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Wheel House for Oct. 29: Musical revue, vaccination site, help for the grieving

MUSICAL REVUE
Berwick, Patterson and Morgan City high schools drama clubs are presenting “MTI’s All Together Now! — A Global Event Celebrating Local Theatre” at 7 p.m. Nov. 13, at Berwick Civic Complex. The musical revue features songs from various musicals including Annie, Let It Go, Newsies, My Fair Lady and more. Tickets at the door are $8 or $5 with a donation of two can goods for area food pantries. The four-day global presentation celebrates the reopening of theatre after COVID caused its closure. For info email kvasquez@stmaryk12.net.

COVID VACCINE
City of Patterson hosting a Vaccination Clinic 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Nov. 13, at 1101 First St., Patterson.

LOSS OF SPOUSE
Support group meeting luncheons 12:30 p.m. Nov. 19 and Dec. 10, at Atkinson Memorial Presbyterian Church hall, Fourth Street, Morgan City. For info call Doylene Porter, 985-384-3277.

BAZAAR
Christmas Bazaar and Plate Lunch Fundraiser hosted by Patterson United Methodist Church, 1204 Main St., Saturday, Nov. 20. Christmas Bazaar, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. includes Christmas decorations, homemade preserves, jams, jellies and baked goods for sale. Lunch, 11-1 p.m. includes spaghetti and meatballs, cole slaw and bread. Cost $8. Lunch tickets, call 985-395-5333 or contact any church member.

THANKSGIVING
Banquet for senior citizens is 5 p.m. Nov. 22, at Patterson Area Civic Center.

AGU GALLERY
Artists Guild Unlimited Everett Street Gallery, 201 Everett St., Morgan City, open Wednesdays-Fridays, 1-4 p.m. and Saturdays, 11 a.m.-2 p.m.

Learn about the constitutional amendments on the Nov. 13 ballot

Louisiana voters soon will have the opportunity to consider four constitutional ballot amendments in this year’s fall election. All four items are tax and budget issues that could become permanent by majority vote.
Business groups such as the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry are encouraging passage of Amendments 1 and 2, which would centralize sales and use taxes and decrease the individual income tax rate for top earners.
“Louisiana’s business tax climate ranks among the worst in the nation,” LABI President and CEO Stephen Waguespack said. “A pair of tax reform measures on the November 13th ballot could change that, enacting constitutional amendments to finally simplify our system, meaning lower tax rates and more jobs in Louisiana.”
The Louisiana Budget Project, a Baton Rouge-based nonprofit, opposes the tax reduction amendment, saying passage could harm the state budget and lead to “less money for education, health care and transportation.”
The election’s two other proposed amendments deal with levee districts and state budget funding.
The fall election was scheduled for Oct. 9, but Gov. John Bel Edwards postponed Election Day to Nov. 13 because of Hurricane Ida. Most of Louisiana will see only the four constitutional amend-ments on their ballot, though some parishes and cities also will conduct local elections.
Amendment 1: Streamlin-ing sales and use taxes
The first ballot measure proposes amending the Louisiana Constitution to create the State and Local Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Commission, which would centralize the filing, remittance and collection of sales and uses taxes.
According to the Public Affairs Research Council of Louisiana, the Louisiana Department of Revenue collects a state sales and use tax of 4.45%, while local governments collect sales and use taxes averaging around 5%.
However, Louisiana’s 64 parishes have differing tax policies and policy interpretations that complicate sales and use tax collection and remittance, though current law also protects them from state government encroachment, a PARC report said.
“This highly decentralized system is unusual; nearly all other states allow a central collector who remits the revenue to the appropriate state and local jurisdictions and acts as the central authority for how and when taxes should be applied,” the report said.
Amendment 2: Individual income taxes
A “yes” vote on Amendment 2 would decrease the maximum individual income tax rate from 6% to 4.75% beginning next year. Passage also would remove the ability to deduct federal income taxes from an individual’s state income tax liability, which is currently allowed. A “no” vote would leave the tax rate and federal deduction in place.
The Council for A Better Louisiana, a nonpartisan public interest group, sup-ports the proposal, which also would apply to corporations. CABL said in statement that reducing the top state income tax rate is “generally revenue neutral to the state and taxpayers.”
The Louisiana Budget Project disagrees, saying the amendment would amount to a “tax swap” that would benefit individuals and corporations that already have the highest incomes.
Amendment 3: Taxing au-thority for levee districts
Amendment 3 asks voters to consider a constitutional provision that would allow levee districts created after 2006 to raise taxes in dis-tricts where a majority of voters approve.
Passage would allow the levee districts to increase property taxes up to five mills, or $5 per $1,000 of assessed property value. The tax revenues would be used for “constructing and maintaining levees, levee drainage, flood protection and hurricane flood protection.”
Amendment 4: Funding budget deficits
The final ballot amend-ment applies to the state budget. Voters will be asked whether they support an increase to the amount of money currently allowed to cope with projected budget deficits.
The Louisiana Constitution and state law allows 5% of dedicated funding to be redirected to items other than what was originally intended. Amendment 4 would increase the limit to 10%.
The Public Affairs Re-search Council said dedicated funds can tie the hands of lawmakers, but also ensure legislatively approved programs and priorities. If the ballot proposal passes, current dedicated funding items would remain unchanged and joint legislative budget committees would have to approve any new changes.
All four proposed constitu-tional amendments were referred to the fall election ballot by the state Legisla-ture, after the amendments each received a required two-thirds vote in the House and Senate. Amendments 1 and 2 stem from three separate tax reform bills – House Bill 278, House Bill 292 and Senate Bill 161.
According to the Louisiana secretary of state’s office, residents can register to vote in-person or by mail until Oct. 13. Online registration will continue until Oct. 23. Early voting begins Oct. 30 and runs through Nov. 6.

Around Town for Oct. 29

Happy birthday Saturday to Deidra Lewis and Sunday to Charissa Jackson from family, friends and Ira.

Danos expands move into renewables

In recent months, Danos has expanded its portfolio of work in the renewable energy sector, the copany said ina press release.
Through a partnership with provider SOLV, a division of Swinerton Renewable Energy, Danos has completed five solar contracts in the western United States in 2021.
The contracts have primarily been for cable maintenance and repair on solar panels through Danos’ instrumentation and electrical services group.
Project locations include Kingman, Picture Rocks and Tuscon, Arizona, Clawson, Utah, and Coyanosa, Texas.
“Many of our established service offerings easily carry over to the energy transition happening in our industry,” said CEO Paul Danos.
“We are excited for the growing number of opportunities to deliver the Danos difference to new customers in the renewables market.”
In addition to instrumentation and electrical, Danos offers the following services: automation, coatings, con-struction, fabrication, intelligent integrated materials management, mechanical maintenance, power generation, production workforce, project management, regulatory compliance, scaffolding and rope access, shorebase and logistics, and valve and wellhead.
With nearly 2,400 employees, Danos is currently registered to work in 18 states and holds electrical licenses in half of those. The company has eight office locations across Texas and Louisiana.

JAMA study: COVID 'lotteries' have small impact on vaccinations

A new health study shows COVID-19 vaccination lottery programs, such as Louisiana’s “Shot At a Million,” produced negligible results despite millions in taxpayer-funded giveaways.
Published by the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), the study examined vaccination rates across the 19 states that announced vaccine lotteries by July 1 and compared them with states that did not have vaccine lotteries.
Researchers used state-level COVID-19 vaccination data from Johns Hopkins University between April 28 and July 1, a period when vaccines were widely available and news reports were promoting the incentive programs.
Gov. John Bel Edwards announced Louisiana’s $2.3 million lottery program June 17.
While controlling for various factors, the study concluded the association between COVID-19 lotteries and vaccination rates “were very small in magnitude and statistically indistinguishable from zero.”
“No statistically significant association was detected between a cash-drawing announcement and the number of vaccinations before or after the announcement date, a period that included announcements of lottery winners for most lottery states,” study authors said.
An earlier study from July 2 that examined Ohio’s “Vax-a-Million” lottery, the first in the nation, determined such programs likely would not increase “vaccine uptake.”
“Therefore, the resources devoted to vaccine lotteries may be more successfully invested in programs that target underlying reasons for vaccine hesitancy and low vaccine uptake,” said Allan J. Walkey, a physician at Boston Medical Center and a professor of medicine.
“It is important to rigorously evaluate strategies designed to increase vaccine uptake, rapidly deploy successful strategies, and phase out those that do not work,” Walkey said.
Louisiana’s “Shot At a Million” program awarded $100,000 a week from July 14 to Aug. 4, nine $100,000 scholarships for children age 12-17 and a grand prize of $1 million Aug. 6.
A week after the grand prize drawing, a separate $7.5 million vaccine incentive program called “Shot for 100” was announced. The initiative offered college students $100 for their first vaccine dose.
“Shot for 100” was expanded earlier this month to include any vaccine eligible resident of Louisiana. It’s scheduled to end on Saturday.

College system honors administrator

The University of Louisiana System has recognized the career of Renee Hicks (BS ‘89, MEd ‘03) by giving her the James Callier Servant Leader Award.
The award recognizes individuals who demonstrate servant leader qualities and characteristics that inspire others to develop their leadership potential.
Hicks, assistant vice president for institutional effectiveness, access and success, first joined the Nicholls team in 1997 as a research assistant in the office of institutional research. In 2019, Hicks was elevated to assistant vice president.
In 2017, Hicks identified trends within the Black male student population that lead to the creation of the Colonels Retention of Winners Network (CROWN). The successful program has increased retention and graduation rates among Black male students since its inception. Recently, she worked with the system as they introduced the first R.F. Lewis Scholars.
“I have a great working relationship with the system and have great respect for their leadership team,” Hicks said. “Dr. Claire Norris, Associate Vice President for Inclusion, Diversity, and Effectiveness, has a contagious energy and positive nature and a true appreciation of data. She assembled a group of leaders to work in this area that was truly amazing. I feel humbled to be recognized because I feel like I learned so much from the group. All are so focused on meeting students’ needs and supporting educational attainment.
"It has been truly inspiring to be a part of the system’s effort towards greater support for our black males.”
During her nearly 25 years with the university, she has served as the liaison with the SACSCOC accreditation body and guided the university through a successful reaffirmation in 2016.
Today, her role has expanded. In addition to her work in institutional research, effectiveness and student academic support, she also oversees the university’s enrollment and admissions offices, the CROWN program and its female counterpart for women of color, Legacy Leaders.
The award’s namesake, Dr. James Caillier, is a lifelong Louisiana secondary and post-secondary educator. He was the first ULS president and holds the distinct honor of being president emeritus for the ULS. He continues his service to higher education as the executive director of the Patrick F. Taylor Foundation.

Jeremy Alford: The politics of redistricting grows bolder in Iberia

The first paid advertisements of the redistricting cycle, purchased specifically to influence how state legislators will draw an election district next year, have surfaced in the Acadiana region.
The political engagement was expected eventually, but seeing it so soon serves as healthy dose of foreshadowing — because this is definitely only the beginning.
The Legislature will gather in early February for its decennial redistricting session, but a statewide public testimony tour is already underway and special interests are slowly revealing their own reapportionment plans.
While the ads are specific to the region encompassing Iberia, Lafayette and St. Martin parishes, the drama and politics involved will eventually be duplicated in election districts all over the state.
After all, redistricting is an intimate affair capable of yielding strange bedfellows and deep political fault lines. No politics will be too local or too petty for the special redistricting session that convenes in roughly 100 days.
The Acadiana ad campaign was largely overshadowed last week by the Redistricting Roadshow’s swing through north Louisiana, which included public hearings conducted by lawmakers in Monroe and Shreveport.
The related chatter, however, was unmissable in Iberia Parish, where politics rivals sugar cane as a chief export.
Former Sen. Troy Hebert paid for the ad that has been running in The Teche News and The Daily Iberian. The advertisement claims a plan has been hatched by “the powers that be” to reconfigure the local Senate District 22 in such a way that condenses power in Lafayette Parish at a cost to St. Martin and Iberia parishes. “Under this new district,” the ad continues, “the Senator will either come from Lafayette Parish or be beholden to Lafayette Parish.”
Hebert, who’s expected to run in Senate District 22 in 2023, said he was attempting to drum up inter-est in this week’s Redistricting Roadshow meeting that’s scheduled for Lafayette.
That’s when members of the House and Senate governmental affairs committee will hear from residents on this matter.
“Look, we enjoy our neighbors in Lafayette, but their blood might be a little too blue for us to share our senator with,” Hebert said in an interview.
“Lafayette already has two senators, trying to steal ours seems a bit greedy. Them big city boys need to learn, pigs get fed and hogs get slaughtered.”
Sen. Fred Mills, who’s term-limited from running again in Senate District 22, said he will continue his pledge in the upcoming special session to protect the district from any major disruptions.
“Senate District 22 has a long and rich tradition of representing Iberia and St. Martin parishes,” said Mills, “and I look forward to seeing that tradition continue.”
Hebert noted in his interview that it’s almost impossible not to make this issue personal, since shifting the district’s base to Lafayette would clearly benefit incumbent representatives in Lafayette and disadvantage elected officials in Iberia and St. Martin parishes. Other politicos working on plans in other election districts are discovering the same — the process gets personal quickly.
On the other side of the state last week, citizens in Monroe and Shreveport got the opportunity to weigh in with their concerns.
What to do about north Louisiana’s two congressional districts was a topic of interest. Population losses will require significant adjustments and some have proposed turn-ing the side-by-side vertical districts into horizontal districts that would run west to east from border to border.
The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, along with other civil rights groups, is also push-ing to turn the 5th Congressional District, now based in northeast Louisiana and represented by a Republican, into a minority voting bloc.
Proponents argue that only one of Louisiana’s six U.S. House districts is represented by a black official, despite the state’s population being a third black.
At the Shreveport public meeting, more concerns were voiced about legislative seats. In northwest Louisiana, there are roughly a dozen legislative seats with significantly low population counts and there could be noticeable losses there on both the House and the Senate sides.
There’s still plenty of time for the public to chime in on redistricting.
But with each passing day, the noise citizens will have to shout over will only grow louder — and, based on ads already surfacing and the intensity of the issues being aired, the cacophony will only grow bolder as well.
For more Louisiana political news, visit www. LaPolitics.com or follow Alford on Twitter @ LaPoliticsNow.

Morgan City High falls at South Terrebonne

Morgan City High quarterback Charlie Wells jumps to pass during the Oct. 22 home game against A.J. Ellender. This week, in a Thursday game, Morgan City fell 41-7 to South Terrebonne in a District 8-4A game. Morgan City's record dropped to 2-6. South Terrebonne is 1-5. Morgan City closes its regular season at home Nov. 5 against Vandebilt Catholic.

The Review/Bill Decker

UPDATED WITH REACTION: School Board names Moore to be interim member

CENTERVILLE -- The St. Mary Parish School Board voted Thursday to appoint Tammie Moore of the Four Corners area to fill a vacant seat on the board.

Moore will fill the seat left open by the Oct. 8 death of member Sylvia Kay Lockett, who had represented District 2 since 2019.

Moore is a campus director for South Louisiana Community College. She will serve until a special election can be held to fill Lockett's position until January 2023, when her term would have expired.

The board voted Thursday night to call the special election for March 26. If needed, the runoff would be April 30.

Moore's reaction to the appointment via Facebook:

"I’m so grateful, humbled and excited about this appointment! I can say without a doubt, that on my list of greatest passions are people and education! Amazingly, in this capacity, I get to advocate for both! I look forward to this assignment and what it will bring to the St. Mary Parish School System, the students, and families directly impacted. God and the St. Mary Parish School Board have trusted me with this assignment and my plan is to make them proud!"

St. Mary School Board makes masks optional for students, employees

Masks are now optional for students and employees at St. Mary Parish public schools, at least for those who are not on school buses.

The St. Mary School board changed its policy Thursday, two days after a new state emergency proclamation from Gov. John Bel Edwards.

The proclamation, which Edwards announced Tuesday, lifts the mandate requiring masks in indoor public spaces and said K-12 schools can make masks optional as long as they adopt "an isolation and quarantine policy for students, faculty, and staff consistent with protocols set by the Louisiana Department of Health (based upon CDC guidance). ..."

Riders on schools buses will still be required to wear masks to comply with a federal mandate targeting public transportation.

The Roman Catholic dioceses of Houma-Thibodaux and Lafayette had already made masks optional for students at Central Catholic, Hanson Memorial and St. John.

On Thursday, the mask option issue was added to the agenda at a special School Board meeting originally scheduled to fill an open seat on the board.

Four people spoke at the board meeting in favor of making masks optional -- Lindsey Anslem, Brooke Falgout, Jesse Simoneaux and Parish President David Hanagriff.

Hanagriff said he issued a parish mask mandate when the state mandate was imposed during the first coronavirus wave, when facts about the pandemic were uncertain. But he hasn't issued mask orders since then, he said, because he believes the choice should be left to individuals.

"We have to get back to normal," Hanagriff said.

Simoneaux also made a personal choice argument.

Falgout said her daughter "struggles with masks every day. ... It takes away from a teacher's ability to teach."

Anslem argued that the size of the virus compared to the size of the openings in the N95 masks used in the health care industry shows that masks are ineffective.

Board member Marilyn LaSalle pushed back.

"What you're saying contradicts what the government says," LaSalle said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendation is that unvaccinated people 2 and over should wear masks in indoor public spaces. Vaccinated people should continue to wear masks indoors if they're in an area with a high risk of infection or if their immune system is compromised, the CDC says.

Anslem also said her child, who has a speech impediment, learns by watching teachers speak. Masks have added to the child's anxiety and difficult with stuttering, she said.

A mask mandate "affects me," Anslem said. "It affects my children. It affects other children in the parish."

Superintendent Dr. Teresa Bagwell said she had talked with faculty members and administrators and recommended adopting the masks-optional policy.

Board member Ginger Griffin moved to adopt the policy, and member Dwight Barbier seconded the motion. It passed without objection on a voice vote.

The audience in the board meeting room, and outside in the lobby, applauded when the motion passed.

"It shouldn't be up to the School Board to decide whether my child should have a medical device strapped on their face or have something put in their bodies," Anslem said after the meeting.

Edwards imposed the latest mask mandate Aug. 4, when the Delta variant of COVID-19 was pushing up positivity rates, deaths and the number of COVID hospitalizations, raising new concerns that the health care system would be overwhelmed.

In St. Mary, the fourth surge in coronavirus cases has resulted in about 2,600 COVID positives since July 1 and 74 COVID-related deaths since Aug. 1.

In October, COVID statistics have decreased steadily. Last week, for the first time since July, St. Mary had something other than a "highest risk" rating for coronavirus infection.

In July, St. Mary was one of the first two parishes to be rated as "highest risk" by the Louisiana Office of Public Health based on test positivity rates and the average daily number of new COVID cases per 100,000 members of the population. Last week, St. Mary was giving a rating of "high risk."

Fifty-seven parishes continue to have "highest risk" ratings this week.

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