Louisiana
Louisiana BESE Board elects new officers for 2025
BATON ROUGE, La. (KALB) – The Louisiana State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE) has chosen its officers for 2025.
Ronnie Morris, the board member for District 6, was re-elected as president. Stacey Melerine, representing District 4, was elected as vice president, while Kevin Berken, who represents District 7, was elected as secretary and treasurer.
BESE is made up of 11 members in total. Eight of these members are elected by voters, while the other three are appointed by Governor Jeff Landry. Each board member serves a four-year term, which matches the governor’s term.
Members from Districts 4 and 5 represent parts of Central Louisiana, with Melerine from District 4 and Lance Harris from District 5.
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Louisiana
Predicting Day 1 of the Louisiana High School Football State Championships
In a few short days, the 2024 Louisiana high school football season will be in the rearview mirror, and we’ll be reduced to making posts like “90 days until fall camp!”
With that in mind, let’s take a moment to savor what’s been a terrific season with comeback stories such as the trio of Central-BR players who were sidelined by an accident just prior to Week One and have now returned to lead the Wildcats to their first Superdome Classic appearance. More on that game, which will be played Saturday, later….
Here are our predictions for Day 1 of the LHSAA Prep Classic. All games to be played at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans.
Thursday, December 11 – 12 PM
OCS wasn’t supposed to be here. This was the northeast Louisiana powerhouse’s down year, at least in terms of seeding. Oh well, when you have an offensive mastermind like coach Steven Fitzhugh and a gutsy quarterback like Luke Vidrine, who called his own number on fourth down to score the winning TD in the semifinals at No. 2 Ascension Catholic, it’s not a shocker to see the Eagles upset undefeated No. 3 Covenant Christian and the Bulldogs.
Vidrine, a junior, has passed for nearly 2,300 yards with 25 TDs and five interceptions. He only has 141 yards but has rushed for seven scores. Makin Lenard (180-1,444 yards, 24 TDs) is the primary running option. Cameron Volion (29-650, nine TDs) and Patrick Turpin (39-642, nine TDs) are the leading receivers.
Defensively, Cooper Russell (6-5, 205, Sr.) has over 100 tackles. Volion and Turpin are tied for the team lead with three interceptions apiece. OCS, which only lost to Oak Grove, has picked off 18 passes.
Vermilion Catholic dresses out approximately half the number of players as the Eagles, who list nearly 60 on the roster.
If you reside in the Lafayette area, you’ve undoubtedly seen Jonathan Dartez’s name mentioned. The senior quarterback has rushed for 2,508 yards on a workmanlike 301 carries with 42 TDs. He can throw it, too (1,600 yards, 22 TDs, two INT). Luke McLain has added another 500 yards rushing.
Receivers Allen McLain and Hudson Hebert have combined for approximately 1,000 yards and 14 TDs. Jyrin Bessard, Ross Dartez, Matthew Mollere and William Simon have all caught TD passes.
Both teams have tremendous coaching staffs. Vermilion Catholic has a young former large school head coach as its defensive coordinator in Brett Blakey (North Vermilion).
PICK: Vermilion Catholic. This just seems like its year. Let’s not forget, the Eagles lost to the OCS Eagles in the 2022 title game. The “Bayou-based Eagles” are hungry. VC”s offensive line has met every challenge this year with Dartez regularly running for 200 yards. He went for nearly 400 yards in a win at Riverside Academy.
Thursday, Dec. 11 – 3:30 PM
This is a rematch from 15 years ago won by the Tornado in a battle of natural disasters. The Hurricanes haven’t been back to the title game since, while Haynesville finished as 2023 runner-up to Oak Grove.
Ethan Henderson and Donnie Critton ran for two scores apiece last week in Haynesville’s blowout of No. 12 General Trass, according to Jimmy Watson of The Shreveport Times. QB Isaiah Washington, Yasmin Meadors and Byruss Burns each added a score.
South Plaquemines and Haynesville (David Franklin) are both coached by alums who won state championships as players at their schools. Lyle Fittte’s Hurricanes are led by QB Rod Parker (1,577 yards passing, 17 TDs), RB JyHeim Williams (102-1,049, 13 TDs) and receiver Alex Phillips (53-764, nine TDs). Parker (85 carries,382, 9 TDs) has a nose for the end zone when the Canes are in the red zone.
PICK: South Plaquemines – Two of the state’s most storied prep football programs finally meet again. Before the three were consolidated into South Plaquemines HS, Port Sulphur, Buras and Boothvillle-Venice all faced Haynesville in classic late round matchups.
If the Hurricanes can strike quickly and get a lead, the Tornado could be in trouble playing catchup with the Wing-T offense.
Thurs., Dec. 13 – 7 PM
A third straight game featuring blue bloods programs from the south and the north? Yes, please.
St. James QB JaJuan Jackson doesn’t have freshman size (6-1, 205) and he hasn’t performed like one, either. The scary thing is the Wildcats will also return RB Kani King-Young and versatile WR/KR Jakias Villaneuva next year. Young scored the game-winner last week to avenge a 2023 loss to Union Parish
Sterlington has won eight of its last nine with the sole loss coming to Union Parish. The Panthers produced two 100-yard rushers last week in Hagen Herring and Gaven Evans. Both have topped the 1,000-yard mark on the season. St. James knocked Sterlington, which has an excellent kicker in Aidan Parker, out of the playoffs in the 2023 semifinals.
PICK: St. James – Villaneuva and King-Young are underrated 2026 prospects who can take it the distance anytime. King-Young (5-9, 190) is getting rave reviews from those getting their first glimpse of the RB. Our crystal ball has Villaneuva returning a punt for the winning TD.
Louisiana
Louisiana education faces budget cuts. Here’s how the ‘fiscal cliff’ happened in the state
Radiance Technologies I-Bowl’sClaire Rebouche talks about the teams
Radiance Technologies I-Bowl chairperson Claire Rebouche talks about the teams
The budget for Louisiana education is facing up to $250 million in possible cuts for the 2025-2026 school year in order to make up for the state government’s deficit.
These budget cuts will potentially affect both preschool education and higher education institutions.
While legislation has trepidations when it comes to refusing money to preschools, it is possible that preschools will not be immune to budget cuts.
Louisiana education system faces possible budget cuts for the 2025-2026 school year
According to Invest in Louisiana, these budget cuts are a result of the “fiscal cliff” Louisiana is said to face in 2025, which will be when $650 million in tax revenue is anticipated to roll off the books.
State legislature created the fiscal cliff, however, it can avoid the budget cuts by renewing, or replacing, the tax revenue, says Invest in Louisiana.
According to the Louisiana Board of Regents, in light of the $0.45 sales tax ending in the 2025-2026 fiscal year, the Board of Regents was tasked to create a plan for higher education institutions to accommodate a $250 million reduction.
What does this mean for Louisiana universities?
The Louisiana Board of Regents presented a higher education budget in Sept. 2024. Highlights from the presentation include discussions surrounding the increase in the total cost of operations, updates on campus enrollment, financial outlook priorities and concerns about the impact of budget cuts.
In addition to this, budget cuts within higher education institutions would result in program reductions, faculty layoffs, increased staff workload, as well as the reduction of scholarship funds.
Potentially $50.4 million, or 20.3%, will be reduced from scholarships including TOPS, Go Grants, RCP, the Patriot Scholarship and GO Youth ChalleNGe.
Louisiana
Louisiana officials accused of inflating pollution monitor costs to kill idea aimed at industry
State environmental officials faced sharp questioning Tuesday for estimating that the total costs of requiring industry and other businesses to have “fence-line” air monitoring to detect pollution could run into the hundreds of millions of dollars.
State Rep. Alonzo Knox, a New Orleans Democrat, accused the agency of skewing the total figures upward by including smaller businesses such as bakeries, car washes and dry cleaners that he said aren’t significant enough polluters to need the monitors.
Knox, who grew up in the Baton Rouge community of Scotlandville near large polluting facilities, said including the smaller businesses in the cost estimate without any context would likely kill any future bills to require real-time, fence-line air monitors of major industries.
“Because here’s what happens in my world up here,” Knox said. “The way to kill a bill is to do a fiscal report with an exorbitant figure. That’s how we kill bills up here. And everything that you are presenting today is going in that direction.”
Knox is part of a legislative task force led by Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality Secretary Aurelia Giacometto. The task force was directed by the Legislature to examine fence-line air monitoring and issue a report with recommendations by February.
During a task force hearing Tuesday at the State Capitol, Giacometto told Knox that the state’s estimates followed the directive of the Senate resolution that created the task force.
Sponsored by state Sen. Cleo Fields, D-Baton Rouge, and co-sponsored by Knox, the resolution directed DEQ to examine the monitoring cost for the nearly 500 facilities with Title V air permits, which are considered “major” based on emission levels.
She explained that the department is trying to remain objective and said that asking it to make distinctions between bakeries and other facilities that have major air permits is “very subjective.”
“The point is the resolution asked for all the Title V facilities and so that is the deliverable that we brought forward,” she said.
Though Giacometto focused on hewing to the Senate resolution’s directives, DEQ did not deliver one of the resolution’s other requirements Tuesday — the cost to the state of health impacts from long-term exposure to air pollution.
June Sutherlin, a consulting toxicologist for DEQ, said agency officials contacted the state Department of Health and were told that type of estimate would require more financial resources. The health cost was left unanswered.
Estimates of nationwide public health and other societal costs from air pollution have been significant. An analysis published in 2016 studying one group of pollutants put the figure at $1 trillion for 2005 alone.
Environmental advocates have long called for fence-line monitoring of major chemical and industrial operations, but bills from Fields to require it have failed to garner traction. The oil and gas and chemical industries have opposed them, citing cost and a fear that real-time monitors could provide false reads and unduly alarm the public.
Such monitors would come in addition to the state’s nearly 40 community air monitors and specific equipment-related monitors some facilities must have.
Under federal rules, oil refineries also have fence-line monitoring for benzene, and 53 facilities in the state will have to monitor a group of carcinogens by June 2026, DEQ officials said. Those monitors report quarterly, however, not in real time.
DEQ officials say fence-line monitoring for facilities that require a major air pollution permit would affect 476 operations across the state.
Based on DEQ estimates, the monitors would cost nearly $800,000 to install at each site and $150,000 to $200,000 per site per year to operate, plus $5.2 million to create a real-time notification system for all the facilities’ monitors for the public and first responders.
Assuming each of the 476 facilities uses only one monitor — bigger operations could use several — DEQ estimates work out nearly to $380 million in combined installation costs, plus up to $95.2 million in annual operation and maintenance costs. DEQ officials said those costs would be borne by businesses.
An industry estimate from a few years ago, which counted 532 facilities and estimated all monitoring sites, put the figure at $500 million to $1.6 billion.
DEQ has also said it would need another 48 employees and $8.2 million annually to manage all the data the monitors would produce.
Giacometto cautioned against assuming that a causal connection exists between air pollution from certain businesses and health impacts, saying lifestyle, genetics and other non-pollution factors also play a role in cancer cases and other health problems in the state.
“A conclusion is being drawn that it is the industries and the emissions of certain industries or businesses that are leading to health conditions and, as was presented by Dr. Sutherlin, there are other factors that also lead to certain health conditions and cancer, and one of things that has not been discussed here are those,” she said.
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