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House panel votes down 'don't say gay' bill

BATON ROUGE — The House Education Committee voted 7-4 Tuesday to reject a bill to ban sexual orientation and gender identity discussions in classrooms for kindergarten through eighth-grade students.
The bill, House Bill 837, was criticized for its vague wording and for making it difficult to teach subjects in Louisiana’s new social studies standards, such as LGBTQ+ individuals who were targeted during the Holocaust.
“I think it is too broad and leaves a lot of room for interpretation,” Rep. Aimee Adatto Freeman, D-New Orleans, said.
All four Democrats on the committee and three Republican representatives voted against the bill.
Opponents referred to the bill as a more extreme version of Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill, as the Louisiana one would have covered a broader age range of students and banned teachers from discussing their sexual or gender identities with students.
“No teacher, school employee, or other presenter shall discuss his own sexual orientation or gender identity with students in kindergarten through grade twelve,” according to the bill, which was sponsored by Rep. Dodie Horton, R-Haughton.
Horton has rejected the “Don’t Say Gay” label and the notion that her bill was exclusionary and anti-LGBTQ+.
“It’s not prejudice to one group or another,” Horton said in an interview with KSLA-TV in Shreveport.
The lack of discussion about sexuality and gender appeared to be a contributing factor in the bill’s rejection Tuesday. When Rep. Patrick Jefferson, D-Homer, asked Horton if students would be allowed to address faculty as “Mr.” or “Ms.,” Horton said that her bill had nothing to do with such titles. This was met with laughter from the committee’s audience.
Lawmakers in other states have proposed bills that would limit all classroom instruction and discussion related to sexual orientation and gender identity.
The controversy over this type of legislation has mostly revolved around Florida, but lawmakers in other Republican-led states, including Alabama, Ohio and South Carolina, also have introduced restrictive bills to prevent gender and sexuality instruction.
“These issues do seem to animate Republican voters for whatever reason, and legislators think they’re following the will of their voters,” said Peter Robins-Brown, the executive director of Louisiana Progress, a progressive organization.
While the Louisiana bill did not make it to the House floor, in Florida, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed into law the Parental Rights in Education act, better known as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. Part of the bill prohibits classroom instruction about sexual orientation and gender identity for kindergarten through third grade classes.
DeSantis cited parents’ rights and protecting children as his main motivations for enacting the law.
“Parents’ rights have been increasingly under assault around the nation, but in Florida we stand up for the rights of parents,” DeSantis said in a press release. “Parents have every right to be informed about services offered to their child at school and should be protected from schools using classroom instruction to sexualize their kids as young as 5 years old.”
Like DeSantis, Horton said that it is important to protect students from inappropriate information such as teachers’ lifestyle preferences.
“Certain teachers use classroom instructional time to share their personal sexual orientation or gender identity preferences with our most vulnerable citizens, our children,” Horton told the House Education Committee. “Unfortunately, in the last probably five years, you just see a trend of certain educators … interjecting their own lifestyle choices.”
In Florida, teachers are already expressing concern over how DeSantis’ legislation will change their classrooms starting in July.
“I can no longer teach kids to be inclusive and accepting of one another,” Melody Bass, a teacher at Cedar Grove Elementary School in Panama City, said in an interview. “I wish that the people writing and passing these laws were actually in the classroom and had exposure to the students that they think they know.”

Ban on hand-held cellphones while driving fails

BATON ROUGE — Lawmakers on Tuesday narrowly rejected a bill to ban hand-held driver phones after a handful of amendments, debates and product demonstrations.
The bill would have allowed law enforcement to ticket anyone caught with a cell phone in hand while driving.
“This bill is a wireless cell phone hands-free bill,” the author of the bill, Rep. Mike Huval, R-Breaux Bridge, said. “It does not keep you from using a cell phone when you’re driving. It just requires you to do it in a safe manner.”
The bill failed to pass in the House by a close margin of 48-46. But prior to the vote, lawmakers discussed the bill in intense debates.
Lawmakers adopted eight amendments to alter the bill since it was first proposed in the House Committee on Transportation, Highways and Public Works on March 14.
Amendments increased maximum fines from $100 to $300 as well as community service from 15 hours to 90 hours.
The amended bill also would have prohibited officers from arresting an individual who was caught with a phone in hand while driving even if the officer observed illegal activities or items in the car.
Rep. Chad Brown, D-Plaquemine, argued that the ban might still prompt an officer to abuse his power.
“I’m going to submit to you that, if he walks up to the vehicle and visibly observes an open container in the console, they’re going to find a reason to detain you and get a search warrant,” Brown said.
Huval said the bill would not allow an officer to do so.
Brown also questioned how law enforcement officers would be able to accurately spot someone driving with a phone in hand.
He held up an item while standing several feet away from Huval and asked him if an officer could fine him if he was driving. Huval said yes, but Brown then revealed it was a phone charger.
“That’s my point,” Brown said. “If an officer sees this, he thinks it’s a cell phone, but it’s a phone charger.”
This was not the only demonstration.
When lawmakers debated the bill in March, Rep. Robby Carter, R-Amite, argued that the bill discriminated against people who can only afford “pay-as-you-go” phones without voice-command features.
“It will not be possible to operate a cell phone in a car that doesn’t have Bluetooth,” Carter said during that debate.
Huval picked up a Dollar General bag with a phone inside.
“This phone costs $49, but I found out I can go to Walmart and get it for $19,” Huval said. “I drive a car that is 50 years old, and…all it has is AM radio. You know what, I can drive my car with this hands-free.”
The bill failed even though the House passed a similar bill in the 2021 session. A motion to reconsider the bill is pending.

Jeremy Alford: Why the mid-term elections matter in La.

Based on recent voting trends and the historic advantages of incumbency, the members of Louisiana’s U.S. House delegation will likely coast to re-election this fall.
The incumbents, after all, already have just about everything they need to win their races, from public exposure and campaign money to access to power.
Nonetheless, our incumbents will still have a few reasons to sweat as this year’s election results are being tabulated nationally. That’s because their political fates are tied firmly to the fortunes of their parties.
A rising GOP tide in Congress next term, for instance, would lift many Louisiana boats in the House, where all but one of our elected members are Republican.
The situation is most pronounced for House Minority Whip Steve Scalise of Jefferson Parish.
Should Republicans gain control of the House this fall, Scalise would be positioned to advance in the leadership, either up to majority leader or maybe even speaker.
California Congressman Kevin McCarthy, the current House minority leader, would normally be positioned for the speakership, but a few controversies have crossed his path in recent weeks.
Most notably, a forthcoming book, “This Will Not Pass,” suggests McCarthy entertained the idea of recommending resignation to former President Donald Trump in January 2021.
This news about McCarthy, which was not well received by the pro-Trump faction of the party, has in turn boosted Scalise’s stock.
It’s unclear, however, how much McCarthy’s recent headaches could influence his re-election bid back home.
In related jockeying, Acadiana Congressman Clay Higgins has been quietly (and not-so-quietly) making his own push to become the lead Republican on the House Homeland Security Committee.
Currently second in the line of seniority, Higgins said in an interview the battle for the top spot will be competitive.
“We’re pursuing it and gradually meeting with colleagues,” said Higgins. “I’m meeting with a whole lot of folks. This would be a natural transition for me.
"From day one, I knew Homeland Security would be the best place to utilize my talents and skill set. I’m a cop and an investigator, and I’m good at it.”
Higgins has quickly made a name for himself on the committee and is presently the ranking member of the Subcommittee on Border Security, Facilitation and Operations.
Members of the Freedom Caucus would like to see the House leadership select one of their own, like Higgins, for the post — except Higgins isn’t the only Caucus member gunning for the chair. Congressmen Scott Perry of Pennsylvania and Dan Bishop of North Carolina are said to be interested, as is Congressman Michael Guest of Mississippi, who isn’t a member of the Caucus.
New York Congressman John Katko holds the senior GOP seat on the committee now, but recently announced his retirement.
The selection of his replacement is viewed as a test for how much the House leadership wants to give the Freedom Caucus in terms of influence.
The ultimate decision will be made by the House Republican Steering Committee, which isn’t always influenced by seniority and other traditional measures.
Again, should Republicans gain a majority in the House this fall, Higgins or whoever gets the homeland security nod would probably be in line to become the chairman next term.
There are similar scenarios playing out across the entire delegation.
Shreveport Congressman Mike Johnson is presently the vice chairman of the House Republican Caucus and has the momentum to go higher.
Baton Rouge Congressman Garret Graves is the Aviation Subcommittee’s ranking member right now, and he could make a bid next term to become transportation chairman.
As for our delegation’s newest members — Congresswoman Julia Letlow of Start and Congressman Troy Carter of New Orleans — they’re just as eager to learn the next partisan makeup of Congress as anyone else.
Letlow, a Republican like most of the rest of the delegation, is working to carve out a niche on the agriculture committee.
Carter, meanwhile, faces a different set of circumstances as the delegation’s only Democrat.
Carter currently enjoys unique access to Democratic allies in the House leadership, but that could all vanish if his party loses control in the upcoming midterm elections.
Should Democrats maintain a majority share in the House, though, Carter could continue to develop his alliances and maybe make his own moves on the transportation committee.
“Maybe,” of course, is the key word to remember, because there’s very little voters in Louisiana can do about these potential leadership moves.
Why? Because gavels and chairmanships meant for Louisiana are going to turn on the partisan voting trends of other states this year.
For more Louisiana political news, visit www. LaPolitics.com or follow Alford on Twitter @ LaPoliticsNow.

Patterson council commits to new Acadiana Crime Lab

PATTERSON — The City Council on Tuesday committed $93,000 to a new Acadiana Crime Lab, its share of the match required to obtain $25 million in state funding.

Bo Duhé, the district attorney for St. Mary, St. Martin and Iberia parishes, told the council that the lab plays a vital role in solving crimes, either by developing evidence against or exonerating a defendant.

“It’s really a tool for all sides,” Duhé said Tuesday.

The lab serves eight parishes, a number that also includes Lafayette, Acadia, Vermilion, St. Landry and Evangeline. The cases submitted for lab analysis number in the thousands each year.

But the current lab headquarters near Acadiana Regional Airport is inadequate, Duhé said. It’s smaller than the suggested ratio of 1,000 square feet for each lab technician recommended by the Department of Justice, and a leaky roof endangers thousands of files stored at the lab.

The new lab will require 1-1/2 to two years to building, Director Kevin Ardoin told the council.

Duhé and DAs representing the other parishes have been making the rounds at local government meetings to build a consensus for and a commitment to construction of a new lab.

And that will help the project receive a high priority from legislators developing the state’s capital outlay budget.

“By the end of the session,” Duhé said, “we need to demonstrate communities are committed to the lab.”

Officials came up with a formula for determining how much each local government should pay toward the $5 million match based on the number of cases submitted to the lab in 2019, the last year before COVID-19.

The total share of all governments in St. Mary would be more than $861,000 based on 1,069 cases. Patterson’s share, based on the 116 cases submitted by Patterson that year, would be $93,442.

Where Patterson will get the money hasn’t been determined. Duhé said private donations could play a role, and that it may be possible to split the payment over two years. Mayor
Rodney Grogan suggested that the money might come from the $2 million earmarked for Patterson in American Rescue Act Plan funding.

A resolution supporting construction of the new crime lab and com-mitting to the $93,442 passed unanimously on a voice vote.

Police chief puts off raise request; fire chief seeks compensation

PATTERSON — Police Chief Garrett Grogan put off his request for a $21,000 pay raise Tuesday. So it was the volunteer fire chief who came to the City Council to ask for compensation.

Also Tuesday, council members got a look at the proposed city budget for 2022-23; heard a request for a joint meeting of the council and the Planning and Zoning Commission to talk about a new city zoning map; and kicked around a proposed ordinance that would effectively ban large farm animals from being housed in the city.

Pay
The agenda included a request from the police chief for a raise in his annual pay to $75,000 from $54,000.

Voters paved the way for Grogan to get the raise as soon as the City Council approves it. They approved a charter amendment March 26 to allow the chief to receive a pay hike in the same four-year term in which the council approves it.

But Grogan withdrew the item from consideration Tuesday.

“I haven’t had a chance to sit down with the council yet,” Grogan said after the meeting, “and make it fit the budget.”

Fire Chief Scott Hut-ton came forward to ask for a stipend for his work leading the Volunteer Fire Department.

Hutton, the chief since 2020, said leadership of the department, and not just going to fires, takes many hours each month, some of which require him to take time off work.

Hutton said he’s asking for $500 to $600 each month as well as part-time clerical help with the paperwork.

The Patterson budget once contained a stipend for the chief, but not since 2020. That was the year that a state legislative auditor’s report accused the former chief of spending $14,000 in department funds on personal items. He was later booked on theft and malfeasance charges.

The council made no decision Tuesday.

Hutton also reported that the fire district serving the city of Patterson received an Insurance Services Office rating of 5, while the area served by the Patterson volunteers but outside the city limits received a rating of 7.

The ISO rates departments on a scale of 1-10. The lower the number, the cheaper home and business insurance will be. Half the rating is based on the department’s quality, including training and staffing levels; 40% is based on the availability of water; and 10% comes from the quality of the 911 service. Communities can improve their rating with outreach such as fire prevention presentations.

Budget

The council heard the introduction of the budget for the fiscal year that begins June 30.

The budget anticipates $8.9 million in revenue next year, including about $3.2 million from taxes and $3.6 million from utilities. The budget anticipates an increase of about $23,000 in tax revenue and a $52,000 decrease in utility revenue.

Expenses are expected to total $8.7 million. The budget anticipates $898,000 in spending on general government, $1.9 million on police, $724,000 on roads; and $774,000 on capital projects and items..

If the legislation follows the normal course, the ordinance would come up for a public hearing and passage vote June 7.

Zoning

Pat Gordon of the South Central Planning and Development Com-mission suggested a meeting with the council and zoning commission members to talk about the redrawing of Patterson’s zoning map that is underway by the com-mission staff.

Mayor Rodney Grogan suggested a yet-to-be-determined date in June.

Gordon also said the process will require public participation.

“This isn’t going to be South Central Planning’s plan,” Gordon said. “It’s going to be your plan.”

Among the issues involved are where mobile homes will be allowed to be located in the future, and what to do about the prospect of what Gordon called sexually oriented businesses, such as strip clubs, moving into the city. The shorthand is “SOBs.”

The mayor also said he believes Patterson should have property zoned for industry such as manufacturing. The need to seek a rezoning might discourage a prospective employer, Grogan said.

“We need to be ready,” Grogan said. “We need to be shovel-ready.”

Animals

The council tabled a proposed ordinance that would toughen the rules about keeping livestock in the city.

Under current ordinances, farm animals can be kept within the city limits provided there’s an acre of land for each along with suitable accommodations. Technically, the ordinance would apply to poultry, but Mayor Grogan said the real problems come from bigger animals, such as ponies, donkeys and goats.

The Planning and Zoning Commission has recommended doing away with the one-acre exemption, effectively banning farm animals from being kept in the city.

On Tuesday, council members heard from one of their own, Joe Russo, who has been an agriculture science teacher for 26 years.

Russo said he doesn’t feel right telling someone they can’t keep an animal on their property.

The council will also have to figure out what to do about animals that fall in the farm animal category but are primarily pets, such as pot-bellied pigs.

Also Tuesday:

—The council agreed to lease space at the old junior high school to 100 Black Men of St. Mary Parish, a group of men who mentor young people. The rent will be $400 per month for two years.

—The council approved an agreement between the Patterson and Franklin police departments. Patterson police will lend Franklin officers video surveil-lance equipment to help Franklin improve security after a recent string of violent incidents.

La. 'trigger law' in place if Roe overturned

A "trigger law" approved by the Louisiana Legislature in 2006 would make abortion illegal if a leaked US. Supreme Court draft opinion overturning Roe v. Wade becomes official.
The Supreme Court could strike down the landmark 1973 decision guaranteeing federal constitutional protections for abortion in Roe v. Wade, as well as the subsequent 1992 decision in Planned Parenthood v. Casey that further supported abortion rights, in a draft majority opinion circulated inside the court, according to Politico.
The opinion, authored by Justice Samuel Alito, argues "Roe was egregiously wrong from the start."
"We hold that Roe and Casey must be overruled," he wrote. "It is time to heed the Constitution and return the issue of abortion to the people's elected representatives."
Planned Parenthood attacked the draft opinion on Twitter.
"Let's be clear: This is a draft opinion. It's outrageous, it's unprecedented, but it is not final," the tweet said. "Abortion is your right — and it is STILL LEGAL."
If the decision stands when it's expected to be officially released in June, it would trigger a Louisiana law approved by the Legislature in 2006 to ban abortions in the Pelican State, with only one excep-tion.
Act 467, authored by former Sen. Ben Nevers, D-Bogalusa, and signed into law by former Democrat-ic Gov. Kathleen Blanco, immediately takes effect if "a US Supreme Court decision reverses, in whole or in part, Roe v. Wade, or an adoption on of an amendment to the U.S. Constitution which, in whole or in part, restores to the state the authority to prohibit abortion."
Act 467 prohibits abortion, unless necessary to save the life of a mother, with no exceptions for rape or incest. The law would immediately end abortions at Louisiana's three abortion clinics: The Wom-en's Health Care Clinic in New Orleans, Delta Clinic in Baton Rouge, and Hope Medical Group for Women in Shreveport.
Those three clinics and others conducted 118,509 abortions in Louisiana between 2006 and 2019, KEPL reports.
"While we have no indication if the leaked decision is accurate, we would celebrate the overturn of Roe v. Wade, restoring Louisiana's right to protect every precious unborn baby from abortion," said Benjamin Clapper, executive director of Louisiana Right to Life. The Supreme Court confirmed Tuesday that the draft opinion was authentic but not final. "With an abundance of public and private resources, Louisiana is ready to support women before and after birth. Louisiana is ready to be abor-tion-free," Clapper added.
Clapper noted Act 467 "ensures that the state of Louisiana has the authority to prohibit abortion fol-lowing the demise of Roe.
"Additionally, the Louisiana Love Life Amendment passed in 2020 protects our body of comprehen-sive pro-life laws disallowing state judges from 'finding' a right to abortion or the funding of abortion in the Louisiana Constitution."
On Monday, the Louisiana Senate also passed Senate Bill 342, known as the 2022 Reaffirmation of Human Life Protection Act, by a vote of 29-3. The measure now heads to the House for considera-tion.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Katrina Jackson, D-Monroe, states "it shall be unlawful for a physician or other person to perform an abortion, with or without the consent of the pregnant female."
The legislation makes exceptions for ectopic pregnancies or to save the life of the mother.
"Whoever commits the crime of abortion shall be imprisoned at hard labor for not less than one year nor more than 10 years and shall be fined not less than $10,000 nor more than $100,000," the bill reads.
"The time is NOW! The Louisiana House of Representatives should take up Senator @KatrinaRJackson's SB 342 – the Reaffirmation of the Human Life Protection Act — as fast as pos-sible and place it on @LouisianaGov's desk for signature!" Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry posted to Twitter Monday. "Let's have #LouisianaLead!"
Gov. John Bel Edwards is a pro-life Catholic Democrat who has opposed abortion throughout his political career.

Morgan City police arrest three on meth possession charges

(Editor’s note: The charges listed here and the narratives that go with them are provided by the police agencies that made the arrests. Guilt or innocence has not been determined in court.)

Morgan City police reported 10 arrests Tuesday and early Wednesday, three of them on methamphetamine possession charges.

Morgan City
Police Chief James F. Blair
reported that the Morgan City Police Department responded to 45 calls for service over the last 24-hour reporting period and made these arrests:

—Herbert Jermaine Brown, 39, Egle Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 3:34 p.m. Tuesday on a charge of violating terms of probation (6th Ward Morgan City Court).

—Anacelia Hernandez Montoya, 27, Cypress, Morgan City, was arrested at 4:28 p.m. Tuesday on a charge of child desertion.

--Mark Broussard, 32, Cedar Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 7:42 p.m. Tuesday on charges of possession of methamphetamine and resisting an officer, on warrants alleging possession of methamphetamine and attempted simple burglary, on a 6th Ward Morgan City Court warrant alleging failure to appear for sentencing, and 16th Judicial District Court warrants alleging failure to appear for sentencing hearing and failure to appear for trial.

—Damon Maurice Allen, 51, Cross Road No. 2, Morgan City, was arrested at 9:26 p.m. Tuesday on charges of possession of methamphetamine and a 16th Judicial District Court warrant alleging failure to appear for revocation hearing, and as a fugitive from the Lafourche Parish Sheriff’s Office.

—Louis David Topham, 46, Louisa Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 9:53 p.m. Tuesday on charges of possession of methamphetamine, possession of drug paraphernalia and improper lighting.

—Gregory S. Payne, 47, Oregon Street, Morgan City, was arrested on a charge of possession of stolen things ($5,000-$25,000) and as a fugitive from the Berwick Police Department.

—Trinity Nicole Todd, 27, Homestead Lane, Patterson was arrested at 11:30 p.m. Tuesday on a charge of failure to appear to pay fine and restitution (6th Ward Morgan City Court).

—Clarence McBride, 54, Brey Lane, Franklin, was arrested at 1:35 a.m. Wednesday as a fugitive from Louisiana Probation and Parole.

—Robert W. Henry, 58, Bayou Tranquille Road, was arrested at 3:36 a.m. Wednesday on charges of driving while intoxicated (first offense), careless operation and improper turning.

Sheriff's Office: Woman's death was due to accidental drowning

The death of a Morgan City woman whose body was recovered Sunday from the water near Berwick was due to accidental drowning, the St. Mary Sheriff's Office says its investigation has confirmed.

No foul play is suspected, the Sheriff's Office said.

The victim was identified this week as Monique Barrilleaux, 38.

Deputies from the Sheriff's Office Marine Section recovered after answering a call to an area about five miles south of Berwick.

Wheel House for May 4

FAMILY/FRIENDS
Good Hope Baptist Church, 908 Washington St., Patterson, celebrating Family and Friends Day at 11 a.m. May 15. Everyone welcome.

Pages

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