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Senate committee advances tenure task force resolution

BATON ROUGE--The Senate Committee on Education unanimously advanced a resolution Thursday that would create a task force to study tenure for college professors.

Senate Concurrent Resolution 6, sponsored by Sen. Stewart Cathey, R-Monroe, would create the Task Force on Tenure in Postsecondary Education. The task force would report back to lawmakers with suggestions on changing tenure policies in the state.

The resolution’s language suggests that Cathey, acting in line with Republican lawmakers in other states, is concerned about possible indoctrination of students at Louisiana universities.

“Postsecondary students should be confident that they are being exposed to a variety of viewpoints, including those that are dissenting,” the resolution reads. The resolution seeks to ensure that “faculty members are not using their courses for the purpose of political, ideological, religious or anti-religious indoctrination.”

While the original resolution called for just two faculty representatives on the task force, Cathey amended the bill to allow for one from each of Louisiana’s university systems. Cathey said that he was asked to do this by Jim Henderson, president of the University of Louisiana system.

The resolution has been met with a backlash from professors. The Association of Louisiana Faculty Senates passed a resolution condemning Cathey’s proposal, as did the LSU Faculty Senate.

LSU Faculty Senate President Mandi Lopez testified against the resolution.

"Novel ideas that go against convention often meet resistance, but it is these ideas and the subsequent endeavors that change the world," Lopez said. "Tenure allows experts to test the boundaries of conventional wisdom, without fear of reprisal or interference."

Henderson also testified before the committee, advocating the importance of tenure.

“Tenure does not protect against incompetence or malfeasance or other issues of cause,” Henderson said. Since 1940, he said, the American Association of University Professors “issued their first statement on tenure and academic freedom that's been a bedrock component of what we do.”

Henderson said that while he thought that Cathey had pure intentions, he disagreed with the language about indoctrination. Henderson said that from his perspective, a task force was not necessary, but he said that he would participate.

“I will be an active participant as well as all the others that are appointed to it,” Henderson said. “And I think at the end of the day, it will result in an unequivocal statement of the value of indeterminate tenure in our work.”

Henderson also lamented the way that tenure is viewed in some circles.

“Unfortunately, we are in a time where caricatures about a concept are what people are against, and sometimes they can create that caricature and say, ‘This is the straw man, and I'm going to defeat you.’ Even if a straw man has no basis in reality," Henderson said.

In an interview, LSU President William Tate IV said that he did not oppose the task force.

“Democracy is about having conversations,” Tate said.

Sen. Kirk Talbot, R-River Ridge, said that he was concerned that free speech is not being respected on college campuses.

“It seems like tenure, at his height, was probably like I said in the late ‘60s,1970s,” he said. “They had a lot of political discourse, and they wanted professors to speak their mind. But it seems like we're going in the opposite direction.”

“They're not respecting the First Amendment anymore,” Talbot said. “It used to be valued. Now we have college campuses telling people you can't come here.”

Cathey said that the outcome of the task force is not certain.

“Maybe a recommendation actually strengthens tenure,” Cathey said.

Cathey’s tweets tell a different story.

Earlier this month, Cathey tweeted that faculty who break the law should lose their tenure. He followed that up with several broader comments on tenure.

“Would never advocate for tenure for anyone in any profession!” Cathey tweeted.

House Committee jettisons multiple minimum wage measures

BATON ROUGE--The House Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations on Thursday killed four bills seeking to raise the minimum wage through different approaches.

Louisiana is one of five states that does not have its own minimum wage.

House Bill 472, sponsored by Rep. Tammy Phelps, D-Shreveport, sought to increase the tipped minimum wage. Presently, tipped employees, defined as those who make at least $30 per month in tips, can be paid as little as $2.13 an hour by their employers as long as they make at least $7.25 after tips.

The bill would have increased the employers’ part of the wage to $4.26 an hour.

“None of the good times that we offer here in Louisiana would be possible if it were not for our service employees to work for these businesses,” Phelps said.

Megan Klock, director of operations at Ruffino’s, a high-end restaurant, spoke in opposition to the bill.

“Tipped employee labor at Ruffino’s runs about 4 or 5% on a periodic basis,” Klock said. “So for 5% of our cost of labor, to double that tip credit rate would double our labor percentage. That means we would immediately take four to five basis points off the bottom line in an industry that we are already working on very thin margins.”

House Bill 101, sponsored by Rep. Malinda White, I-Bogalusa, sought to raise the minimum wage for state employees to $9 an hour.

White told the committee that she used to earn the minimum wage as a single mother. “It’s not right,” she said.

Rep. Dodie Horton, R-Haughton, said that public employees making below $9 in Louisiana were “unskilled laborers.”

Peter Robins-Brown, executive director for Louisiana Progress, pushed back on Horton’s characterization.

“These are skilled jobs,” Robins-Brown said. “I'm not very good with landscaping, you know, but I think that's a skill. You know, I don't think that any job is unskilled.”

Horton clarified that she meant that the workers were unskilled when they were hired but learn skills on the job.

House Bill 311, sponsored by Rep. Denise Marcelle, D-Baton Rouge, sought to set the minimum wage to $10 an hour in 2023 and $12 in 2024.

“People will pay what they have to pay, and of course, that's their profit margin that's going to go down,” Marcelle said. “I understand that, but what I don't understand is people who have been elected by the citizens of the state not putting the people first. I'm all for businesses. I believe the same thing that Rep. White said--when we put the money in the hands of the citizens, they will spend the money in the economy.”

Rep. Raymond Crews, R-Bossier City, opposed the bill, arguing that it would make it harder for job seekers to find positions.

“I think it actually makes Louisiana worse off and reduces opportunities for employment,” Crews said.

House Bill 229, sponsored by Rep. Kyle Green, D-Marrero, sought to place a constitutional amendment raising the minimum wage to $11.65 on the ballot so that voters could decide whether they want it.

“The reason why I put in $11.65 an hour was I thought it was a middle-of-the-road approach, because when you take into consideration as to what the minimum wage increase was when it was enacted by Congress in July of 2007 to the current level, at seven and a quarter, when you do the CPI index,” Green said, “what that is now the value is $11.65 an hour.”

“So basically, what it would be doing, should the people approve this amendment, is it would keep right with inflation,” Green said.

Frankie Robertson, president of the Amandla Group, which aims to help the Black community overcome health inequities, spoke in favor of the bill.

“If you ask us as employees and people as humans and not a business lobby, then we will tell you that we are not a burden to the very businesses that we helped to thrive,” Robertson said. “We are in essence the backbone of the business, and we deserve to have people that raise our minimum wage to pay for the work that we do.”

Jim Patterson, vice president of government relations for the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry, argued against the concept of a minimum wage.

“Right now, wages are finding their level based on the high demand for labor and the shortage of labor,” Patterson said. “That's the way that an economy will work if there isn't the interference that, unfortunately, government has chosen by setting a minimum wage.”

Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, has proposed increasing the minimum wage several times since he took office in 2016. But the Legislature, which is led by Republicans, has blocked each attempt.

Survey: Louisiana people split on abortion

BATON ROUGE--A survey released Thursday suggests that Louisiana residents are split almost evenly over whether to maintain legal access to abortions.

The survey, by the LSU Reilly Center for Media & Public Affairs, found that 49% of the 508 residents surveyed opposed legal access to abortions in all or most cases, and 46% supported it.

In a similar survey in 2016, 55% of state residents thought abortion should be illegal in all or most cases while 40% thought it should be legal.

The shift occurred primarily among Democrats. Over the last six years, the level of Democratic support for legal abortions rose to 74% percent from 51%, and the percentage of Democrats opposed to legal abortion fell to 19% from 42%.

The percentage of Republicans who largely opposed legal abortion in most or all cases slipped during those years to 69% from 73%, while the percentage of Republicans supporting legal abortions inched up to 24% from 23%.

Support for legal abortions also gained somewhat among political independents, to 47% in the new survey from 40% in 2016. The share of independents who think that abortion should be illegal in most or all cases fell to 50% from 56% six years ago.

Changes in aggregate opinions are not necessarily from people changing their minds, the survey noted. The people might be switching to parties that better align with their views, or the composition of the parties might be changing with generations of voters, the survey report stated.

Abortion is legal in Louisiana up to 20 weeks of pregnancy, but it might be banned if the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade in June. Louisiana and surrounding states approved laws that would ban abortions if Roe were overturned.

Louisiana lawmakers are also creating other restrictive legislation. On April 12, a state Senate committee advanced a bill that would criminalize the sale of abortion-inducing pills online or through the mail.

The new Louisiana Survey also says that support for the death penalty for persons convicted of murder has slightly dropped since 2018, to 51% from 58%.

Opposition to the death penalty remained edged up to 38% of those surveyed from 34% in 2018.

The increase in opposition is largely among political independents. Independent opposition rose to 42% from 31% in 2018.

Democrats remain largely opposed to capital punishment and support for it dropped from 43% to 32% over the last four years.

Republican support for the death penalty has not changed much since the 2018 survey, dropping slightly to 70% from 74%.

More than 650 people have been executed under the death penalty in Louisiana, and 62 people are on death row at the Louisiana Penitentiary at Angola. Last week, Louisiana lawmakers rejected a fourth bill since 2017 aimed at abolishing the death penalty.

The Louisiana Survey data was recorded from a geographically diverse sample of 508 Louisiana residents. They were interviewed by telephone or online survey between Feb. 21 to March 14, 2022. The results are the final installment of a survey.

The Reilly Center for Media & Public Affairs is a part of the LSU Manship School of Mass Communication.

Keeping Ochsner St. Mary beautiful

Ochsner St. Mary staff members participated in the Keep Louisiana Beautiful campaign in April by cleaning up the hospital grounds. Pictured from left are Ochsner St. Mary employees Sharon Terrebonne, Danette Kelso, Raymond Pisani, Louis Bourgeois and Lauren Vinning.

Ochsner St. Mary Photo

Batter up: Morgan City T-ball, wee ball and softball get underway

Shaw Park was the setting Saturday for opening ceremonies for Morgan City's wee ball, T-ball and softball leagues. This year, 292 youngsters 3-11 signed up. Mayor League Dragna threw the ceremonial first pitch to Mayor Pro Tem Steve Domangue.

The sponsors this year are Garber Brothers for wee ball; Courville's Seafood, Candy Fleet, A.J. Dohmann, Peace Candles, Tiger Island, Landry's Legal and LAD Services for T-ball; and Courville's Seafood, M C Bank, Candy Fleet, Sam's Lawncare, Grizzaffi's, Guidry and Horaist Orthopedics, and Cannata's Family Market for softball.

The Review/Bill Decker

Take a look at the Bayou Chene Flood Control Structure

The newly completed Bayou Chene Flood Control Structure is the largest structure of its kind in the country. It was officially declared complete Friday with a ribbon-cutting.

The project consists of a holding structure and a 446-foot barge. When high water threatens, the barge can be moved into place across Bayou Chene, pivoting on giant pins. Once in place, it can be filled with water to setting into a holding structure beneath the bayou.

Sealevel Inc. of Thibodaux was the major contractor, and Bollinger's Amelia yard built the barge. In all, 130 people worked on the structure, which took two years to complete.

The $80 million project was funded through the Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority.

It's designed to prevent back-flooding when the Atchafalaya River runs high, protecting 6,000 homes and 1,000 businesses in six parishes.

The Review/Bill Decker

Four arrested on drug 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 and parish officers made four arrests Thursday on drug charges.

Morgan City

Police Chief James F. Blair reported that the Morgan City Police Department responded to 40 calls for service over the last 24-hour reporting period and made these arrests:

—Trevor A. Bergeron, 52, 11th Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 10:23 a.m. Thursday on charges of possession of cocaine and improper lighting.

—Galen Wayne Ford, 20, Ditch Avenue, Morgan City, was arrested at 9:50 a.m. Thursday on a charge of indecent behavior with a juvenile.

St. Mary

Sheriff Blaise Smith advised that over the last 24-hour reporting period, the Sheriff’s Office responded to 32 complaints and made these arrests:

—Michael Ford, 52, Jackson, Mississippi, was arrested at 6:30 p.m. Thursday by the Narcotics Section on a charge of possession of marijuana. Ford was released on a summons to appear July 19.

—Martin Hartzog, 50, Clinton, Mississippi, was arrested at 6:30 p.m. Thursday by the Narcotics Section on charges of improper lane usage and possession of marijuana. Hartzog was released on a summons to appear July 19.

—Kencay Harrison, 44, Decatur, Mississippi, was arrested at 6:30 p.m. Thursday by the Narcotics Section on charges of improper lane usage and possession of marijuana. Hartzog was released on a summons to appear July 19.

—Jonathan Joseph Arcemont, 51, Baldwin, was arrested at 10:27 a.m. Thursday on charges of driving under suspension and proper equipment required on vehicles. Arcemont was released on a summons to appear July 19.

—Juvenile female, 16, Morgan City, was arrested at 6:28 p.m. Thursday on a charge of battery of a dating partner. The juvenile female was released into the custody of a guardian pending juvenile court proceedings.

Saturday is Drug Take Back Day in Morgan City, Berwick

Morgan City and Berwick police offer the opportunity to rid your home of unwanted medications with a Drug Take Back Day 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday.

The Morgan City Police Department is again partnering with the Drug Enforcement Administration, Walgreens Pharmacy and Walmart Neighborhood Market to allow citizens to dispose of all unwanted and expired prescription medication.

In Morgan City, you can go to either Walgreens Pharmacy, 815 Brashear Ave., or Walmart Neighborhood Market, 1002 La. 70, to dispose of your medication.

The Morgan City Police Department also offers an onsite medication drop box at 723 Myrtle St. in Morgan City 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Friday to dispose of all unwanted medication year-round.

In Berwick bring your unwanted prescription drugs to the Dollar General, 4790 La. 182, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday.

Berwick police, who also partner with the DEA, offer an onsite medication drop box 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday at Berwick Town Hall in the lobby.

Remember it is never safe to dispose of these types of medications down your drain. Both police departments said medications can be dropped off with no question asked.

'A beautiful day': Officials cut ribbon for Bayou Chene structure

The biggest structure of its kind in the country, designed to eliminate one of the region's most persistent flooding vulnerabilities, was officially opened when Gov. John Bel Edwards cut the ceremonial ribbon at the Bayou Chene Flood Control Structure.

Boats carried state and local official and representatives of the companies that worked on the $80 million project from the Amelia boat launch to the structure.

"It is far more than what I envisioned in my mind ...," Edwards said on the deck of the 446-foot barge that is the structure's centerpiece. "This is what $80 million will do."

"Today -- today is a beautiful day," said state Sen. Bret Allain, one of the lawmakers who struggled for most of a decade to secure funding for the structure.

The structure is designed to block back-flooding when the Atchafalaya River runs high. High water on the river can result in flooding in six parishes, threatening 6,000 homes and 1,000 businesses, Allain said.

Three times since 2011, officials ordered a barge floated into place on Bayou Chene and then sank it to block flooding. The solution worked, but it required days to put into operation and cost millions of dollars.

The new structure is composed of the barge, constructed at Bollinger's Amelia facility, which can be moved into place into a holding structure. Closure, which will be triggered when the Atchafalaya at Morgan City reaches 7 feet, will now require hours rather than days.

Among the dignitaries at Friday's event was Chip Kline, director of the Coastal Restoration and Protection Authority, the agency through which funding was secured.

"It's good to say we no longer have to worry about sheet piles and barges," Kline said. "The Bayou Chene Structure is in place."

Druilhet arrest announced by sheriff

The St. Mary Parish Sheriff’s Office has posted the arrest of Gerald Joseph Druilhet Jr. on a warrant for second degree murder and illegal possession of a handgun by juvenile.
The SMPSO post is as follows:
UPDATE: Gerald Joseph Druilhet Jr. Arrested
On April 28, 2022, the U.S. Marshals made contact with Gerald Joseph Druilhet Jr. in Texas and arrested him on the St. Mary Parish Sheriff’s Office warrant for 2nd-degree murder and illegal possession of a handgun by a juvenile.
Sheriff Blaise Smith and the Investigations Division of the SMPSO would like to thank the U.S. Marshals for their assistance in this investigation.
Original Post:
Sheriff Blaise Smith announced that the investigation of a shooting of a young man in Baldwin has progressed with the arrests of two subjects for accessory and an active warrant for the identified suspect.
On December 13, 2021, deputies responded to a report of a shooting on Railroad Avenue in Baldwin. Upon arrival, it was learned that the victim, Treamell Robertson, 18, had been shot and was deceased.
SMPSO Detectives began an investigation into the incident. As the investigation progressed, two female subjects were arrested and charged in connection with the incident:
Tamika Stewart Bougere, 45, Baldwin, LA, was arrested on December 17, 2021, at 12:52 pm accessory after the fact-2nd-degree murder, accessory after the fact- illegal possession of a handgun by juvenile, and obstruction of justice-tampering.
Catrina Angelant Druilhet, 42, Baldwin, LA, was arrested on January 31, 2022, at 6:39 pm for accessory after the fact-murder, obstruction of justice-tampering, and accessory after the fact-illegal possession of a handgun by a juvenile.
Detectives identified the subject in the shooting as Gerald Joseph Druilhet, Jr., 17, of Baldwin. A warrant was obtained for the arrest of Gerald Druilhet, Jr. on the charges of 2nd-degree murder and illegal possession of a handgun by a juvenile.
Gerald Druilhet, Jr. is considered to be armed and dangerous.

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