houses underwater operations supporting offshore oil and gas; inland/infrastructure; underwater ship repair and maintenance; and hydropower/windfarm clients.

This location also serves as a training facility for welder/diver certifications and procedure development and houses the purchasing department in support of worldwide operations.

The 5.5-acre facility features 27,845 square feet of office and warehouse space, two testing and training tanks, and 770 feet of waterfront along the Bayou Teche with easy access to the Gulf of Mexico.

Ochsner St. Mary Nurse Tech Honors graduates

Ochsner St. Mary Photo
Ochsner St. Mary held a graduation ceremony for its summer Nurse Tech Honors Program. This is a program that hires nursing students who are in their junior or senior year of nursing. The students follow a preceptor in different departments and observe the nursing process and patient interactions, and learn time management skills and critical thinking skills, just to name a few. The purpose of the program is to allow them to see and be a part of what they will be doing once they graduate and transition from being a nursing student to an actual nurse. Pictured from left are Yvette Boudreaux, RN, clinical educator for Ochsner St. Mary, Rebecca Bonvillain, Kimberly Cabinella, Delila Boudreaux and Olivia Benoit.

Terrebonne General sponsors recreation complex

Terrebonne General Health System, together with Terrebonne Parish Consolidated Government,announced that system is the new presentation sponsor for the Bayou Country Sports Complex.

This partnership will further support Terrebonne General’s l commitment to the health and wellbeing of south Louisiana, the system said in a news release.

The BCSC is a premier venue that offers baseball, softball, and soccer fields and a recreation area with a fully stocked fishing pond, beach, and splash park with concession stands.

Local, regional, and travel teams from across the country will use the complex for games and tournaments. All visitors alike can enjoy the beautiful surroundings that offer family-friendly activities.

“Terrebonne General is proud to play an integral role in this partnership that furthers our ideals around health and wellness,” said Phyllis Peoples, Terrebonne General Health System president and CEO. “We are a community resource that delivers both hospital care and preventive healthcare to better serve the people of our region.

The BCSC is a great partner for us because sports and recreation play an essential role in keeping people fit, improving physical health, and teaching the importance of teamwork; everyone can benefit,” she added.

Festival sponsor

Louisiana Shrimp and Petroleum Festival Photo
The Louisiana Shrimp and Petroleum Festival received a sponsorship check from Morgan City Toyota and Morgan City Ford. Shown from left are Bobby Dufrene, festival board member; Kevin Madise Sr., finance manager; Hailee Thomas; festival director; Gregg D. Rudnick, general manager; Lou Tamporello, festival chairman; Kevin Madise Jr., sales manager; and David Fuhrer, festival vice president.

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
P.O. Box 566, Franklin, LA 70538
Phone: 337-828-3706
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Morgan City Review
1014 Front Street, Morgan City, LA 70380
Phone: 985-384-8370
Fax: 985-384-4255