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THOMAS RIVET JR.

Thomas Rivet Jr. 85, a resident of Bayou Vista, passed away on Thursday, December 30, 2021 at Ochsner St. Mary Hospital.
Thomas was born on November 5, 1936 in Plaquemine, the son of Thomas Rivet Sr., and William E. and Agnes Gonzales Brown.
Thomas served his country proudly in the United States Marine Corps, serving during the Korean War. While in the Marines, he was one of the Marine’s first mechanics to work on the first jets that were built for the Marine Corps. After three years of serving his country, he became a boat captain and a crane operator serving for 42 years offshore in the oil and gas industry. When he wasn’t working or spending time with his family, he enjoyed a day out on the water fishing. He was the true patriarch of his family and will be deeply missed by all.
He will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his wife Barbara Ackerman Rivet of Bayou Vista; two children, Donna DiMaggio and husband Darryl of Bayou Vista and Tina M. Johnson of Patterson; six grandchildren, Amy, Darryl III, Tiffany, Courtney, Melody and Isaiah; three great grandchildren; two brothers, Douglas Brown and James Brown; four sisters, Mary Smith, B.J. Massey, Bobbye Lynn Bordelon and Debbie Prisock.
Thomas was preceded in death by his mother, Agnes Gonzales Brown; his fathers, William E. Brown Sr. and Thomas Rivet Sr.; his son, Thomas Rivet III; a grandson, Thomas Rivet IV; one brother, William Brown Jr.
Funeral services will be held at 11:00 a.m. on Monday, January 3, 2022 at Twin City Funeral Home with Monsignor J. Douglas Courville officiating. A visitation will be held from 9:00 a.m. until the time of the service and following the service Thomas will be laid to rest with Military Honors in the Morgan City Cemetery. Military Honors will be rendered by the United States Marine Corps Funeral Honor Guard and the East St. Mary Veterans Funeral Squad.

Morgan City police radio logs for Dec. 30

The following are the radio dispatch logs from the Morgan City Police Department. To report unlawful or suspicious activity, call the Police Department at 985-380-4605.
Thursday, Dec. 30
6:43 a.m. Sixth Street; arrest.
8:58 a.m.: Glenwood Street; animal complaint.
9:06 a.m.: Wren Street; assistance.
9:51 a.m.: Egle; animal complaint.
10:12 a.m. :La. 182; complaint.
10:18 a.m.: Myrtle Street; complaint.
11:15 a.m.: Levee Road; arrest.
11:23 a.m.: Fourth Street; escort.
11:42 a.m.: Hilda Street; vehicle burglary.
12:58 p.m.: Arenz Street; suspicious person.
1:20 p.m.: Brashear Avenue; traffic stop.
3 p.m. Bernice Street; animal complaint.
3:18 p.m.: Iowa; lost and found.
3:36 p.m.: Myrtle Street; arrest.
3:38 p.m.: Second Street; unauthorized use.
3:39 p.m.: La. 182; arrest.
5:04 p.m.: Front Street; arrest.
5:10 p.m.: Franklin Street; arrest.
5:36 p.m.: Eastbound U.S. 90; complaint.
5:52 p.m.: Halsey Street; loud music.

The storm that missed, the virus that hit: Ida, COVID made news in Tri-City area

We feared a direct hit from one of the most dangerous hurricanes to strike Louisiana. It missed us, mostly.
We weren’t expecting a new variety of COVID-19 to take us back to the days of masks, jammed hospitals and limits on occupancy in public places. But the virus hit us.
We applauded the accomplishments of an adopted St. Mary resident at the very highest levels of track and field, and a team of preteen girls from Berwick who didn’t know how to give up.
St. Mary Parish residents learned that there aren’t as many of us at the end of the decade as there were at the start.
We waited to cross to bridges. A lot.
Those were among the biggest stories in the Tri-City area in 2021. Most of us won’t miss the trepidation and irritation that another year of pandemic brought us. But 2021 had its shining moments, too.

Ida: The
'whew' factor
Ida caused death and destruction from Venezuela to New York, killing at least 95 people from late August into early September.
But for St. Mary residents, the scariest days were from about Aug. 26 until landfall Aug. 29. That’s when the forecast track left open the possibility that Ida would come ashore somewhere near Morgan City — in the worst case, just to the west — with winds of at least 110 mph.
The new forecast cone issued by the National Hurricane Center every three hours continued to show something like a direct hit until only about 20 hours before landfall. Then, about 4 p.m. Aug. 28, the forecast began to show an easterly movement in the storm’s path.
That move continued until Ida’s center hit Port Fourchon Sunday, Aug. 29, 16 years to the day from when Katrina devastated New Orleans.
The storm hit with sustained winds of 150 mph, Category 4 strength, with reports of gusts of up 172 mph. Ida tied 2020’s Hurricane Laura as the strongest storm to hit Louisiana in at least 150 years.
At least 33 Louisiana people died in the storm or its aftermath. Virtually all of Terre-bonne and Lafourche was without electricity immediately after the storm, and many residents of those parishes waited for weeks to have power again.
Buildings in the strike zone were devastated. Ports, schools, businesses and government offices were shut down, some for weeks.
Every building in Grand Isle sustained some damage. Nearly half were destroyed.
St. Mary didn’t escape entirely unscathed. Trees and utility poles were knocked down here and there in the eastern part of the parish. Power was out over large stretches of the area until at least Aug. 30. And we learned how vulnerable cellphones can be to bad weather when service was interrupted on some carriers for several days.
When the lights came back on, we learned that we don’t have to take a direct hit to feel a storm’s effects.
Suddenly, eastern St. Mary was on the boundary between parishes to the east, where people couldn’t get gas or groceries, and evacuees returning from the west. The roads were crowded. So were grocery stores, where employees hustled to keep high-demand items in stock. Gas stations experienced long lines and frequent shortages of fuel.
Traffic control and the need to keep order at gas stations added to the burden on first responders, many of whom had been working extra hours even before the storm hit.
To make matters worse, the interruption in data service affected the modern communications systems used by police.
Ida left Louisiana to spawn tornadoes in the eastern United States and flash flooding in New York City. Esti-mates of the damage inflicted by Ida range upward from $65 billion.

The delta variant
Not even 16 months of life and death with COVID-19 could prepare us for the speed and power with which the new delta variant hit St. Mary.
By mid-summer, new cases of COVID-19, along with COVID deaths and hospitalizations, had been on the wane since the peak of the third wave of infections over the winter. Most mask mandates and public occupancy restrictions were gone.
Best of all, three COVID vaccines — the two-shot Moderna and Pfizer formulations, and the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine — had been widely available since the spring. Public health officials said the vaccines, limited to adults at first and eventually offered to children as young as 5, are 90% effective.
St. Mary people were slow to embrace vaccinations. By July, less than 30% of the parish’s population had been vaccinated, trailing the state and the nation.
The first confirmed Louisiana case of infection with the delta variant came around the first of July. By the middle of the month, St. Mary was one of two parishes characterized by the state Health Department as being at “highest risk” for COVID, based on the positivity rate of COVID tests and the average number of new cases each day over the course of two weeks.
At the first of August, the number of deaths began to rise. Through August and much of September, St. Mary averaged more than one COVID death per day.
Between Aug. 1 and the end of October, when newly imposed restrictions were lifted again, 74 St. Mary people died of COVID-related causes. More than 2,600 St. Mary people tested positive for COVID over that time.
The new surge in COVID cases led to the cancellation of the Louisiana Shrimp and Petroleum Festival for the second straight year.
Statewide, the delta-fueled fourth surge in COVID cases pushed the number of hospitalized people to a peak above 3,000.
As the year ends, public officials are monitoring the threat from another variant, this one called Omicron. This variant, already the dominant form of COVID in the United States, is said to be more easily spread but less severe than delta based on the early data.
But statewide hospitalizations had risen from 207 to 514 Dec. 17-28. More than 200 new COVID cases have been reported in that time in St. Mary, where the vaccination rate is now just over 42%.

Tootie
Vernon “Tootie” Norwood came to Morgan City with his family from New Orleans in 2005 to escape the damage inflicted by Hurricane Katrina. Coaches in the public schools here persuaded him to come out for track.
They knew talent when they saw it.
LSU’s website calls Norwood “one of the greatest 400-meter runners ever to wear an LSU uniform.” He was a four-time NCAA champion, an eight-time All-American and a nine-time All-SEC performer. In 2015, he won both the NCAA indoor and outdoor championships in the 400 meters.
An injury kept him out of the 2016 Olympics, and the Tokyo games were postponed because of COVID in 2020.
But the Olympics got the green light in 2021, and Norwood was ready for Tokyo.
He was part of two U.S. relay teams that won medals — the 4x400 mixed relay, which won the bronze, and the men’s 4x400 relay, for which he ran in a qualifying heat. The men’s team went on to capture the gold medal.
Back home in Morgan City, Norwood received the key to the city. The St. Mary School Board voted to rename Morgan City High’s track in his honor.
‘They fight’

In their first year as a Babe Ruth League-sanctioned team, the all-stars from Berwick’s 10-and-under rec league made quite an impression.
“This little group that we have, they want it,” coach Shari Osburn told The Review. “They’re such competitors, and we practice often. We practice hard.
“They don’t complain. They just can’t get enough of the sport, and seeing that in them, I really felt that we were going to do well.”
And later, as the team prepared to play in the Babe Ruth World Series: “They fight,” Osburn said.
In the state tournament at Metairie, Berwick’s stars swept three games by combined scores of 39-10 to emerge with the Louisiana title.
Then it was on to the four-state Southwest Regional in Houma. This time, Berwick swept four games by a combined 39-12 margin.
The regional victory earned Berwick a place in the 10U Babe Ruth World Series in Jensen Beach, Florida.
Berwick split four pool-play games, picking up their seventh and eighth straight tournament wins along the way.
In bracket play, Berwick split six games, finishing with a tough 3-2 loss to the Brookfield Burn of Connecticut in the Diamond Bracket.
Team members appeared in uniform to receive Beacon Shines On recognition from the Berwick Town Council.

The count
Since the 1940s, when St. Mary’s economy became tied to the energy industry, the parish’s population has fluctuated along with the price of oil. The last decade was no exception.
More than half the 2010s were dominated first by a slump in oil prices, then by reduced demand for energy resulting from the worldwide pandemic. The parish’s population slumped, too.
The results of the 2020 Census, with the percentage of population loss from the 2010 Census:
—St. Mary: 49,406, -9.6%
—Morgan City: 11,472, -7.5%
—Patterson: 5,931, -3%.
—Berwick: 4,771, -3.5%
—Franklin: 6,728, -12.2%
The figures may have stung worst in Berwick, where the 2010 Census showed the town within a few dozen residents of reaching a population of 5,000, which would move Berwick up from town to city status under state law.
Mayor Duval Arthur has said he believes the Census Bureau underestimates Berwick’s population, and he pointed to an LSU population estimate showing Berwick’s population to exceed 5,000.
In any case, the Census often sparks more arguments than it settles. That’s because most governmental entities that elect members from geographic districts must redraw their district maps to account for populations.
And that means political leaders, from city councils to the Legislature, will be jockeying to protect or improve their electoral prospects.
The Legislature also redraws the boundaries for the state’s six U.S. House districts. Gov. John Bel Edwards added some potential tension to that process recently by suggesting that Louisiana, with a population that is just more than one-third African American, should have a second black-majority congressional district.
Louisiana had two black-majority congressional districts after the 1990 Census, when the state had seven House seats.
But to include enough black residents to make the district work, it had to be drawn to stretch from Shreveport to Monroe, down to Alex-andria and Lafayette, and over to Baton Rouge. It was called the “Mark of Zorro” district because it resembled the letter “z.”
The courts eventually struck down the district for what they ruled was an unlawfully large reliance on race to draw the map. We may see this year whether population shifts have made a more compact black-majority district possible.

Bridge fatigue
Lots of time in 2021 was spent discussing, cussing and waiting to use the new U.S. 90 bridge or the old La. 182 bridge over the Atchafalaya.
The rehabilitation and repainting of the new bridge, which has narrowed traffic there to one lane in either direction since September 2019, was supposed to be finished this year. But, citing weather delays, the Department of Transportation and Development has pushed the estimated completion date to June 2022.
That leads to rush-hour delays merging onto the single lane in each direction on the new bridge — no more than a slight nuisance, usually.
But sometimes it’s more than aggravation, as when post-Ida traffic led to congestion on local roads, or when an accident on either bridge blocks traffic, an all-too-frequent occurrence.
Berwick Fire Chief Allen Rink joked ruefully at a Town Council meeting that if a new fire station is needed, it might save time to build it atop a bridge.
One crash atop the La. 182 bridge July 18 sent pieces of concrete falling onto a Berwick resident’s home.
Then there are the vehicle strikes on the beams dictating truck clearance at either end of the old bridge. The strikes sometimes require the closure of the bridge for DOTD safety inspection.
Not all the bridge difficulties occur over Berwick Bay. Three days before Christmas, a vessel strike caused significant damage to the Bayou Ramos bridge on La. 182. The bridge will remain closed until the DOTD can arrange for repairs.

Taxing debate
On March 20, St. Mary voters approved a new sales tax for the St. Mary Parish School Board by a 62-38% margin with a turnout of just less than 15%.
The vote capped more than a year of argument over how big the tax should be, what it should be used for and whether it was needed at all.
What eventually passed was a 0.45% sales tax to raise $4 million a year to give teachers and other school staff members a raise. Proponents said St. Mary’s school salaries should be raised to attract and keep competent educators.
The proposal started off in December 2019 as a 0.5% sales tax for the raises and to support a new technology fund. The School Board voted that month to call an election the following spring.
But the proposal drew immediate opposition. Parish President David Hanagriff said the timing was wrong for a new tax as St. Mary struggled through an economic recovery. Then-Mayor Frank “Boo” Grizzaffi noted that Morgan City’s total tax would top 9% if the new tax passed.
State Sen. Bret Allain, R-Franklin, objected to the technology component. Unless the technology fund was dropped from the dedication, Allain said in 2020, he’d insist on a vote that would coincide with the November 2020 presidential election, which was sure to attract more voters to the polls. (The Nov. 3, 2020, turnout was 70%).
Allain was in a position to influence the tax process. He sits on the State Bond Commission, which must approve tax propositions.
The School Board dropped the technology fund from the tax proposal and trimmed the tax to 0.45%. Even then, the board needed two tries to get the measure through the State Bond Commission, and then withdrew the proposition from the November 2020 ballot in a dispute over the ballot language developed by the Secretary of State’s Office.
The board set the March 20 election, where the tax passed.

Drainage
district blues
The consolidation of the drainage districts serving Morgan City and Amelia in 2020 seemed to generate more controversy, not less, as time went by.
Hanagriff, the parish president, pushed for the St. Mary Parish Council to consolidate Gravity Drainage District No. 2 with No. 6 as an efficiency move, eliminating one piece of what some see as a patchwork of dozens of tax districts across the parish.
But Hanagriff had also hoped to consolidate the millages of the two districts at a December 2020 election to avoid the need to keep separate accounts for the two districts and the merged district. But the measure failed by a nearly 2-to-1 margin late in 2020.
Then Mayor-elect Lee Dragna of Morgan City, who had chaired the Morgan City drainage board before the consolidation, challenged the Parish Council action combining the two districts on procedural grounds and making an extensive public records request.
Over the course of 2021, Dragna and Parish Council member James Bennett of Morgan City challenged the actions of the combined Gravity Drainage District No. 2A board over its obligation to spend taxes raised in Morgan City in the city and taxes raised in Amelia in Amelia.
Hanagriff accused them of attacking the drainage district board and tried, unsuccessfully, to have a request for an ethics inquiry targeting Bennett placed on the council agenda. Hanagriff pointed to disclosure paperwork submitted by Bennett to the state that describes him as an employee of Dragna’s LAD Services and as the mayor’s assistant. Bennett can't act objectively on issues involving Morgan City, Hanagriff argued.
Bennett has since amended his disclosure, saying he is a contract employee of LAD and doesn’t work for the city government at all. And he has called for ethics inquiries of his own over what he said is the drainage board’s refusal to comply with records request.
The drainage district seems likely to make more news in 2022. Parish Councilman Patrick Hebert of Morgan City has prepared an ordinance that would expand the consolidated district to include Avoca Island and Bateman Island. Hebert said the expansion would lead to a lower property tax rate across the district.
Appearing before the Parish Council on Dec. 15, Dragna said taxing swamp land for drainage would be “absurd.”

Sheriff offers reminder about fireworks rules

Fireworks are allowed only in unincorporated areas of St. Mary Parish and only during hours established by parish ordinance, according to Sheriff Blaise Smith and his deputies.
Fireworks are not allowed inside city limits, the Sheriff’s Office said.
The rules are set out in St. Mary Parish Code of Ordinances, Section 13-113.
.“Fireworks may be used, set-off, or shot from June 28 to July 4 and from December 22 to January 1 from the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Additional hours of fireworks use will be allowed from 10:00 p.m. on July 4 to 1:00 a.m. July 5, and from 10:00 p.m. December 24 to 1:00 a.m. December 25 and from 10:00 p.m. December 31 to 1:00 a.m.”

La. National Guard was challenged by events in 2021

PINEVILLE—The Louisiana National Guard confronted a demanding 2021 with a plethora of challenges and missions both at home and abroad.
Over the course of the year, soldiers and airmen deployed overseas and to other states, responded to multiple emergencies including the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and participated in a number of significant events.
In January, Gov. John Bel Edwards directed the Guard to send approximately 174 service members to augment the District of Columbia National Guard to ensure a safe presidential inauguration
They troops joined National Guard men and women from other states and territories who conducted security, communication and logistical missions in support of federal and D.C. authorities.
More than 2,400 Guardsmen from multiple brigades, including the 256th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 225th Engineer Brigade and 139th Regional Support Group, and the Louisiana Air National Guard deployed to the Middle East and the southwest border in the past year.
All Guard units play a vital role after disaster strikes, but even with the reduced force, the Guard was still prepared to protect what matters. Over the course of the year, Guardsmen were called to support operations including: logistical support, water distribution, road clearance, debris removal, generator support, construction, commodity distribution, search and rescue, engineering, and aerial reconnaissance.
During the winter storm in February, the Louisiana National Guard activated more than 1,200 Guardsmen to support operations throughout the state by delivering more than 2.1 million gallons of water and 43,356 meals, clearing 223 miles of road and 260 commercial vehicles from the roadways, and providing 14 generators to aid in necessary infrastructure support.
In May, as flooding began in the southwest portion of the state, the Guard had 393 Guardsmen activated to support a variety of missions, including search and rescue, engineering, and aerial reconnaissance, rescuing 25 people and two pets and installing 3,350 feet of Tiger Dam to mitigate flooding.
Hurricane Ida, in particular, called for a massive emergency response effort. Although prepared and ready, the Guard was assisted with support from neighboring states and military components to assist with the demands and needs of the communities.
More than 3,000 Guardsman activated from 16 states and Puerto Rico assisted in the aftermath of another devastating hurricane strike.
Overall more than 6.7 million meals were distributed, along with 7.9 million liters of water, 1.3 million bags of ice and 310,245 tarps.
A Guard floating bridge assisted in the crossing of 30,710 vehicles. Guard engineers emplaced 1,689 super sacks to fight flooding, assessed 5,314 miles of road and cleared 2,946 miles of road in 20 parishes. The Guard ultimately rescued 397 citizens and 65 pets.
Throughout all of this, more than 800 Louisiana Guardsmen continue to support COVID-19 testing and vaccination sites across the state. To date, the Guard has vaccinated 192,596 and tested 498,122 personnel throughout the state, packaged 41,685,551 pounds of food and delivered 99,530 vaccine vials.
Guardsmen are still supporting 21 open medical test sites, 31 vaccine sites and six open food banks throughout Louisiana.
“The LANG is integral to our partnership in making this successful,” said Dr. John Vanchiere, chief of Pediatric Infectious Diseases at LSU Health-Shreveport and the director of Community Outreach for Testing and Vaccination Program.
LANG also remained committed to responding to cyber-attacks throughout the state in 2021. In partnership with the Office of Technology Services and the Louisiana State Police, LANG responded to 12 cyber threats that impacted 69 entities within the state, parish and local agencies.
In spite of deployments and emergency response operations, the LANG is dedicated to sustaining readiness and promoting esprit de corps throughout the organization. Some of the highlights included: the Best WarrBy Louisiana National Guard Public Affairs Office

Entergy makes a gift to Nicholls coastal research

Entergy Louisiana is donating $40,000 to the new Coastal Center at Nicholls State University to enhance the center’s coastal education and outreach initiatives.
The grant will support the Coastal Center Coast, Climate, and Culture Literacy Program, which will bring exhibits to the center as well as organized presentations, group tours, publications and an additional web page dedicated to the coast, climate and culture.
“We’ve seen firsthand how important it is for Louisiana to preserve its coast,” said Phillip May, Entergy Louisiana president and CEO. “Our partnership with Nicholls State University will help ensure future generations continue to understand and work to bolster our coastline for years to come. This is not just a project for today, but one that will have a lasting impact.”
Louisiana loses a football field of coastal islands and wetlands every 100 minutes and has experienced more coastal land loss than any other state in the nation since 1930 with more than 1,800 square miles turned to open water.
The Terrebonne Basin has the highest rate of coastal land loss in the state with more than 30,000 acres of wetlands lost since 1932. Meanwhile, the Atchafalaya Basin gained 4,000 acres of wetlands while every other basin in the state has lost land.
Dr. John Doucet, dean of the College of Science and Technology and distinguished service professor, said the exhibits will center around the significance of climate change, the importance of coastal restoration and protection, the historical and cultural impacts and the connection between the community and the coast.
“This program will show communities the connections between the coast and their culture, between climate change and the coast and how the work of the Nicholls Coastal Center helps protect and preserve Louisiana’s coastal wetlands,” said Doucet, who also authored the grant.
“We are grateful to have the support of Entergy Louisiana in establishing this program."
Entergy is our region’s utility company, and they see firsthand the impacts of coastal land loss, especially following hurricane landfalls.”
For more information on the Nicholls Coastal Center, visit nicholls.edu/coastal-center.

Jeremy Alford: Political battles will intensify in 2022

The period between Christmas and New Year’s Eve is traditionally a quiet time in Louisiana politics.
So make sure you soak up all peace and tranquility while you can because the next 12 months will host plenty of noisy political action — and it will be anything but peaceful.
There will be at least two legislative sessions in Baton Rouge in 2022, and another round of congressional elections are on deck for the fall.
Plus, an unprecedented amount of federal infrastructure money is headed to the state.
First up legislatively in the new year will be the special session on redistricting, which convenes Feb. 1. Lawmakers will be charged with drafting new maps for our election lines based on the latest U.S. Census data, and Gov. John Bel Edwards will have veto authority. Unfortunately, that special session, which promises to be just as controversial as it will be acrimonious, may very well set the tone for the rest of the year, if not the rest of the term.
The next month, in March, lawmakers will again gather to gavel in their regular session. Thematically, the 2022 regular session will seem familiar to you, since it promises to rehash many of the same issues that dominated the 2021 legislative year. Lawmakers are planning to bring back bills to address vaccine mandates, the powers of the Executive Branch, critical race theory, transgender athletes, higher teacher pay, criminal justice reforms and certain tax policies (but nothing that increases or decreases taxes, since 2022 will be an even-numbered year).
Transportation will once again be an attention-grabbing issue, especially with dollars headed here from President Joe Biden’s massive infrastructure package. The speed of construction work at the state Department of Transportation and Development may be under the microscope as well. Senate Finance Chairman Bodi White, for one, recently called for a “complete overhaul.”
From inside the rails of the Legislature, you can expect one or more special elections to be triggered by unexpected resignations. That trend started last term and has stayed strong over the past two years. There’s no valid reason to believe vacancies will slow down in the new year.
The next 12 months will also host the run-up to the statewide 2023 election cycle. Politicos will soon begin announcing for the state’s premier political post, to replace Gov. John Bel Edwards, which will in turn probably open up other statewide offices.
Legislative races will begin in earnest next year as well, in anticipation of the 2023 statewide cycle. There are currently 25 term-limited lawmakers who are not eligible to run again, or 17 percent of the entire Legislature. In the House, 16 members are term-limited, or 15%, compared to nine senators, or 23% of the upper chamber.
For now, however, it’s a waiting game. There’s only so much potential candidates can do until lawmakers approve new election maps in February. “I’m talking to a lot of people who are interested in these seats,” said consultant Jason Hebert, a partner at the Political Firm, “but what they’re finding is uncertainty. There’s an unwillingness to engage from some supporters and donors until the lines are drawn. So what I think is important right now for a lot of these candidates is to pay attention to the process. If you’re serious, be ready to go when the lines are drawn and set. Until then, everyone is in wait-and-see mode.”
More immediately, there are other elections slated in the New Year, beginning in just a few weeks with a Jan. 15 special election for a Catahoula parish police juror, followed by a larger municipal primary in March. That spring election will include races for mayor, district attorney and appellate and district judges.
The heavy election action will arrive in the fall with the Nov. 8 ballot. That’s when voters will be asked to weigh in on a U.S. Senate race (for the post occupied by Sen. John Kennedy), six congressional seats (which may look dramatically different due to redistricting), a Supreme Court contest, two Public Service Commission positions, nearly a dozen mayoral matchups and 22 appellate judgeships.
While all of these elections, issues and sessions might provide an early political road map for the New Year to come, they do not represent an all-inclusive list of story lines to track over the next 12 months. As is always the case in Louisiana politics, expect the unexpected, too. (If we didn’t learn that from 2020 and 2021, we didn’t learn anything.)
For more Louisiana political news, visit www.LaPolitics.com or follow Alford on Twitter @LaPoliticsNow.

Family-friendly activities to begin the new year

People spend so much time planning New Year’s Eve revelry that they may not consider that they have another day on the holiday calendar to enjoy after the clock strikes 12.
New Year’s Day activities may differ significantly from the countdowns and parties of the night before, but that doesn’t mean it can’t be equally enjoyable.
Chances are children are home from school for holiday breaks, meaning New Year’s Day activities should probably be family-friendly.
Check out these family-friendly ways to spend New Year’s Day.
—Catch (or play) a football game. New Year’s Day and football go hand in hand, and families can likely find a game on television to enjoy together. Of course, it’s also fun to burn off a few New Year’s Eve calories by playing a game of football in the backyard.
—Host a New Year’s Day meal. Give people plenty of time to recover from last nights’ antics by inviting neighbors or friends and their children over for a brunch, late lunch or early dinner. Potlucks are great for these occasions because no one will likely want to cook for a crowd.
—Enjoy a movie marathon. Spend the day in comfortable clothes and make a new family tradition. Select one movie for each family member to watch and then cue up the streaming service or dust off that DVD player.
Use holiday mugs for hot cocoa and dig into any leftovers from holiday dinners. If a marathon at home isn’t up your alley, check out the showings at a nearby theater and enjoy an afternoon at the cinema.
—Play a board game or a multiplayer video game as a family.
Have each member select a game. Flip a coin to see which game to play first.
—Take a hike. Enjoy the weather up close and personal with a hike. State parks or nearby nature preserves may not be busy on Jan. 1, making them an even more relaxing respite.
—Volunteer with a local charity. Give back to the community and start off the new year on a positive note by volunteering as a family.
New Year’s Day presents an ideal opportunity to spend time together as a family.
New Year’s Eve recovery tips
The saying “go big or go home” is never more appropriate than on New Year’s Eve. Waking up hours later tired and lacking motivation is not uncommon.
Fortunately, there are various ways to feel better on Jan. 1.
—Take a nap.
—Drink plenty of water.
—Enjoy a soothing cup of tea.
—Look to caffeine as a pick-me-up.
—Eat light.

Dinner-and-drinks invite makes teetotaler uneasy

DEAR ABBY: My husband, “Dan,” and I do not consume alcohol, mostly because of our family history. Several years ago while Dan was at a work event, a consultant, “Ken,” took him and some co-workers out for dinner. Ken ordered a bottle of wine for the table. Not wanting to cause a scene, my husband drank the glass poured for him. Now Ken has invited Dan and me to join him and his wife for an evening out, and he wants to “meet early for drinks.”
Dan is sure Ken will buy another bottle to share. I think Dan should give Ken a heads-up beforehand. Dan thinks it would be rude to refuse a drink and doesn’t want to have to go into an explanation as to why we don’t. We don’t care if the people we are with drink alcohol. Is there a polite way to decline without offending? Should it be ahead of time or at the restaurant?
RESPECTFULLY DECLINE

DEAR RESPECTFULLY: It is perfectly acceptable to refuse alcohol. For various reasons, many people forgo “the grape” (and the harder stuff) these days. If a server asks your husband what beverage he would like, your husband should state his preference — be it sparkling water, a soft drink, a juice drink, etc. There is no shame in it, and it isn’t rude.
That the host is providing alcohol is not a mandate to indulge, particularly if the guest has a problem with it. If Ken pushes, Dan should simply tell him the two of you generally prefer not to drink alcohol.

DEAR ABBY: I am 30 weeks pregnant with my second child. I have always been slender, so like many expecting women, I am somewhat self-conscious of my changing (and ever-growing) figure. I was at the park today with my 2-year-old son when an older woman smiled and asked me when I was due. When I told her, she replied, “Oh, my God. Are you sure there aren’t twins in there?” I thought her comment was appalling. Since when is it OK to comment on someone else’s body? I was left feeling embarrassed, angry, and on top of that, enormous!
I know I shouldn’t care what other people say or think, but pregnancy is also a hormonal time, and I can’t seem to get past her nasty comment. What ever happened to “If you don’t have something nice to say, don’t say anything at all”? A simple “Congratulations,” or “How exciting!” would have been a far more appropriate and well-received response.
I’m sending this in the hope that ignorant people who say things like this will read it and realize how hurtful their comments can be to expectant mothers. Also, how should I respond if someone else makes a similar comment?
TEN MORE WEEKS TO GO

DEAR TEN MORE WEEKS: Two responses come immediately to mind. The first would be to tell the person who made the thoughtless comment, “Wow, that was tactless!” Or say, “Nope. It’s just one healthy baby in there.” Of course, a third option is to say nothing and walk away.

DEAR READERS: I’m wishing you a happy, healthy 2022. Whew, folks! I can’t believe we made it so quickly through 2021!
I will join you tonight toasting a new year that will be a less stressful year for all of us. If you are celebrating this evening, please take measures to protect not only your own health but also the safety of others.
LOVE, ABBY
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Abby shares more than 100 of her favorite recipes in two booklets: “Abby’s Favorite Recipes” and “More Favorite Recipes by Dear Abby.” Send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $16 to: Dear Abby, Cookbooklet Set, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447.

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