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Footprint of solitary confinement in Louisiana expands because of ICE use of isolation | The Lens

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Footprint of solitary confinement in Louisiana expands because of ICE use of isolation | The Lens


Kiana Calloway spent nearly two decades in prison, entering the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola when he was 17 years old.

For roughly nine of the next 17 years, he was incarcerated in solitary confinement, including a year-and-a-half stint in Angola’s notorious punishment camp, Camp J, for “aggravated disobedience.” 

An empty cell-block cell from the House of Detention jail building in New Orleans. Kiana Calloway was held alone in similar cells at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola and also was confined in solitary for 23 hours a day in a 6-foot by 9-foot, one-man cell in Angola’s Camp J punishment camp that affected his hearing and vision.

One Sunday in 1998, he came back from visiting his family in the visiting shed. As usual, he went through the line to be searched on the way back to his dorm, but then was ordered into the security booth for another cavity search. He refused, was charged with “aggravated disobedience” and sent to Camp J.

Image from “Inside, the Valley Sings,” the Oscar-qualified animated film featuring Calloway, by award-winning Irish filmmaker Nathan Fagan.

Even today, 15 years after his release, the darkness from that time feels close.

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“Isolation hurts,” said Calloway, now 48. “Isolation puts you in a state of despair, loneliness and darkness.”

His cell door had 28 bars, he says. It’s a detail that held his attention as he spent hours analyzing every inch of the space. Inside, water for the toilet and sink flowed through the same incoming pipe, distracting him from the deafening sound of iron doors and the cries of mental distress around him. 

Even today, if he hears the loud flush of a stainless steel toilet, he is instantly carried back there in his mind.

Calloway, a native of Harvey, doesn’t want anyone else going through that darkness. After his release, he began trying to convince prisons and jails to stop housing people in solitary, through a group called Impacted Solitary Survivors Council, or ISSC. 

His work as a human-rights activist had to start in his own backyard, Calloway said, because Louisiana is the “world’s capital for solitary confinement.”

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1 in 5 people held in solitary in Louisiana, one snapshot showed

In 2017, 19% of men in state prisons—or 2,709 people—reported spending more than two weeks in solitary confinement, according to Louisiana on Lockdown, a report by Solitary Watch. (Illustration by The Lens.)

When the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections conducted a full count in the fall of 2017, 19% of men in state prisons – a total of 2,709 people – reported that they’d been in solitary confinement for more than two weeks, according to Louisiana on Lockdown, a report by Solitary Watch.

The rate of people in solitary in Louisiana was more than double the next state’s average and four times the national average.

Because of ISSC’s advocacy, the DOC expanded out-of-cell time for people held in administrative segregation and changed one of the reasons people were put in solitary: a catch-all category in prison rulebook, called Rule 30, and its subsection, 30W, which allowed people to be held in solitary — known as “the dungeon” —  for weeks at a time for “any behavior … that may impair or threaten the security or stability of the unit or well-being of an employee, visitor, guest, offender or their families.”

But despite any achievements with the DOC, the footprint of solitary confinement within Louisiana seems to be expanding because of the state’s growing network of ICE dentition facilities, some of which are shuttered state prisons repurposed to hold immigrants. Tracking the situation is difficult, because detainees are often transferred quickly, Calloway said. “We don’t really know who’s in there and how many are in there.”. 

Plus, solitary is still widely used in state prisons and local jails, here in Louisiana and across the nation. 

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At least 1,222,840 people are locked daily in solitary confinement in U.S. prisons and jails for 22 or more hours a day, according to Calculating Torture, a report by Solitary Watch.

They’re held for months or years at a time — and often for punishment, according to Prison Policy Initiative research.

But even short stays in solitary confinement can have serious psychological and physical effects.

That puts people with mental-health conditions in grave danger, said Andrea Armstrong, a law professor at Loyola University New Orleans who studies death in jails and prisons through the Incarceration Transparency project. “The number of completed suicides that are occurring in segregation or solitary cells is really astounding,” she said.

Lasting effects as brains change from solitary

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Albert Woodfox

Depth perception in vision vanished for Angola 3 member Albert Woodfox, who spent 43 years in a 6-foot by 9-foot cell – as recounted in his Pulitzer Prize-nominated book, Solitary: Unbroken by Four Decades in Solitary Confinement

Woodfox’s physical impacts went far beyond the terms of his imprisonment, Armstrong emphasizes. “Nobody ever sentenced him to losing a portion of his eyesight because of the conditions in which he was housed.”

Those beyond-punishment effects are part of the reason that the United Nations takes the position that “prolonged” solitary confinement, for more than 15 consecutive days, amounts to psychological torture.

Long after release, people suffer long-term effects because of sensory deprivation and exposure to extremes. The brain itself changes during solitary confinement. If the brain has little stimulation, it creates its own distortions. If it is exposed to extremes like bright lights ir loud noise, the brain heightens or blurs its reactions to outside stimuli.

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As Calloway stared at the blank wall, he used to transport himself. “I used to be at my brother’s football games,” he says in the animated movie, “Inside, the Valley Sings.”

For a long time, the way Calloway perceived the world was altered. “By being in a cell so long, it took time for my eyes to dilate properly,” he said. 

His hearing too, suffered. “It took a while for my ears to get back adapted to hearing birds chirping or the small things.” 

Woodfox and the other two members of the Angola Three, Herman Wallace and Robert Hillary King, became known worldwide for their philosophical responses to spending most of their adult lives in solitary. As Woodfox wrote, he had seen the worst, but chose to hold onto the good. “I have witnessed the horrors of man’s cruelty to man. I did not lose my humanity,” Woodfox wrote. “I bear the scars of beatings, loneliness, isolation and persecution. I am also marked by every kindness.” 

Calloway, who was mentored by Woodfox, remembers his focus on the positive. “Every day, in Camp J, he would be the first to pop up and tell everyone ‘Good morning,’” he said. “At night, he’d tell everyone ‘Good evening.’” 

Similarly, Calloway focused his mind on thinking through big topics and imagining better places. “Your mind is one thing that can’t be put in shackles and handcuffs,” he said. “If I didn’t have the opportunity to harness my mind and my imagination, to think that something good would come out of this, I would be one of the many people who lost their minds in there.”

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Touring solitary-confinement bus stops at Loyola 

A social-justice bus known as the “Journey to Justice” is parked on the campus of Loyola University in New Orleans during a stop on its national tour to end solitary confinement. (Photo by Gus Bennett | The Lens)

Recently, a social-justice bus called “Journey to Justice” stopped at Loyola University for a day, as part of a national tour to end solitary confinement. The bus contained some exhibits and a cell replicating the exact size and furnishings of a solitary cell. 

Calloway, who works at the Jesuit Social Research Institute on the Loyola campus, spoke with students and local residents as part of the visit. The goal was “humanizing what incarceration looks like” and helping students see that they can push for change, he said. 

Naquasia Jones | Photo courtesy of Pure Legacee

Naquasia Jones, 42, the outreach coordinator for the National Religious Campaign Against Torture survivors’ network, also spoke at Loyola about her time in prison, which included 60 days in solitary at the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility in New York, when her only human contact was with correctional officers. 

While in Bedford Hills, Jones also spent an entire year on lockdown – when an entire tier is “locked down” for 23 hours, given only one hour of yard-phone-shower time each day. The time tested her mental strength, she said. “It’s designed to break you.”

Some Loyola students walked out of the Journey to Justice bus feeling profound effects.

Students stand inside the “Journey to Justice” social-justice bus during a stop at Loyola University in New Orleans, examining exhibits focused on solitary confinement and mass incarceration. (Photo by Gus Bennett | The Lens)

“They’re allowed to do that to people? It just feels very wrong. Tortuous and inhumane,” said Indie Petitto, 20, a Loyola senior, who walked into the solitary cell and read through the Journey to Justice exhibits about the practice. 

Petitto felt physically weak. “As I was on the bus, I felt my legs shaking the whole time,” she said.

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As a teen, Calloway is placed directly in solitary

In 1994, when Calloway was 16, he was arrested and wrongfully charged with robbing and killing a pregnant woman and her boyfriend in the Woodmere subdivision in Harvey. 

In 1996, he was convicted of first-degree murder, given a life sentence, and shipped from Jefferson Parish jail to Angola. 

Kiana Calloway on the Journey to Justice bus. (Photo by Gus Bennett | The Lens)

Once there, he moved in and out of “ad seg,” administrative segregation, a working cell-block where he served time alone or with one cellmate. He was sent to the cell-blocks for a range of reasons, often small. For instance, when he was in the fields, he was ordered to pick okra, which sent his arms itching to the point where he refused to continue. 

He was often in and out of the cell-block. For not having his shoes lined up under his bed. For having too many cans of tunafish. And for making a three-way phone call, asking his mom to call his brother. 

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That’s important to understand, Armstrong said. “I think the public thinks about solitary as a place exclusively for people who have serious or significant disciplinary issues. Instead, she said, “people are housed in solitary for a number of reasons — suicide watch, protective custody, medical issues, administrative detention, or even minor offenses.”

Calloway learned how to pull himself back whenever he lost hope. But the depth of his despair often tugged at him.  “There have been many times where I deemed like ‘Why am I here? I should just kill myself.’”

“Once the bars close, you’re in a cell by yourself. No access to mail, the air, or civilization in no way shape form or fashion, Calloway says in “Inside, the Valley Sings.”

The isolation units were narrow cells with solid concrete walls on three sides and bars on the fourth side, at the front, next to the door with 28 bars.

He was only allowed a limited amount of personal belongings – an orange jumper, shower slippers, and underwear. 

Because of the prevalence of mental illness in Camp J, some men became known for strange behavior. “Some individuals would start throwing human feces or urine throughout the cell,” Calloway said. Others would make darts and let them sit in human feces for weeks at a time. If a dart pierced the skin, it could cause gangrene, other Camp J residents discovered. 

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“There were times, man, when I would wake up in the middle of the night to individuals bamming their heads on the walls. Boom, boom, boom,” Calloway said. “From the outside looking in, you can see the individuals are dealing with mental-health issues. Why are they in these cells?”

Twenty-three hours in, one hour out
In solitary, there are no classes or programs. Each man is allowed only one hour out of his cell daily to make a phone call or take a shower after 23 hours inside the cell, a schedule known as 23-1. 

 “I used to freeze time by looking into the wall, just sitting, staring,” says Calloway in the new animated movie, “Inside, the Valley Sings,” which plumbs the role of imagination for those in solitary.

“I think of solitary as like a prison within a prison,” Armstrong said. “It is one of the most highly controlled spaces. Often, you’re not allowed to have pens or pencils or regular bed sheets. And yet, despite that control, in our data, we see that a substantial portion of suicides are occurring in solitary cells, particularly in jails.”

The harms of solitary confinement were carried over from another system that routinely used solitary to punish Black people: enslavement. In the book Twelve Years a Slave, for instance, Solomon Northrop was kept chained in isolation.

“The systems are structured and designed to deteriorate and demoralize the individual,” Calloway said. “We know that incarceration is a direct descendant of slavery. In appearance, Angola, Louisiana, still looks like a slave plantation. They didn’t change the name — just turned it into a prison.”

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Working to reform policies that lead to solitary confinement

A solitary confinement cell. (Photo courtesy of the ACLU.)

Calloway’s conviction was overturned in 1998, after the Louisiana Fifth Circuit Court of Appeal in Gretna granted post-conviction relief, vacating his first-degree murder convictions and life sentences, and remanding the case for a new trial. This led to follow-up trials and a manslaughter conviction with a 34-year prison sentence. He would serve 17 years before he was granted parole.

After his release in 2011, Calloway began working with the Jesuit Social Research Institute to help the DOC rethink disciplinary policies and support those who have endured solitary confinement.

“Locking up individuals inside cages and expecting them to come home ready to function, that’s a threat to public safety,” he said.

A man released home to Jefferson Parish directly from extended lockdown at Allen Correctional Center about a decade ago serves as a tragic reminder of the continued harms of lockdown. Within months of the man’s release, Calloway saw the man on TV news, arrested for killing his girlfriend and her children, Calloway said.

After that tragedy, the Department of Public Safety acknowledged that releasing people directly from solitary onto the street was an issue — “and the only reason they knew that was because they were tracking their own operations,” said Armstrong, who believes that DOC data on solitary’s use — and its effects — should be released, to enhance public safety.

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These days, within and outside of his work, Calloway’s life is broad and wide and accomplished.

He has worked on Inside, the Valley Sings, an animated film that’s on the long list to be nominated for an Oscar in 2026. A different film, a feature documentary called Kiana’s Mission, is now complete and will be screened in the upcoming Sundance Film Festival. 

And across the state, Calloway now trains formerly incarcerated people to lead reform efforts focused on rehabilitation. That work includes a digital tool designed to guide people returning home. “If we invest in building people and divest from harming them we’ll have a better society,” he said.

 

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Inside the lab at the heart of Louisiana’s mosquito-borne disease prevention network

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Inside the lab at the heart of Louisiana’s mosquito-borne disease prevention network


BATON ROUGE, La. (Louisiana Illuminator) – Hundreds of meticulously labeled vials filled with mosquitos line colorful plastic trays inside a freezer at the Louisiana Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory in Baton Rouge.

Each vial sitting atop the frosty shelves, aligned in rows like egg cartons on a grocery store shelf, contains up to a hundred mosquitoes sent to the lab from across the state. Scientists can extract information hidden within the mosquitos’ DNA to help stop the spread of diseases to humans and keep infections at bay.

“Look at your electric bill,” said Alma Roy, director of the lab housed at Louisiana State University. When it costs more to keep your home comfortably cool, that’s when the airborne pests — and the viruses they carry — flourish and circulate.

“When it’s wet and hot, the mosquito is out there reproducing and biting,” Roy said.

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The spindly black bugs aren’t picky about what they bite, picking up diseases like West Nile virus from animals like birds and passing them on to humans.

The Louisiana Arbovirus Surveillance Program helps health professionals, entomologists and local mosquito control districts stay apprised on where a disease crops up.

Mosquito control organizations at the parish level across the state capture mosquitoes and pack them into vials. The vials are stuffed into small white boxes and shipped weekly to the lab in Baton Rouge. Around 30 of Louisiana’s 64 parishes participate in the voluntary surveillance program every year, according to the Louisiana Department of Health.

Each year the lab tests 25,000 vials of mosquitos, which are called pools in the lab. In total, the tests involve up to 2.5 million individual insects, but it can’t be done one mosquito at a time.

“We take the whole pool and puree them,” Roy said.

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Lab technician Tarra Hardy adds a mixing solution and a copper ball to mash up the pool before a machine blends the sample.

The result resembles a small mosquito smoothie, which is placed into a machine that analyzes the contents and shows its findings on a computer screen. Colorful spikes on a graph show when a sample tests positive for West Nile, eastern equine encephalitis or St. Louis encephalitis — the most common diseases the lab detects.

Hardy said it only takes around 48 hours for the lab to test a sample, so mosquito control personnel can get information on where a disease is spreading fast enough to contain it.

The Louisiana Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory tests thousands of mosquito samples for diseases like West Nile virus.(Elise Plunk/Louisiana Illuminator)

Sarah Michaels, a clinical associate professor with Tulane University’s Department of Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease, works as a medical entomologist who focuses on insects that carry diseases passed by arthropods, known by scientists as arboviruses. This includes mosquitos, ticks and flies that can be vectors for disease.

The ability of the testing lab in Baton Rouge to turn around its test results quickly allows local mosquito abatement efforts to get out in front of mosquito-borne diseases before they spread, Michaels said. With the geographic location of a positive test result pinpointed, abatement crews can go on the offensive, and the public can take preventative measures.

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“That’s kind of why it’s important for us to know if the virus is circulating locally, so we can give people information so they can take precautions to protect themselves against mosquito bites,” she said.

Spraying insecticide by truck, plane or helicopter kills the adult mosquitoes, and Michaels said larvicide is applied in areas with standing water, to halt their development. This typically uses naturally occurring bacteria only harmful to developing mosquito eggs.

The majority of West Nile cases reported to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control are between June and October, with steep drop offs when cooler temperatures curb mosquito breeding.

But Michaels described how, with summertime temperatures starting sooner and lasting later in the year and frequent storms bringing in standing water perfect for mosquitoes to live and reproduce in, keeping a watchful eye is more important than ever.

“Mosquito season, which is getting longer and longer here, is kind of near the peak of it right now, June through September,” she said. “Surveillance really zeroes in on where and when it’s happening, and then hopefully can suppress those mosquito populations before that becomes widespread and puts more people at risk.”

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West Nile was first detected in the United States in Queens, York, in the late 1990s and spread around the country. The virus was first detected in Louisiana in August 2001 when an infected crow in Kenner tested positive. That fall, it showed up in horses from three coastal parishes, along with Louisiana’s first human West Nile case.

Case numbers climbed to their highest point nationally in 2003 with about 9,800, and the count has remained relatively stable below 3,000 cases over the past 10 years.

“It can be mild and transient, but it can be really severe as well,” Michaels said

West Nile virus is relatively uncommon, affecting less than 5,000 people in the United States in a typical year, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. By comparison, the most prominent flu strain in 2024-25 infected more than 51 million people, the CDC reported.

While most cases of West Nile don’t produce any symptoms, those that do usually cause mild, flu-like reactions like fever and muscle aches. Symptoms can last anywhere from days to weeks.

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If the virus enters the central nervous system, it can result in complications such as brain swelling and paralysis. Less than 1% of people infected develop symptoms this severe, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, but some cases can require hospitalization or even result in death.

Louisiana recorded four West Nile-related deaths last year and three in 2024. No human infections have been reported this year as of early July.

Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com. Follow Louisiana Illuminator on Facebook and X.

Copyright 2026 Louisiana Illuminator. All rights reserved.



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Parasitic stomach illness that can cause explosive diarrhea rises in Louisiana

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Parasitic stomach illness that can cause explosive diarrhea rises in Louisiana


NEW ORLEANS (WVUE) – Louisiana health officials are tracking a rise in cases of cyclosporiasis, a stomach illness caused by a parasite that can be found on contaminated food or in contaminated water.

The Louisiana Department of Health has confirmed 23 cases of Cyclospora infection in the state, according to information obtained by Louisiana Illuminator. One person has been hospitalized, and no deaths have been reported in Louisiana.

The number is slightly above Louisiana’s recent average. LDH said the state has averaged 20 reported cases over the same time period during the past five years.

“Because many of these cases are still under investigation, this number is preliminary and subject to change,” an LDH representative said.

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Cyclospora is a microscopic parasite that causes an intestinal illness called cyclosporiasis. The CDC says people can get sick after eating food or drinking water contaminated with the parasite.

The illness is often associated with fresh produce. Past outbreaks in the United States have been linked to items such as leafy greens, herbs and berries.

Symptoms usually begin about a week after a person eats or drinks something contaminated, though the CDC says symptoms can appear anywhere from two days to two weeks or more after infection.

The most common symptom is watery diarrhea, sometimes with frequent and explosive bowel movements. Other symptoms can include stomach cramps, bloating, nausea, fatigue, loss of appetite and low-grade fever.

If left untreated, the illness can last from a few days to more than a month. Symptoms can also go away and then return.

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Health officials say cyclosporiasis is not likely to spread directly from one person to another. The CDC says Cyclospora must spend at least one to two weeks in the environment after passing in a bowel movement before it becomes infectious.

Cases typically rise during warmer months. The CDC considers May 1 through Aug. 31 the yearly cyclosporiasis season.

Louisiana is not the only state tracking cases. The CDC said in its June 16 update that it had received reports of 145 domestically acquired cases in 17 states, with 20 hospitalizations and no deaths. Federal officials said there was no evidence at that time of one single multistate outbreak linking all cases, but several clusters remained under investigation.

Since that update, some states have reported larger increases. Michigan has reported one of the largest outbreaks in the country, with over 700 cases.

Federal and state health officials have not identified a clear source for the current illnesses.

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The CDC says people with symptoms should contact a health care provider. Testing for Cyclospora may require a specific lab test that is not always part of routine stool testing.

Health officials recommend washing hands before handling food, rinsing fresh produce under running water and cooking vegetables when possible. Washing produce can reduce the risk, though it may not remove all Cyclospora from contaminated food.

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Norman C. Francis library naming honors Lafayette education legacy

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Norman C. Francis library naming honors Lafayette education legacy



The future North Lafayette library will expand learning opportunities while honoring the lifelong impact of the Louisiana education and civil rights leader.

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  • Lafayette has named its new Northeast Regional Library after educator and civil rights leader Norman C. Francis.
  • Francis was the first African American to enroll at Loyola University’s law school and served as Xavier University’s president for 47 years.
  • The new library is a key part of North Lafayette’s revitalization efforts and will feature expanded community resources.

Lafayette Consolidated Government (LCG) has officially designated the Northeast Regional Library as the Norman C. Francis Library, recognizing the lifelong legacy of one of Louisiana’s most influential educators and civil rights leaders. 

The Lafayette Parish Council approved the naming, cementing a tribute to the late Francis, whose decades of leadership in higher education and public service helped shape opportunities for generations of Louisianans. 

The new library will serve as the cornerstone of North Lafayette’s ongoing revitalization efforts through the Holy Rosary Redevelopment initiative while expanding access to educational resources, technology and community programming. 

“By bringing a new chapter of opportunity for residents on the Northside of Lafayette, this library stands as a fitting tribute to one of the most influential educators and civic leaders in Louisiana’s history,” Lafayette Mayor-President Monique B. Boulet said. 

Boulet added that Francis dedicated his life to expanding access to education and creating opportunities for others.  

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“It is only fitting that this library, a place of learning, discovery, and community, bears his name for generations to come,” Boulet said.  

Norman C. Francis’ legacy honored in Lafayette 

Born in Lafayette in 1931, Francis dedicated his life to expanding educational access and advancing social justice. 

In 1952, he became the first African American to enroll at Loyola University New Orleans College of Law. After earning his law degree, he joined Xavier University of Louisiana in 1957 before serving as the university’s president from 1968 through 2015, making him one of the longest-serving university presidents in the United States. 

His influence extended far beyond higher education. Francis advised eight U.S. presidents, led the Louisiana Recovery Authority following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, and received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President George W. Bush in 2006. 

Francis died in February 2026 at the age of 94, but community leaders say his impact continues to inspire future generations. 

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Northeast Regional Library’s Upgrades 

Conceptual design plans for the new Northeast Regional Library were presented to the Lafayette Public Library System Board on June 29. 

The planned facility will encompass 20,533 square feet on a 6.5-acre site and include: 

  • Space for 44,000–53,000 library materials. 
  • 37 public computer stations. 
  • Children’s and teen areas. 
  • STE(A)M learning and maker spaces. 
  • Study rooms and quiet reading areas. 
  • Walking paths and music garden. 
  • Interactive displays. 
  • 119 parking spaces, including six ADA-accessible. 

Community leaders celebrate library naming 

State Sen. Gerald Boudreaux said the designation reflects years of work by local leaders and residents to bring the long-planned Northside library to fruition. 

“I would like to thank the Boulet Administration, the Lafayette City and Parish Councils, and most importantly the many community members and organizations that remained committed for years to making this vision a reality,” Gerald Boudreaux said. “Dustin Cravins and the Holy Rosary Redevelopment Committee have developed a master plan that will positively transform this historic property while honoring the remarkable legacy of Dr. Norman C. Francis.” 

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City Council Chair Kenneth Boudreaux said the project represents a decades-long investment in North Lafayette. 

“Seeing this library become a reality is deeply personal. I was honored to help secure the initial funding for this project years ago because I believed the north side of Lafayette deserved a first-class library that would serve generations to come,” Kenneth Boudreaux said. “To now see it bear the name of Dr. Norman C. Francis, a man whose life was defined by education, opportunity, and service, is a powerful reminder of what can happen when a community refuses to stop believing in its future.” 

Parish Councilman Abraham “AB” Rubin Jr. called the naming a symbol of perseverance. 

“There were times when this project faced real uncertainty, but our community never gave up because we knew this library was worth fighting for,” Rubin, Jr said. “Dr. Norman C. Francis spent his life opening doors for others and believing in possibilities that many thought were out of reach. Naming this library in his honor reflects that same spirit of perseverance and hope to future generations.” 

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City Councilman Elroy Broussard said the library will become an educational anchor for North Lafayette. 

“As a former member of the Lafayette Parish School Board, I know that libraries are not just brick and mortar, but are gateways to learning and opportunity,” Broussard said. “This library will touch countless lives across the northern parts of Lafayette, and there is no more fitting namesake than Dr. Norman C. Francis, whose extraordinary legacy will remind every young person who will walk through its doors that education has the power to transform lives.” 

For additional information about the Northeast Regional Library project and design plans, visit the Lafayette Public Library’s Northeast Regional Library information page. 

Aaron Gonsoulin is the General Assignment/Trending Reporter for The Daily Advertiser. Contact him at AGonsoulin@theadvertiser.com. 



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