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Special flag will fly over Patterson in July

An American flag with a special meaning will fly over Patterson’s City Hall this summer.
Mayor Rodney Grogan showed the flag at Tues-day’s City Council meet-ing. It comes from the U.S. Navy in Washing-ton.
And it will mark the retirement of Chief Shallon McGuire Davis.
Davis will retire July 31 after 30 years in the Navy. She’s the daughter of Gloria McGuire and the late Russell McGuire.
The flag will fly over City Hall on her retire-ment date.
After Grogan made the announcement Tuesday, the council and the audience stood and applauded.

GOP governors ask Biden to increase energy production

North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum and 24 Republican governors have called on President Joe Biden to prioritize U.S. oil and gas production and restore American energy independence. They did so as crude oil hit $120 a barrel and is expected to surpass $200 a barrel, causing gas prices, and everything that depends on gasoline for transport, to skyrocket.

The market went into a correction on Monday, after the U.S. already entered into a 40-year inflationary high. Both are expected to push the U.S. toward a volatile recession.

This was totally avoidable, Burgum said.

“From the unsecured southern border to the underutilized oil fields of North Dakota, President Biden’s misguided policies continue to put U.S. citizens at risk and hold America back,” he said.

“The Biden administration has again failed to meet its obligation to hold a federal oil lease sale, [which] is further proof that this administration isn’t serious about U.S. energy security. The President needs to reverse his anti-oil policies and unleash American energy production to protect U.S. consumers and return our nation to a position where we can sell energy to our friends and allies instead of importing it from adversaries like Russia.”

The Biden administration argues that its restrictions on oil and gas production are necessary to combat climate change and that there are enough untapped permits for drilling on federal land that the industry could increase production if it wanted to.

North Dakota produces more than 1.13 million barrels of crude a day and 2,990,340 MCF (thousand cubic feet) of natural gas a day.

Crude oil production from North Dakota alone would easily offset the imports from Russia, the governor argues.

In Biden’s first year in office, he halted and restricted oil and gas leases on federal lands, stopped construction of the Keystone Pipeline, and redirected U.S. policy to import more oil from Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and Russia (OPEC+) instead of bolstering American oil and gas exploration and production.

While U.S. production on federal lands was stifled in 2021, the U.S. imported 8.47 million barrels per day of crude oil and refined products, of which 672,000 barrels per day (8%) came from Russia, according to the U.S. Energy Information Agency. The U.S. also imported 6.10 million barrels per day of crude oil, of which 199,000 barrels per day (3%) came from Russia.

The U.S. has been importing about 473,000 barrels per day of refined products from Russia, Andrew Lipow of Houston-based Lipow Oil Associates LLC, told The Center Square in an email. Of this, 354,000 barrels a day is unfished oils, which means they need to be upgraded in refineries in the U.S. – mostly on the Gulf Coast, because the Russian refineries aren’t unable to upgrade them.

The U.S. also imports 697,000 barrels a day of gasoline blendstocks, of which 50,000 barrels a day (7%) came from Russia, Lipow said. This mainly goes to states on the East Coast.

The U.S. also imports 287,000 barrels a day of distillate, of which 23,000 barrels a day (8%) come from Russia. This also mainly goes to states on the East Coast, he said.

The 25 governors in their joint statement to Biden called on him “to reverse his policies and restore America’s energy independence for our citizens as well as our allies abroad.

“By removing his bans on new oil and gas development on federal lands, building the Keystone XL pipeline, and reinstating regulatory reforms to streamline energy permitting, we can protect our national energy security and sell to our friends rather than buy from our enemies – specifically Russia."

Governors from Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia and Wyoming signed the letter.

North Dakota’s two Republican U.S. senators, John Hoeven and Kevin Cramer, along with seven other cosponsors, also introduced the American Energy Independence from Russia Act in the U.S. Senate.

The bill would require the Biden administration to submit an energy independence plan to Congress within 30 days that provides an energy security evaluation and risk assessment, and plans to leverage America’s oil and gas resources.

It would authorize the construction and operation of the Keystone XL pipeline, which Biden shut down when he entered office, and remove regulatory hurdles to increase liquefied natural gas exports.

It also would prohibit any presidential moratoria on new federal leases and require the U.S. Department of Interior to hold a minimum of four oil and natural gas lease sales in fiscal year 2022 in each state that has federal land available for leasing. It also would prohibit the U.S. Energy Department Secretary from drawing down the Strategic Petroleum Reserve until the Secretary of the Interior issues a plan to increase oil and gas production on federal lands and waters.

BRENT MICHAEL DALTON

Brent Michael Dalton, 41, a native of Morgan City and resident of Berwick, died Sunday, Feb. 20, 2022.
He is survived by his mother, Gail Rogers of Berwick; brother, Chad Dalton of Alabama; stepsister, Mary Williams of Houma; stepbrother, Matt Dalton of Morgan City; and a host of other relatives.
He was preceded in death by his father, a half-sister, and paternal and maternal grandparents.
Graveside services will be held at a later date.

Wheel House for March 9

SPRING REVIVAL
At First Baptist Church, 1915 Victor II Blvd., Morgan City, March 27-30. Times: Sunday, 10:45 a.m. and Music Celebration at 6 p.m.; and Monday-Wednesday, 6 p.m. Features Evangelist Sam Moore and musician Robbie Briggs. For info call 985-384-5920. Public invited.

EASTER EGG HUNT
Hosted by New Age Patterson Civic Organization April 9 at Park Street Park (behind Hattie Watts Elementary), Patterson. Starts at 2 p.m. with free food and door prizes. Hunt starts at 3:30 p.m. Public invited.

CHERYL ANN RULF LANDRY

Cheryl Ann Rulf Landry, 63, a native and resident of Morgan City, died Saturday, March 5, 2022, at Ochsner Health Center in New Orleans.
She is survived by two children, Chad Landry and Kalyn Palmature; five grandchildren; and two sisters, Patricia Aucoin and Terry Rulf.
She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, maternal and paternal grandparents, and a brother.
Visitation will be Wednesday, 6-9 p.m., at Twin City Funeral Home and will continue Thursday at Pharr Chapel United Methodist Church from 9 a.m. until services at 11 a.m. Burial will follow in Morgan City Cemetery.
Twin City Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

DONNA BERG McCLELLAND

Donna Berg McClelland, age 78, passed away on Sunday, February 27, 2022. She was a native of Port Arthur, TX and a resident of Berwick, LA. She enjoyed scrapbooking and doing various crafts. Donna was a member of the African Violet Club.
Family and friends of Donna are invited to attend the Visitation on Saturday, March 19, 2022 from 12-2pm with a Memorial Service immediately following at Hargrave Funeral Home.
Donna is preceded in death by her husband, Pat McClelland; parents, Peter Berg and Hallie Vick; stepfather, Jessie Roland Vick; grandson, Jacob Ward; siblings, Peggy Love, Catherine Andrews, Marie Powell, Ruby Sexton, Rita James, Moris King; uncle, Claude Ramdohr.
She leaves to cherish her memory to her daughter, Vickie Voorhies (Roger); sons, Shawn McClelland, Kelly McClelland (Brenda); siblings, David Berg, Ann Colvin, Janie Richardson, Gladys Wilson; grandchildren, Malorie McClelland, Abigail Voorhies, Victoria St. Romain, Sarah Thomas, Breanna Brock, Terri Voorhies, Samantha Voorhies; great-grandchildren, Blaze, Scarlet, Michael, Ellenor, Saydee, Wesley, Gavin, Max, Alexis, Grace, Autumn and a host of nieces, nephews and other relatives and friends.
To offer a message of condolence to the McClelland family, please visit www.hargravefuneralhome.com

DEANNA ARCEMONT GUIDRY

March 11, 1945 — March 3, 2022
Deanna Arcemont Guidry, age 76, a native and resident of Morgan City, LA, passed away on Thursday, March 3, 2022, at Ochsner St. Mary from Pneumonia. Deanna enjoyed attending church and being with her friends and family.
Family and friends of Deanna are invited to attend the Memorial Visitation on Saturday, March 12, 2022, from 9:30am-10am at Holy Cross Catholic Church following a Rosary at 10am. Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 11am at Holy Cross Catholic Church. Deanna will be laid to rest at the Morgan City Cemetery.
Deanna will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by her daughter, Tina Guidry Grancio and her husband P.J. of Cypress, TX; two sons, Brad Guidry and his wife Tana of Morgan City, LA, and Greg Guidry and his wife Kris of Spring, TX; seven grandchildren, Brett Guidry, Marissa Geiger, Sarah Salinas, Karley Marino, Taylor Grancio, Thomas Salinas and Paige Grancio; five great-grandchildren, Olivia and Charlotte Bridges, Bodhi Guidry, Elenor Geiger, Harper Marino, and Beckett Guidry (on the way); four sisters and two brothers.
Deanna is preceded in death by her husband, Gilmore “Butch” Guidry, Jr.; her parents, Nick Acremont Jr. and Olive Landry.
Special thanks to Maison Jardin Living Community and all the employees, Tammy Williams and Bobbie Ruffin for all the exceptional care given to Deanna.

From the editor: War in Ukraine raises oil prices; does it solve a St. Mary mystery?

While the horrific events in Ukraine seem far away, those events have touched St. Mary in a very real way. And Russia’s invasion may have solved a 7½-year-old St. Mary mystery.
As this is written Monday, oil contracts for West Texas intermediate crude oil are going for $118 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, pushed up first by recovering demand from COVID shutdowns and then by sanctions levied against Russia.
That’s the highest price since May 2014, just before the beginning of a long slide in prices that hammered St. Mary’s economy.
The higher oil price means we’re paying more for gasoline, which will have economic consequences of its own. But we can hope the higher price will reverse some of the damage sustained since 2014.
The slump
Our parish makes ships and grows sugar cane, so we can’t say the local economy is completely dependent on the energy industry. You’re not absolutely dependent on having a left leg, either.
But we developed a noticeable economic limp when St. Mary’s employment fell from more than 27,000 in summer 2014 to 18,500 as of December 2021.
Those are Great Depression, “Grapes of Wrath,” “Brother, can you spare a dime?” numbers. Truth be told, we muddled through. Local governments budgeted conservatively, and services continued at close to pre-plunge levels. Oil prices started heading up for real about the time COVID-19 struck, and worldwide recovery in demand for energy has been pushing the price up more or less steadily since late 2020.
And, although there has been real economic pain for local people, the employment numbers exaggerate the effect on St. Mary.
We can’t assume 27,000 St. Mary people were working in 2014 just because 27,000 people were working in St. Mary. The Census Bureau says that in the five years before COVID-19, an average of about 53% of St. Mary people 16 and over had jobs.
That means the number of people employed in St. Mary exceeded the number of St. Mary people with jobs by something like 8,000. Not all the impact fell on people who live here.
The world energy market has already gotten a shock from the decision not to open the Nordstrom 2 natural gas pipeline from Russia to Germany. More sanctions targeting Russian oil and gas may be coming.
Russia is the world’s third-largest producer of oil at about 10.5 million barrels a day, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. That’s just less than Saudi Arabia. The United States is comfortably in first at 11.5 million.
At home, conflicting federal court rulings have delayed federal offshore energy lease sales.
We’ll have to see whether the higher price and whatever lease environment that develops will lure back the kind of Gulf of Mexico exploration and production that led to that pre-drop heyday in 2014.
Meanwhile,
in Ukraine ...
Ukraine was one of the subject “republics” in the Soviet Union. After the Soviet Union fell apart, Ukraine became independent and was rather proud of it.
Sometime around 1991, I covered a Lafayette gathering of state government officials and representatives of the pre-born Ukrainian nation. I weaseled my way into an interview with one of the visitors and asked what hopes he had for the Ukraine.
No, no, no, he answered. Not “the” Ukraine. Just Ukraine — an independent country.
He was serious about it, and so were his fellow countrymen, who began almost immediately to create trade and political ties with Europe.
Sadly, the new nation was dogged by corruption. Russia meddled at every chance. The Ukranians had to invent their own economy from scratch with no scratch. Their elected leaders were a mixture of incompetents, true reformers and Russian lackeys.
Ukranians rose up. They took to the streets in the Orange Revolution of 2004 and succeeded in getting a fraudulent presidential election overturned and rerun.
They were back in the streets again in the winter of 2013-14. The president elected in 2010, Victor Yanukovych, shut down work on a trade and diplomacy deal between Ukraine and the European Union. The blockage was seen as caving in to Russia, and by now, Ukrainians had all the Russia they could stand.
So thousands spent that long, cold winter in a Kyiv square called Maidan. They were bullied, shoved, shot and beaten, but they weren’t defeated. By spring 2014, they succeeded in forcing Yanukovych to flee to Russia. (There’s a great documentary on those events, “Winter on Fire,” on Netflix.)
In Russia, Vladimir Putin, who has tried desperately to keep the break-away republics closer to Russia than to the rest of Europe, was not amused. It was after Yanukovych’s retreat that Russia seized Crimea and intensified fighting in the southeastern Ukrainian region that was the flashpoint for the Russian invasion.
And that’s where St. Mary comes in. Maybe.
Mystery solved?
On Sept. 11, 2014, just months after the end of the Maidan protests, some St. Mary people received emergency text alerts warning of an explosion at a carbon black plant in Centerville.
The text warned of a “toxic fume” release. Social media posts began showing fake screen captures, made to look like CNN and newspaper websites, reporting on the incident.
The company that owns the plant where the explosion supposedly took place quickly stepped up to squelch the report, as did Duval Arthur, who is now the Berwick mayor but was then the parish’s homeland security director.
In 2015, writer Adrian Chen of the New York Times Magazine linked the St. Mary hoax to the Internet Research Agency, a government-linked hacker operation in Russia. Chen called it an organized disinformation campaign, complete with thousands of tweets from fake accounts and a YouTube video showing men in Middle Eastern clothing claiming credit for the terrorist attack that never happened.
Special counsel Robert Mueller obtained a 2018 indictment against the Internet Research Agency, accusing the group of trying to tamper with the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
Even so, there was no obvious connection between a bogus St. Mary explosion and the presidential election. So the question remained: What were the Russians doing in this parish?
The answer may be that they were practicing.
Before the Russians began their invasion of Ukraine, the Biden administration warned that Moscow would rely on misinformation. And Moscow did, with some of the same tools used in the 2014 hoax.
There was a fake YouTube video showing the allegedly decrepit condition of the Ukrainian military. Fake CNN social media posts “reported” that actor Steven Segal was on the ground in Ukraine, and that an American activist had been killed there.
We’ve grown used to the idea that we live in a world where nations trade with and depend on one another. Sudden shocks in the oil economy are nothing new.
But it is strange to think that our largely rural parish might have been the testing ground for a new weapon in a war thousands of miles away.
Bill Decker is managing editor of the Morgan City Review.

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